Strait) &ttfr Blackout Si K.ililihliiiliii'.ilii!i HNIii'iiliii.milnliMllli ill weatner, On 8-mlnute blast on sirens and whlillH it the signal for blackout In Klamath Falli. Anolhtr long blast, during black oul, It signal lor all-claar. In yracau tlonary periods, watch your itreat lights. ! 4 "F loods rail Nazi 1 - : Vii'l n FT "KjHnniJ iii ipi 11 p i yr ii iiii i' i hi ii I, i i i i p1: i .11 I'nmiii imi i Hi il i I " I 'I III I l1!! 'li hi I'll' i IM'IIIIIIIIIHl'1!! ' i i 1'i'ii Ii .nil U ll 1 IfllllllllffilWllll By FRANK JENKINS TN this period of tense waiting, which Is certnln to bo broken sooner or Inter by heavy fight Ins, llicro uro three hoi upots to wntch: I. liiily. Q 2. Turkry. 3. Ilomlmitf of Europe. "THESE reports of scanty plnnc unci untl-iilrcriift dciimtic In Itnly Hint nro bclnu brought buck by our bomber crew are Inter esting and might bo significant. They COULD Indlcnto thnt Germany doesn't plnn a coiitly and stubborn defenso of Itnly. TP you're In a speculative mood and like to guess, get out your map. Tnko a good long took at the Mediterranean. You'll bo struck by the relatively (jrent ex tent of Italy's coastline. Then try out, for a moment, the well known recipe for find ing a nmlo (Imagining you oro a mule and trying to flgura-whore you would be.) Imagino your self In Hitler's place. If you had too few men and too many places to put them (with every spot a hot one) you might not liko the Job of defend ing Italy's vast coastline. You might prefer to withdraw to tho historically strong and ex tremely short defense lino of the Alps, where few men (and planes) could put up a tougher defense. It's Just possible that Hitler may feel the same way about it. I)ON'T Jump to any wrong con elusions. If the Germans give tip Italy, 11 will be because they HAVE to and not because they WANT to. They'd RATHER keep It. ; We'd much rather havo Italy than NOT to have It for reasons that aro obvious. Possession of itnly would cinch our control rt the Mediterranean. It would give us closer bases tor bombing Germany and also for operations against Greece and tho Unlknns. . The point Is that If Hitler should giva up Italy 11 would be an admission that he's gottlng In a tight spot. For that reason, whut ho docs there will be worth wntching. THE mop will tell you clearly why Turkey is a hot spot. The Salonlkl goto to tho fort ress of Europe lies at the head of the Aegean sea, which Is sprinkled with Islands almost as liberally as tho South Pacific. It Is generally assumed that the Germans have air bases on most of those islands at least on all the strategic ones, Expcrlcnco In tho South Pa wiflc (ns well as elsewhere) in ' clicnlcs that sending a sea-borne 'invasion forco through Islands heavily supplied with lnnd-bosod aircraft Is a highly difficult and dangerous operation, nrURKEY is the key to this problem. It she should como over on our side (and she has been talking that way increasing ly of late) the way Into tho Bal kans would bo made much easier for us. WATCH very closely indeed the growlngly Intense bomb ing of Gerinnny and her adjacent (Continued on Page Two) Deficiency Fund ill to Senate The house passed and sent to the senate today a $134,000,001) deficiency appropriation bill with amendments denying funds for the salary of throe govern ment employes and prohibiting tho use of nny of tho president's emergency funds for tho fnrm security administration or tho national resources planning board, HOUSE HEEOS RUMORED FDR TAX BILLVETO Senate Skip - a - Year Measure Downed Third Time WASHINGTON, May 18 W) Heeding the threat of a possible presidential veto, tho house re- jectcd for the third time today the senate-approved skip-a-ycar Incomo tax bill, The action, by roll call vote of 202 to 104, came on a motion to Instruct Its delegates to a Joint home-senate conference commit tee to accept the senate measure. Stalamate Saan By its decision which opens up the possibility of a new stale mate tho house stood pat on Its own measure, the Robertson Fornnd1 bill which would abate a year's tax obligation for ap proximately 00 per cent of the nation's taxpayers, The Vole, tolled off In a tense climax:-to '-the seesaw' struggle which ha gripped congress for months, came after Speaker Ray burn (D-Tex.) predicted flatly that thei modified Ruml sklp-a-year pla,n, If passed, would be vetoed. ' Immediately after the vote was announced, Chairman Doughton, (D-N.C.) of the tax-writing ways and means committee, said to newspapermen: lluml Plan Daad "The 1,'uml plan Is dead. We have kllleil It . As long as Frank (Continued on Pago Two) t - Two Fitted for Pulling Feathers From Peacocks i The case of tht peacock feath ers reached city police court late Monday afternoon and two young men wora- clvcn fines of $10 or five doyv In the. town Jail for taking parf. In molesting the Moore pork birdi on Sunday, May 0. V William B. Galloway. 18. and Clint Hamblin, 20-ysar-old mill worker, appeared bei'oro Polico Judge Harold Franey; after city police had worked or, Ihe case following complaints1 filed by E. E. Spencer, Moore J irk care taker. , Galloway and Hamb'In were charged with violation 1 1 Ordin ance 8003 which specifically seta forth that it Is unlawful to "Injure, molest, harrass, or de stroy animals, birds or fowl cither within or belonging to said park." The 18-year-old pleaded guilty (Continued on Page Two) Marked Hospital Ship Sinks As Jap Sub ALLIED HEADQUARTERS IN AUSTRALIA, May 18 Wl Tho Australian hospital ship Cen taur, brilliantly lighted and un mistakably marked, was tor pedoed and sunk In flames by a Japanese submarlno off the coast of Australia last Friday with a loss of 298 lives. No warning whatever was given, The ship capsized and sank within three minutes. Slxly-four of tho 383 aboard. including only one of 12 women nurses, were saved. Forty-three of the crew of 13 and 248 Aus tralian and British medical staff men went down, most of them trapped on a lower deck of the blazing ship. No Americans There were no Americans aboard. The ship, en route from Sydney to New Guinea, carried no pntlCnls, Survivors, crowded on mk: ASSOCIATED PRESS PRICE FIVE CENT .V),ti 'MM4uri:f Tank Men's Choice Miss Mary Oliver (abova), 33, of Camp Campbell, Ky., won the title of Miss Armoratta In natton-wids voting contast among armored force soldiers In the U. S. Parade to Mark Celebration of "Victory Day" A ' parade and a blast of whistles will mark Wednesday's celebration In Klnmath Falls of "African Victory Day." The ob servance will bo statewide, and will mark tho state's first war festivities since the armistice of 1918. The parade is scheduled to start at 1:30 p. m., from Tho Her ald and News corner, and will pass down Main street. Whistles will bo blown at 2 p. m.- The event will be In charge of the Lions club, which is running this month's war bond drive. Most elaborate celebration In (Continued on Page Two) . Allies Rain Fire On Sardinian Port, Airfield By WILLIAM B. KING ALLIED , HEADQUARTERS IN NORTH AFRICA, May 18 (P) Carrying on an unrelent ing attack on Italy's Mediter ranean islands, allied air force Wellingtons ot tho RAF bomb cd the airfield and port of Al- ghero on tho west coast of Sar dinia last night. Bomb bursts were seen in the town and Port areas and one (Continued on Page Two) 8 fig ntuiMiMtt iii iii i! f lm KrJSi mm Torpedoes WHhoui Warning shift rafts In water swarming with sharks,, were picked up 38 hours after the Centaur went down. General Douglas MacArthur expressed deep revulsion at jue "limitless savagery" of tho sink ing. No Escort "Tho vessel was traveling un escorted and was fully Illumi nated and marked with the Red Cross and complying with ail provisions of International law governing hospital ships In time of war," tho announcement from his headquarters said. "Tho weather was clear and visibility was excellent." The torpedo hit at 4:10 a, m, while the ship was 40 miles off Brisbane and most of those aboard were asleep below decks. The huge Red Croases on Its sido had been newly Repainted In Sydney two days before and sur vivors (aid the vessel "w lit IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND !, OREGON, Ml ndusuy RIOTS RUMORED AFTER BRITISH KIR BATTERING Americans Alternate Night, Day Raids With English LONDON, May 18 W) New reconnaissance pictures taken to day showed that floods started when the RAF ripped open the Mohne and Eder dams still were spreading In two directions, in the neighborhood of Industrial Kassel and toward the center of the Ruhr Industrial valley. Official German figures, broad cast by Berlin, said water levels were unusually high in the Rhine at Duismirg, where the Ruhr en ters the Rhine, and In the Wosor river below Kassel. RloU Told wholly unconfirmed reports broadcast by the Morocco radio said riots had occurred at Duis- burg- and Jn other Ruhr valley towns. Dortmund was said to be threatened with complete in- unaatton , with the toll of dead and homeless growing hourly. Air raid shelters were declared flooded, in Duisburg, one of the hardest hit cities in th RAF of fensive. , . - .The drive against Hitler's Eu ropean fortress continued today wnrt the heavily-gunned Ameri can Thunderbolts patrolling Bel gium In strength. One of the P 47s was shot down and the flight bagged pne Messerschmltt. A (Continued on Page Two) Mexican Farm Labor Arranged For Tulelake Final arrangements were an nounced ' Tuesday for bringing 80 Mexican laborers to the Tulelake district for work on farms in that area. The. Mexi cans will arrive from Old Mexi co about May 24. Chester Main, president of the Tulelake Growers, said that the growers' group has contract ed with the FSA to bring the laborers to Tulelake. They will be housed at the Tulelake CCC camp, which was inspected and opproved Monday by W. L. Gertz, FSA official from Port land. The Mexicans, who will not be accompanied by families, will work on. 14 farms. Farmers who have arranged for this labor met Monday with the growers' group and federal officials. The arrangement for Mexi can labor was made In view of a serious shortage of white help In the basin district. in Flames up to glory," It offered a perfect target for the murderous attack. Sister Eleanor Savage of Sydney was the one woman sur vivor. Despite a blow in the face which gave her a black eye, she never complained and sur vivors said her fervent prayers did much to help keep up mor ale. It was only after the res cue that she mentioned a side Injury. Doctors found three ribs broken. Slstar't Story Sister Savage said she and her cabtnmate were awakened by a terrific explosion. They ran to tho , door and looked into the passageway. The ship already was afire. Donning Ufejackets over their pajamas, they leaped from the ship together. The other woman struck floating wreckage and was kilted. "Tho sea was covered with oil which fortunately did not catch (Cofttiimsd en J?gi Two) TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1943 Still surrounded br scaffolding; Klamath's World War II memorial shaft is shown in th ahora picture. Namas of Klamath count; soldier dead will ba painted on the white sides of tha obe lisk, which will soon ba completed and will be dedicated on Memorial Day- - . BMHiES 15 Expected Summer Offensive Stiil Not Begun By WILLIAM ' "cGAFFlH MOSCOW, May 18 (iP The Kuban front ftared into action again today when German troops stole through the forested hills and sprang upon the Rus sians in a violent effort to re gain important positions lost weeks ago. Latest Russian reports said that German infantry which at tacked several times supported by tanks, planes and artillery, was thrown ' back each time with heavy losses. The German counterattacks are aimed at driving the Russians back from the Inner positions of the Black Sea port of Novorossisk, No Summer Offensa From the figures mentioned in dispatches it is obvious that the Kuban activity is hardly the prelude: to- the expected German summer offensive, but it is the most vivid action on the long Russian front in sev eral days. - - 1 The exact extent of German losses in the new Kuban drive was not stated, but at- least 200 were known to have been killed (Continued on Page Two) Central Indiana Torn by Worst Flood Since 1913 INDIANAPOLIS, May 18 OTi One of the worst floods since 1913 tore through .central and northern Indiana today. At least four lives have been lost In the raging torrents.' Moro than 500 families have been moved from flooded homes in Marion, Frankfort, Wabash, In dianapolis and other places. Flood waters surged over thousands of acres of lowlands, damaging early-planted farm crops. Numerous victory gardens havo been washed away. Nine blocks of sandbagged levee and the Charles Mills dam at Marion held back the swollen Mlsslssenewa river. Three hun dred families in the area were evacuated. LITTLE ROCK, Ark, May 18 (IP) The "big inch" pipeline running from Texas to Illinois to relieve tho eastern seaboard oil shortage was broken today by the Arkansas river flood, War Emergency Pipelines, Inc., disclosed, NEA FEATURES Number 9800 Shaft Rises in Memory of Soldier I i, ' .' f Wt f 'ii- life 1 r.a Pelican Bomber Receives Boost Klamath's d r i v e. f o r a Klamath' Pelican bomber re ceived a boost ' today from 6ut of town, , , . Mrs. J.L. Itfchey, "Port-, land, former resident of Klamath Falls, wrote the war savings committee ', that she had read in the paper about the Lions club campaign to buy a plane to bomb Tokyo. "We'd like to help do that,"-she wrote. "It would be a special pleasure to have a Klamath Falls boy fly that Klamath Pelican.- . Enclosed is application blank -and a check. There will be an other for each week of May.' We have been buying bonds here, but we want to have a part In that Klamath Peli can'." Mother Demands City Pay After Daughter Hurt Injuries suffered by her 17-month-old daughter when she fell on a circular iron cap from which steam was emanating, caused Mrs. Kessner Funk to de mand - compensation , from the city of Klamath Falls, according to a letter read by City Attorney J. H, Carnahan before the city council last night. Representing Mrs. Funk is Attorney F. O. Small. In the meantime, the city has been advised that the matter is being adjusted by the Columbia Utilities company, Mrs. Funk's attorney stated that the child, toddling by the side of her mother at the rear of Montgomery Ward's oh North Ninth street, fell upon the iron cap and suffered burns to the right leg and buttocks. Injuries were attributed to the hot Iron and. steam. The child has been under the care of physicians. "This is definitely a personal Injury and laid at the door of (Continued on Page Two) Baseball NATIONAL R. H. E. Pittsburgh 0 5 1 Boston 4 5 0 Sew ell, Herbert and Lopez; Javery and Poland. . R. H. E. Cincinnati 3 9 0 New York 1 5 a Riddle, Beggs (8) and Mueller; Sayles, Adams (8) and Lombard;. R H E St. touts '. 7 11 0 Brooklyn 1 3 0 White, Brechesn (7) and W. Cooper; Wyatt, Allen (5), Web ber (W and Owen N Dead 'BEAT JAPS FIRST MEUOIIGED Speech Seen as White " House "Sounding; - Board" By JOHN H WIGGINS WASHINGTON, May 1ft. W An idea that a senatorial appeal to "beat Japan first" may. have served as a sounding board for White .House strategy sifted through the capital today in. the wake oi a three-hour senate row over., diverting. American, mili-i tary might to the Pacific. . . Senator Chandler (D-Ky.), who started the wrangle with, warn ings that if Germany is beaten first the United States way count on little or no help from Britain or Russia to whip the Nipponese, acknowledged himself, that he was "encouraged to make the speech. . . : . .. Decline . : The Ken tuck is n declined r to say from what source the en couragement came but he . eX- (Contisued on Page Two) British Subs Sink Italian War Ships . LONDON, May 18 (PJ Brit ish submarines torpedoed , and sank an Italian destroyer and at least five supply ships during a recent. series of . Mediterranean encounters, the admiralty an nounced today. . : ' . V -. The destroyer was sunk. - off north Sicily. Several other ships wee de clared damaged. J A a City Council Moves to Acquire Cemetery Land The city council, In session Monday night, took steps toward acquiring the proposed new city cemetery site overlooking Klam ath river when an ordinance passed the first and second read ing authorlfclng the purchase of the property. . .. The city will pay to Northwest Utilities of Portland, the sum of i $5000, to Klamath county, $1308.20, and to Gomel and Hel en Caseman, $1C0 plus $3.36 In taxes. It was brought out by the. city attorney, J. H. Carna han, that Northwest.Utilities is furnishing title Insurance at their expense, but that the city would provide insurance on the other pieces of land. - r - - r Ordinance Rmd - i The newly introduced .ordi nance reads;- "Linkville ceme tery is almost Ulted and the rate of burial hM not diminished an4 May 1? High 1. Low 3$ Praeipltatlon at of Mar 10. 1 Stream yaar to data ... H.IT Last year u ...11,58 Normal IQ,84 ARMYTRDQPS SEIZE RIDGE ATJiflLTZ BAY Cosuo'f ties Lighter; Than Expected; ; Navy Support By JOHlf M. HIGHTOWEH WASHINGTON, May 18 W Army troops which began th reconquest of Japanese-held AV tu. island a week ago have cap tared ground which apparently was the enemy's main defensa position. The ridge, lying between, th two arms ol Holts bay on th. northern side of the eastern ex tremiry of Attn, was taken after bitter fighting, a navy commi nique disclosed today. Earlier Secretary Knox had disclosed the capture of the strategic, po sition. . - i . , . : Strong Attacks Saying tha victory wa won Isit night, the communique re ported that American troop were successful "in spite of strong counter attacks by tha enemy." ; ' ' Th same communique di closed new air ' blows against Japanese, outpost ' in both tha Central ' and - South Pacific at weil as the anchor at the north ern? ead-f -their long ocean bat- ' UUa.-.---;:'-- .:; . - Soetbara Blew 1 ' " On Saturday, it related, army Liberator' heavy . bombers as : saultod ' Wake island" and that down two "out of 22 enemy Zero, lighten which sought to Inter cept. Another fighter probably (Continued on Page Two) - Retail Grocers Appeal to FDR Over CPA Prices - CHICAGO, May 18 m Tha national . association of retail grocers, stating it spoke for 380,. 000 storekeepers, appealed to President Roosevelt today for re lief from new price ceilings or dered by the office of price ad ministration. - "Retail grocers of the nation, shocked and- stunned by the ad vertised maximum prices on a number of canned foods listed in yesterday' newspapers, face a grave crisis," the association said ir a telegram' to the 'White House. : - . - "Items in . some areas are ac tually below replacement cost, and any mean actual loss to re tailers considering operating, costs, decreased , volume and other expenses. Isn't it violation; of price control act for OPA to force changes in business prac tice and to issue all regulation without consultation with, In dustry which they aifeeW" - WASHINGTON, May 18 m Representatives of small business men appealed today for relief, from controls of the office o price administration and branded the policies of that agency "eco nomic murder." ' f soon there will be no room uv Unkville cemetery for further burials,- therefore, It has been found necessary to expend pub lic funds and to purchase a new Cemetery : site for the city ot Klamath FbIIs." ; . J,, J, Keller, president of th council, presided In the absent of Mayor John-Houston, Also missing from the table wbs Coun cilman Rollln Cantralt who U la tha north. ' Circus Aikad ! Troy Cook and Paul Lee of th Junior chamber of commerce,' appeared before the council and sought permission - to sponsor Pollock Brothers indoor cirrus, to be held in the trmory, June 3, 4, S and 8. The Junior cham ber -'hopes-.' to replenish fta treasury through thojoircusy In this way eliminating any detnnd CeaMnat4 m Pa Tw