ff talfr and SSIlS'lililll'' On S-mlnutt bint on tlrtnt ind whittle! U tht tlanal lor blackout In Klamath April SO High 81, Low 41 Precipitation is ol April 14, 14 -i - Stream year to data ..........,..14.41 Lait yaar........;...10.82 Normal.... 10.03 Fallt. Anolhtr long blatt, during black out, U tlgnil lor all-cltar. In precau tionary ptrlodt, watch your atraat llghti. ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES PRICE FIVE CENTS'. KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, SATURDAY; MAY 1, 1943 Number 9786 0 2". AUvimrt .i.;.is,)MAWf, nvn n LTQUJLJVULUJ U 'a'ilMllilllMJlHtlNlilllll'ltll'I'Wl'i'lilliliNI'iNKill Blackout aianai lllllllllllllllllMllllllllilllllllllll M 0, S.TSH1 By FRANK JENKINS A FEW minutes nflcr the dead- lino ho had sot expires, FDR lakes over the coal mines and calls on tho striking miners to 'eturn Immediately and work for their government" undor the protection of the army, It necessary, h 't ET'S trace the-steps taken so for. First tho President appealed to the miners not to strike. THEY STRUCK more than a quarter of million of them, to day's dlirfwtches tell us. That Is better- than HALF the member ship 'of tho United Mine Workors. It meant that John L, Lewis had won the first round. THE President (hereupon takes II,. nnvl tnii rWVinilS .Inn He tokos over tho mines and lnvitetthe miners to RETURN to work, under the protection of the! troops If such protection Is deemed necessary to prevtnl v)o lenco (or Jntiminnuonj, ,,, If they REFUSE his Invitation wind remain away from work, it f will mean' that Lewis hat won the second round. If they return In decisive num. bers. It will mean that John L, has LOST THE BATTLE. . AS these -words -art written " (about rioon)' there I no In duration of. what the miners will do. THERE'S interesting newt Tho British fall (as you have read) to punch through to Tunis by way of the Mcdjez el Bab gate. Tho Gormans concentrated too much strength in front of them. Whereupon our Americans strike at tho Matcur gate, to the north, taking tho Djcbcl Tahent (hill) and turning their long -range artillery on Motour itself, lonly 18 miles away. Tho Germans were apparently token by surprise, but recovered and came bock at the Americans with, heavy artillery fire and sent out IB of their Focke-Wulfe lOO'.planos In nn effort to seek out ' and destroy the American guns. Tho planes FAILED in their mission, tho dispntchos say. T ET'S do a little guessing here. " In order to stop the British hammering at tho Mcdjez el Bab gate, the Gormans probably WEAKENED their forces at the Matcur gate. Tho Americans, toking advantngo of the shift In German strength, struck without delay and MADE PROGRESS. TF this guosswork Is anywhere fL near accurate, It means that our sldo has the upper hand to such an extent that we can strike at ANY POINT where tho Ger- mans are compelled to weaken their forces In order to defend SOME OTHER point. . CIGNIFICANTLY, Montgom cry's guns In the south are re ported today to bo beginning a thunderous barrage, which Is his usual preliminary to an Infantry advance In forco. This suggests that, his veteran flth army Is getting into tho gamo at still another point. , JERMAN communications are raided disastrously, soma dozen and a half supply ships be ing roportod sunk or badly dam aged by allied submarines and lanes. Stopping reinforcements destined for the beleaguered Gormans Is a major part of our job '. . . Thore's ' another Interesting straw In .the wind. . Tho .German air forco Is re ported to have been kept so busy fighting off our planes striking (Continued on Page , Two) SOVIETS BEGIN NEW SLUGGING IN KUBAN AREA Russians Reported to Have Launched on Novorossisk LONDON. May 1 M') Break ing silenco on the military situa tion In tho Kuban valley, the Russian midnight communique announced early today that the red army had captured "several key enemy positions", with the support of soviet filers, possibly heralding the beginning of a new Russian offensive in the western Caucasus agBlntt the narrow coastal bridgehead, still held by the Germans. .'- -. Tho war bulletin,, recorded hore by the soviet radio monitor, pointed up German . assertions that 1 50.000 Russians have launched a new drive against Novorossisk and the German held arc northward in the Ta iDun ' peninsula;- -although ,ithe German statements said the at tacks were unsuccessful, , ., ,. .'. Moscow Silent' 1 ' ; " Moscowflfficlatly had been silent on land action In the Ku ban valley- during the last few days but reports from the front had told of terrific air battle! in the region and this was taken generally as a prelude to a new push. , The Russian press' yesterday appeared with hints that decisive events were In the making and the Russian people had expected developments In the ' campaign such as were announced this May Day, MOSCOW, May 1 (P) Major air battles continued ' up and down the long Russian front to day with' tht sharpest f ights abovo the harrow Kuban. bridge head the Germans hold In the western Caucasus, while on the , (Continued on. Page . Two) Nippons View Coal Strike as Power Challenge By The Associated Press The Nippon Times, Japanese foreign office organ, declared editorially today that tho United States coal strike was "a direct challenge to governmental pow er In wartime and something that Is Inconceivable ln Japan, whore everyone Is putting his shoulder to tho wheel." Excerpts of the editorial were broadcast by tho Tokyo radio and recorded by The Associated Press., '"Roosevelt was vacillating In his negotiations with the labor loader," the Nippon Times edi torial added, according to radio TnWvn Thl urn nttiltititut in "fourth term" aspirations. I Three Negroes Service Siation Robbery Three negroes, said to have robbed the Diamond Lake junc tion sorvico station of moro than $40 lato Friday afternoon, were to answor a charge of larceny In a shop after Bird Loosloy, sta tion operator, had filed a com plaint against tho trio In Chilo- quln Justlco court. Tho three aro LoRoy Weath ers, Oscnr Hicks and Shirley Leon Simmers, all of California. Justice of the Peace Blaine Stinson said Loosley appeared at his office Saturday to file the charge, Co-owner of the station Is John Zblndon. Both aro well known hero. Loosley said the three stopped at his station, 69 miles north of Klamath Falls, asked for oil and two of the negroes stopped Into an adjoining-room with him and I mm Klamath Sweetheart and Captain Jack in Portland Klamath hlgh'l .'pretty 'sweetheart. Vivian DirtchL kadUamath's bond-selling rooster; Cmpula Jaek.'wer In Portland at 'the "sarn time this week, and 1hty made a splaih In war bond rlrclts up there. The above picture of the' Klamath contingent was - taken in Portland. Miss Dirschl,; at Ult. Is shown with her mother, Mrs. J. H. Dlrtchl. Captain , Jack, perches'. on bis tank .coop. 'At right is Eugene Allen, editor of tht Oregon Labor Press. Union labor provided the trip; for-Miss Dlrsehl as a result of tht war bond contest at tht local- high school. 1 ; .- English Subs Blast Ships in Mediterranean LONDON, May 1. OP) Ten moro enemy, ships have; been sunk In the Mediterranean v' by British submarines, the admiral ty announced today. Among the ships sunk,, said the communique, was a large tanker torpedoed near . Mariv timo island "while west-bound on a conrso for Tunis. She was escorted by an unusually large number of surface craft and -aircraft." ',. , ,- Another tanker -was- sunk- by gunfire oft Italy's west coast and a largo ammunition ; ship was blown up off the island of Monte Crlsto, between. Italy and Cor- slco. . , - Other, sinkings were off the east coast of Corsica, northwest of Sicily and off the northern tip or Tunisia. ' FAST JOB WASHINGTON. May 1 (P) Described as one of the fastest color printing Jobs in the history of the government printing of fice, 10,000 red, white and blue posters to be displayed on mine properties seized by the govern ment rolled off the' presses to day. Held Afier argued at length, concerning the type of oil to buy. Tho third re mained in tho office. Loosley dlscovcrod tho theft wh.cn Jie went to the cash register to ring up a 35-ccnt sale. Klamath stato officers were notified and started toward Bond but were advised that De schutes police had arrested the three without trouble at LaPlne. They were returned to Bend and lodged in the Jail, : Sergeant E. W. Tlchenor ; of local state police said Weathers had obtained gas to got to Seat tle, through the local rationing board after he had reported his gas: book stolon here. He. was en route to Alaska, he said, to work , for tho government and was to ' leave his car with a brother In Seattle,. - I - . -, . : vAfV) - p - QH" RAF Baiters Rttir Voeyr( v Americans Make Day Raid LONDON, May 1 (P The RAF made a "heavy attack' last night on Essen and. other Ruhr valley targets in western Germany and . today several squadrons of heavy bombers, be lieved to be American Libera tors or Fortresses or both, flew across the channel to continue the. assault on the , nazi- war potential. ' The daylight bombers-, flew at great height and - appeared headed for tho Cherbourg penin sula, perhaps to pound anew Hitler's submarine bases,. The air ministry . announced that 13 bombers' were lost last night during the fourth, attack of- April- on the Ruhr valley, Lions Opening Drive to Buy Flying Fortress A Flying Fortress to be named the Klamath Pelican .will be pur chased by Klamath county war bond buyers If the Lions, club May campaign is a success, It was announced Saturday by - Gene Hooker, Lion president. ' Hooker made tho . following statement: ' . "The Lions club of Klamath Falls has accepted the responsi bility of sponsoring tho war sav ings bond drive for May. The people of Klamath county have responded to the call in the past, and we appeal to each and every one to make the same response Uiifcmonth. ... . Mt "We have as our objective the purchase of a Flying Fortress which costs $350,000. This For tress would be purchased by war bonds sold, right here In Klam ath county, and would bear the namo, 'Klamath Pelican. . "Wouldn't It be 'significant for a bomber named the Klamath Pelican made possible by Klam ath war bonds, to fly over and bomb Tokyo? "To tho farmers, the , mill workers, the business men,; the housewives of Klamath, we are making an urgent appeal for you to purchase as many E bonds as possible in May." (Picture on page four), n concentration ' point of heavy German steel and coal industry. Damagt'Tbld ' " '. . The .German communique,- re corded from. Berlin broadcasts,, said considerable damage . was caused at Essen arid other, places in western uermany..?. 1 - ., i Continental ; weather-- .condi tions probably, caused 'the. rald- ers to scatter over several v tar gets instead of loosing one sat uration raid, observers said. The other , objectives were -not im mediately identified.. t , The" most recent Visit Ho- the -much-bombed Ruhr area -was Monday night when the RAF battered Dulsburg, , 12 miles west , ot . Essen, - in . the second roid-on tha,t, river port-in- a month. Photographs Takan V - Essen itself has been bombed 55, times since the beginning of me war and boo-tons of block busters were dropped on It in the last previous raid Anril 3. Photographs taken during the following days showed -that -the viral Krupp works there was idle for 10 days because of the damage.; :. , William Roberts Reported Held In Philippines ; Pvt. William R. Roberts, 22, previously reported as -missing in action in the Philippines,.-is now: a prisoner of . war. accord ing to word received . by the youth's father, Colin Floyd-Roberts of Bonanza. Official noti fication came from the war de partment .this week. r Roberta enlisted In the regu lar army In. July, 1941-, and left immediately. for the Philippines for '. training. He-'- Was wounded in action in March,, 1942, and had just reported for duty when Bataan fell. A sister, Mrs. Olen Lebow of Bonanza, last heard from her brother In. November, 1941, when he wrote from Manila.;-- A- , ' -.-! . " ,'.; At the time 'of Roberts' en listment he "was employed as Untber taller f 6r- Lamm's - camp. iatsior ALLIES WREST 10 HILLS IN ! . KNIFE CHARGE Axis Warships Socked In Air Attack : On Sea Lane . By EDWARD KENNEDY ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, May 1 VP) American troops, continuing their stubborn advance toward Mateur, stormed -and captured Djebel - Tahent yesterday and wrested a neighboring high point from the Germans- in. a fierce bayonet charge, allied . head quarters announced today, as aT--liedsir" forces blastedan ' axit concentration of warships and vessels of all sizes in their most successful attack yet on the 'en emy's sea lanes; , ' Direct hits were scored by the airmen on at least eight ships, in cluding a light cruiser and two destroyers .rhich' were sunk or leftflame and. apparently sink- 'y Tittici' On J4eVt; Kt'":" The- second TT.. Srarmytcorp? of Lieut. Gen. George S. Patton J took DJebel Tabent, Kndwfl alHill-609..'16:mil4s' -southwest 0 Mateur in the Sidi N'slr area, and abtured..Hill 523 iiist to the south,. Their new positions per mitted them to begin long-range shelling , of Mateur,. .18 - miles southwest of Bizerte. - . . , But. -while they were. scoring these successes, the British first army lost ground east and north east of Medjez-el-Bab in-exceptionally hard fighting. , ' British Back Up 'This slight withdrawal by the British, in the Djebel Bou Aou kaz area, 20 miles- west of Tunis, came, after . the Germans had made three heavy, counter-at-. (Continued, on Page Two) Navy Negotiates : With Kaiser for Big .Cargo Planes ' WASHIN(GTON, " May. 1" jiPi The navy reported last night .it was negotiating with Henry J. Kaiser, . shipyard' and ' airplane builder, . for development . of "long range" cargo airplane. Plans, the navy said, still are in "a very'elementary' stage." Kaiser has been asked to build a wind tunnel model of the plane, details of. which were not. dis closed here. No funds' have been allocated for construction of a full-sized flying model, the navy added. . . .' Should Kaiser build the plane, it probably would be constructed at the Brewster plant, Hatboro, Pa.. .' Stalin Hails Allied Blows As Shadow of Second Front By The Associated Press - MOSCOW, May 1 Premier Joseph Stalin hailed the British American 'aerial, blows at Eu rope today as foreshadowing a second front when all the al lied armies "will break the backbone, of - the fascist beast" with -. joint smashes from east and west, and called for the "utter- routing" and "uncondi tional, surrender" of Hitler's Germany. . In a May Day order of the day to his nation and its army, Stalin echoed the "unconditional surrender" keynote struck by Prime Minister Churchill and President Roosevelt at t h e i r Casablanca conference. . The Russian leader signed the order both as supreme comman der, and sis marshal, the latter title 'recently conferred on - him for his direction ot the Russian winter offensive. He praised' the allies' cam paign on the North Africa' front which, together wlth the air Roosevelt Orders Return to Work; Army May, be Used . - WASHINGTON, May 1 OPi President Roosevelt ordered gov. ernment operation of the nation's coal' mines today with milk tary protection if necessary and in a statement called on strik ing miners to "return immediately to the mines and work fof: their government." . .- i;:, ' . The summons was directed primarily at the some 250,000 men who are already dut. -; : ; The president ordered Secretary, of the Interior Ickes to takt possession and operate the mines with such workers as he caq ' provide, and told Ickes he could call on the army for protection for the mlnes.if necessary; ".' : : ... i 1 1 . Telegraphs Mints . Ickes immediately dispatched telegrams to the nation's 3400 bituminous coal companies directing- them to fly ' the. Ameri can flag over their properties to indicate that the mines are "be ing operated exclusively for the United States." Similar tele grams! are to go to about 450 Pennsylvania anthracite opera tors. ' ' Shortly-after the order went out from the White House, the president in a statement re viewed the situation leading. up to the 10 a: m. deadline which he had set for the miners to re- wme a. deadline ' they ignored. "Except- u few mines the production of coal has virtually ceased," the president said. "The national ' interest is in grave peril." Coal" Must Go ' , Asserting that .the production of coal must and shall continue, 'the chief executive said he would talk over the radio "to tb,e miner o theatton' at 7 p;-m.iPWT tomorrow night. Thia was taken .ta jneaWrn n wuii taw nis case to them and id -the. country without stop ping for. -more . talk with John L.' Lewis head of the .United Mine Workers.' ' ,. ' Ignores WLB '' Lewis thus ar ; has Ignored war labor board and president ial appeals to: take up the min ers 'wage. - demands ' with the board in - routine fashion. ' in New York,' Lewis declined com ment on the presidential action. - Ickes promptly sent telegrams (Continued on Page .Two) Demos Caff on Congressmen to Support Plans , 1 WASHINGTON, May 1: ) In formal reports, the house ways, and, means committee's democratic majority : called up on congress today to support its compromise . pay-as-you-go. . tax plan- while --the republican "mi nority 'pressed, anew for pass age of the Ruml skip-a-year al ternative."1 ' . - The democrats called the Ruml plan "unfair, a gross violation- of the' principle of abili ty to- pay," while the 'minority countered with an assertion that the opposition: compromise was "a stepchild of political pres sure" and "a conglomeration of stubborn -differences." ' ' The Ruml. plan, said the re publicans, "is the outgrowth of ' (Continued on Page Two) war; the Russian successes and the failure of the German coun teroffenslve.in the Kharkov re gion, . Stalin said, had caused .a great axis crisis which resulted in a German "babble about peace.". Decrying German propaganda attempts to split .the Russian-British-American coalition, he threw off German peace talk w i t h the statement:; "But of what kind of peace ' can one talk with, the imperialist ban dits from the German fascist camp who have ' drowned Eu' rope in blood and studded it with, gallows? " .. . . It is now clear that only the utter routing of the Hitler ite armies and the unconditional surrender of Hitlerite Germany can bring peace to Europe ... '.The- German-Italian fascist camp is experiencing a. great crisis and facing catastrophe. This does not mean, of course, that the catastrophe of Hitlerite Germany has already come." ALLIES PATTER JAP IS Enemy Subs Attack " Force East of . . : ) . .Australia . ! A tfX I ED HEADQUARTERS : IN AUSTRALIA, May 1 (P) With allied air action limited for the -moment to relatively , light- blows at the familiar island tar gets-northeast of Australia, Gen eral Douglas MacArthur's south west Pacific command centered attention -today on an undersea threat developing" suddenly in the waters below these Japanese - bases:'- ' '' - .-.. . . '"The :,eneraS' has launched submarine attack in some force in the. waters, east' of .Australia, ' Wh'Wmmuhique disclosed. Details of the nature, effect ' (Continued' on Page Two)-- Ocean Wove Scratched From Kentucky Derby By 8ID FEDER - CHURCHILL DOWNS, Louis vllle, Ky., May 1 VP) Warren Wright, the Chicago and Lexing ton, Ky, sportsman,, announced today that he had decided "not to start""his Ocean-Wave In the 69th Kentucky derby late this. afternoon, a decision that left the ' $75,000 run for the roses virtual ly at the mercy, of the mighty ; Count Fleet ' Wright made. the statement v four hours before' the scheduled derby post tirne (3:30 p. m. PWT and before the colt who has been suffering 'with an injured left lore t leg,, had been , officially withdrawn through . the. secre-' tary's. office. The 'Wave, stablemate . of, Whirlaway in . Wright's string, won the blue grass stakes and , the . derby trial mile in the last 12 days and came out of each. with a cracked left fore heel. As ; a result of the two victories, he J has been regarded as the only . horse in the field capable of chal- ' lenglng Mrs. John D. Hertz' , Count Fleet for the big end of ' the pot today,. . . .. Baseball . NATIONAL LEAGUE R H E Cincinnati 7 13 8' St. Loiils 3 . 9,3 ; Walters and' MuellerJ Gum-, bert; Munger (8) and Odea. I . .. ..'... R. H. . k. : Chicago 3 8 1 Pittsburgh ..... 6 10 3 Passeau, Fleming (6) Erickson (7) and Hernandez; Sewell and Lopez. R. H. E. Brooklyn 9 11 2 New York 2 4 f 2 Macon, Webber and Owen; C. Melton, Series (6), Coombs (0), and Lombard!. ' AMERICAN LEAGUE ' ! . R. H. K. St. Louis '4 - 7 ,1 Chicago 8 13 1 ; L. Gatehouse, Caster (6) and Ferrell; Smith and Trcsh. . R, H .El. Philadelphia ilLi l' S'; 3 Boston ......v...... 3 13 Harris and Swift; Judd and Peacock. , . , , Cleveland , 8 1 Detroit 3 13 0 Kennedy, Naymlck (3), Hevlng (5), and Desautcls, Rosar (6); White, Smith (3),"Trout (11) and Richards, Parson (18), '' -. i : i'.": .'