alb iirai'iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiUilllililllllllllillliiliill'U DiaCHOU IliSFi il,l.i,:lii.iiii!i'tni.i: On 5-mlnute blait on sirens and whistles it the signal lor blackout In Klamath Falls. Another long blast, during a black out, ( a ilgnal lor all-claar. In irecau tlonary parlodi, watch your street llghti. June J High 84 Low 91 Precipitation aa of Mar 28. 1143 Stream year to data II. IS Lait year 13.08 Normal..... 11,01 ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES n- ir"" in-iTv-rry rirr innrinni-njgru"Lnj AnjyirLrifiji PRIOR FIVE CENTS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1943 Number 9815 HIM 'USU'i Tl AMVilill'l .s...t. i.i. !- " n n A By FRANK JENKINS COMETIIING new is added to tho news picture today. There's a revolution of somo sort In Argentina which seems to be led by tho nrmy mid to be directed at Dictator-President Castillo, who has been, both pro axis and hiird-boilvd social re actionary, TT'S Impossible to sny as this Is wrltton whether tho revolution hos grown out of tho pro-axis war issue or tho hurdbollcd ro actloniiry Issue, The two, however, nrc so close ly related thut tho result on the Owur slluiition will probably bo tho sumo in either event, us the bis landowners and Argentine aristocrats who have been buck ing Custlllo lean toward tho axis while tho generally antl-Castlllo middle classes (if thcra can ba (aid to be a mlddlo class in Ar gentina) and the workers have been mora sympathetic with our Ids. : ARGENTINA Is tho ONLY Western Hemisphere nation retaining diplomatic relations With tho axis, and as a natural result has become a hotbed of German, Italian and Japuncso spies and propagandists, (Argentina hasn't bcon deflu " ftely and flatly pro-axis. Under . Castillo, hor neutrality, he been friendly toward Germany as our 0 neutrality before Prnrl Harbor was friendly to Britain.) . AS this Is wrltton, Castillo Is said to havo fled Buenos Aires on a gunboat and tho rev olution (or revolt, or flare-up whatever It may turn out to be) is believed to bo succeeding. THE battle of the Yangtze river Is said today to have turned into a ROUT of tho Jap forces, which nro being battered ceaselessly by American and Chinese AIRMEN. ' Tho Chinese are reported to day to be taking towns EAST of tho Important north-and south Canton-Hankow railroad, which Is moro than 100 miles DOWN the Yangtzo from tho Jap bnso at Ichang. This, if true, Is highly Import Quit, as It means that by cutting tho river transport lino (rail roads and highways arp few and far between In this part of China) tho Japs at Ichang may be cut off. Thcra aro Indications that tho Chlncso may bo headed toward the big air baso at Changsha, which tho Chinese built for US to use against Japan but which the Japs took. THERE'S nothing much but rumors from Europo today. Tho rumors, however, havo taken a now turn. Yugoslav General Mllmllovic's guerrillas aro said to have surged up In such forco as to havo com pelled tho Germans to abandon ,1200 square miles of territory. Greek guerrillas havo captured Qui Italian-hold vlllago in the Pindus mountains whcro tho Greeks made their epic stand . something over a year ago), kill ing 300 Italians and taking 80 prisoners. London today reports the Jews rising In Poland, with TER ( RIBLE consequences to them (Continued on Pago Two) Anti-Strike Measure Back In Senate After House O.K. WASHINGTON, Juno 4 (fl) Legislation providing for prison sentences and fines for porsons instigating or leading strikes in overnmont-operatod plants was Qmsscd today by tho house and sent back to the senato for ac tion on amendments. , Tho legislation continues ma jor provisions of the senate-approved Connolly bill and a sub stitute mcasuro drafted by the houso military committee ' It provides that anyone liisll 4 fating a strike ' or directing - Oram BRITISH DARE UNHEEDED ITALTSFLEET Pantelleria Shelling Continues Without Opposition By ROGER GREENE Associated Press War Editor For tho fifth time in five day a British challenge to tho Ital ian fleet to come out and fight was underlined today with the dlsclosuro that allied warships twice again had bombarded the "Italian Gibraltar" at Pantel leria, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's hcadquortcrs announced that al lied naval forces shelled. the key bastion Wednesday night - and renewed the assault at dawn yes terday. Allied naval salvos had pre viously battered tho Island's de fenses Sunday night and Tues day aftornoon, and on Wednes day a forco of British and Greek destroyers boldly sallied Into Italy's own coastal' waters to blast an axis convoy off Capo Spartlvento, on the toe of the boot-shaped Italian peninsula,"1 Forgotten- Boasts . Despite these five attacks, there was still no sign of Italian mon-o'-wor venturing forth from their harbors, although axis broadcasts for the past several weeks have boasted that the fas cist fleet was ready to steam in to battle at any moment. . Gen. Elsenhower's command said allied warships bombarded Pantelleria harbor and shore bat terics in tho latest assaults, en countering "slight retaliation" which caused neither damage nor casualties. Synchronized with the naval (Continued on Pago Two) Germans Foresee "Largest Scale" Battles Ahead LONDON, June 4 (IP) While Italy tensely awaited an Invasion by allied forces, a Berlin broad cast told its overseas listeners todoy tho German army wos "proporlng for battles on the largest possible scale." Referring to tho "assumption'! that tho Germans would remain on tho defensive in Russia dur ing tho summer an assumption which arose from a recent broadcast to German listeners by Lieut. Gen. Kurt Dictmar, nazi military spokesman a Ger man radio overseas commentator said: . "The base of Europe is so strong and wide that it permits not only defensive but offonsivo actions." The Gorman general staff is keeping its plans secret, the com mentator added, but he asserted that several now. divisions had been created and that tho pro duction of arms In Germany was exceeding expectations. "So wo con conclude," he said, "that Germany Is preparing for the coming battles on the largest possible scale" strike or lockout shall face a maximum penalty of $8000 fine and ono-ycar imprisonment, In addition, it bars the use of union funds for benefit payments to workers on strike but docs not Interforo with tho right of an In dividual to refrain from work, " Tho measure represents tho consolidation of a bill drafted by Representative Harness (R-Ind.) and Representative Smith (D-Va.) following the general lines of the Connolly and the houso mili tary measures. Ousts Casta Father? 2 1 1st Charles Chaolln. movie com edian, wu e-iaraed In a civil suit with being the father of the unborn child of 22-year-old Joan Berry. (Story on page 2), . E State Evidently Seeks To Show BlyMan : " Wounded Self Testimony evidently Intended to show that William Titus shot himself on tho morning of Feb ruary 15 and was not wounded by his wife, was brought out In court Friday morning by the prosecution. Titus had stated to Sheriff Lloyd Low at tho hospital on the afternoon of tho alleged homi cide that Mrs. Titus had shot him first, that he had then grab bed the gun and shot her. Ho Is being tried for first degree mur der. Dr. Joseph Becman, of tho crime detection laboratory in Portland, testified that he had conducted a minute examination of the gun used in the alleged shootings and of a portion of door casing sent to him by the district attorney. He said he found an Indentation In the shapo of a half moon in the door casing and also discovered that eight fragments of wood wore missing from the plaque. On the bottom on the butt of the shot gun eight wood fragments of the same size were found to be im pressed. The testimony apparently was intended to siiow tho gun had (Continued on Page Two) Blast at Portland Injures One Man PORTLAND, Juno 4 (VP) An explosion early today in a core oven at tho Columbia Steel Casting company plant here se riously injured one man, de stroyed tho oven and damaged tho building and other equip ment. Plant officials estimated damage at $10,000. Worth Blackburn, worker, suffered severe face and head injuries. Investigators said a defective burner probably allowed an ac cumulation of gas which ex ploded when tho oven was light ed. Ouster of Seattle Police Chief Asked SEATTLE, June 4 (P) Scat tic's controversy over vice con ditions was in the laps of the city councllmon today after Mayor William F. Dovln yester day issued an order for the dis missal of Pollco Chief Herbert D. Kimscy and asked tho coun cil to concur. Council approval Is necessary before tho chief can bo ousted. In this report to tho council the mayor charged Chief Klmsoy with being "either unablo or un willing to manage tho police de portment in an .effective man ner." J rl i 1 Do S I Isolationist Regime Cracked in Near Bloodless Move By CHARLES H. GUPTILL BUENOS AIRES, June 4 (IP) A military government headed by Gen. Pedro Ramirez, former minister of war, appeared today to havo supplanted the reaction ary and isolationist regime of President Ramon S. Castillo, as the result of a swift and rela tively bloodless coup, Castillo and most members of his cabinet iled aboard the gun boat Drummond at dawn as some 7000 troops under a Ramirez as sociate, Gen. Arturo Rawton, marched on the capital. Before the flight, Castillo sign ed a decree appointing Gen. Ro dolfo Marquez chief of "the forces of repression" charged with suppressing the move and then headed up the Rio de-la, Plata to tho naval base at Rio Santiago. - ---w .-1- i ! Crowds Cheer" There was no immediate state ment of the new council's policy. but crowds cheered the troop movement with cries of "Long live democracy" and "Long live ireedom." Castillo had based his whole foreign policy on continued main tenance of relations with all bel ligerents, making Argentina, the only nation in the western hemi sphere to keep open channels to Rome, Berlin and Tokyo. The council is made up of tnreo men, Ramirez, Gen, Juan Giovanclll and a naval officer who was not immediately identi fied. It appointed General Raw son minister of war. From Rio Santiago, Castillo issued a message to the nation broadcast by official and com mercial radios, declaring his in tention to resist the establish ment of a military regime. Loyalty Asked He asked the armed forces of the country to show loyalty to (Continued on Page Two) Airlines Plan 100-Passenger Plans After War PORTLAND, June 4 (IP) United Airlines contemplates coast to coast service after the war with 63-ton transports' of 100-passengcr capacity, District Traffic Manager W. R. Thlgpen said today. The four-cngincd craft, he said, would make coast to coast flights with only one stop. Mail Piles Up at Portland Terminal PORTLAND, June 4 (IP) Stacks of mall sacks continued to pile up in Union station to day as the Northern Pacific Terminal company reported a critical shortage of mall hand lers. Tho staff of 70 handlers, members of the railroad broth erhood, went on a 48-hour work week Tuesday, their spokesman said, to safeguard health after working as high as 90 hours weekly to keep up' with in creased movement of mail. Born ? Foe A cattalo was born today on Hie unique Poo valley ranch of Chct Barton. Barton explained the strange newcomer is tho offspring of an Angus bull and a buffalo cow. Ho said there have been cases of crosrins Herctords with buf'r' , . . he does not know ARGENTINE CO I N N NEW HANDS First Lynn Boyeroft, director of Lolcama. tin can salvage committee, are shown on the first carload ath Falls. This tin was collected Klamath's Per Capita Income Mounts to 7 ( $7568 M'4ir Far Over National Figure On- the average everyone In Klamath Falls had $1568 to spend in 1942, according to a nationwide, survey of effective buying income made ' by Sales Management, and pleased, local ly by Ihe' research department oJ -the-Oreftm Mutual Life In surance " company; ; This- figure is unusually high when. . com pared to the national per capita income' which ' averaged only $871.. Per capita income for 17 major cities in Oregon was $1563, and for ' the state as a whole $1186. Oregon ranks fourth among states where greatest gains in effective buying income have oc curred since 1939. The highest states are Washington, Maryland, California, Oregon, Alabama, and the District of Columbia, Improvements On Klamath Air Field Slated SEATTLE, June 4 UP). The civil aeronautics authority said today ' that bids will be' opened tomorrow at the army engineers' office in Portland for a 2000- foot extension to a. runway at the Klamath Falls,' Ore., airport. ' Lane Wilcox, CAA airport su pervisor for this region, has been in Klamath Falls several days in connection with the forthcoming work. - - -- The extension, it is understood, is to be added to the main run way at the airport Wilcox and his associates con ferred with the city airport com mission Wednesday morning, and later discussed with the county court the matter of closing the short length of road at the north end of the field. . . Removal of obstructions in the vicinity of the airport was plan ned at the conferences. 1 Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE R. H. E. St. Louis 4 7 0 New York 6 10 1 Ostermueller, Caster (7), and Hayes, Ferrell (9); Chandler, Russo (9), Murphy (9), and Hems ley. (10 innings). R. H. E. Chicago 4 4 2 Boston 3 8 0 Ross,' Maltzbergcr (7), and Trcsh: Lucicr, Terry (8), and Partce. Valley Cattalo of ny other in which an An gus and a buffalo have mated. The rancher said he had avoided disturbing the dark youngster and has not yet learned its sex, Barton's ranch menagcrlo has Included various unusual animals, including ostriches, kangaroos and Japanese deer. Can Load to Leave Klamath elviliarl services for Klamath Falls, Norma Earnest and Scoity In the recent salvage campaign I Oregon also ranks fourth In the country in the highest retail sales on a per' capita basis for 1942. The state's total retail sales in 1942 were 58 per cent of the effective buying income. : 'Total dollars wortbiof. effect' Uve; buying, income in- Klamath Falls last year amounted to Sior 879,000, or 2.05 per cent of the total for the state. Retail sales transacted equalled $28,643,000, or 3.92 per cent of the total re tail sales volume for. Oregon. Effective buying income in T CHUNGKING, June 4 (P) Chinese forces have smashed in to the Yangtze port of Itu after annihilating 2000 Japanese troops in the area and have cap tured Nahsien on the northern shore of Tungting lake, a ' Chi nese high command communi que announced, today. - The-report-said the battle on the upper Yangtze had turned into a rout of enemy forces. which were battered ceaselessly by American and Chinese air men. Fierce street fighting was reported in progress in Itu, 22 airline miles below the main Japanese base of Ichang.. In addition to capturing Nah sien, - 95 miles soutneast oi itu, the Chinese were reported to have retaken 10 other towns in the Hupeh-Hunan border region east of the Canton-Hankow rail way. All O. K. Between Him and Stalin, Roosevelt Says WASHINGTON, June 4 . &) President Roosevelt said today that the understanding and ac cord between him and Premier Joseph Stalin of Russia is ex cellent, in commenting at a press conference on the return of his special emissary to Moscow, Jo seph E. Davies. . Mr. Roosevelt, referring to the soviet head as Marshal Stalin,' said Davies had brought back a letter and that the un derstanding and accord between the president and Stalin . is .ex cellent. That was all he said about it. and reporters did not press him for details. OPA Desk Number Plan Given Up WASHINGTON, June 4 (W) A six-page memorandum which said: The drawers of all stenog raphers are to be numbered as follows: 1-2-3," has been re called, OPA officials said yes terday, because "it was folt that the public would not under stand- desk proccduro and the OPA would be held up to ridi of salvage tin to leave Klam carried on in the city schools. Klamath county, which contains 3.54 per cent of the state's popu lation, totalled $50,709,000 at the end of the year.- This figure represents 4.01 per-cent of the total for. Oregon, and .044 per cent of u. S. buying income. County retail sales reached $37, 306,000,' or 5.1 per cent of the volume of retail sales transacted in the state. " Klamath county population' is highly . urbanized (40.7 per . cent living :- in :, urban', sections as against 17.1 per cent on farms.) The remainder live in towns and villages under 2500. As is true of almost the entire Pacific coast region, the median (Continued on Page Two) - U. S. Casualties In Attu Conquest Now Set at 1535 WASHINGTON, June 4 (P) Conquest of Attu in Aleutians cost the United States. 1535 army casualties ' including 342 men dead, 1135 wounded and 58 missing up to midnight Tues day, the navy reported today. The deaths represent a ratio of about five Japanese killed for each American lost in the battling over the snow covered crags and tundra. - Known Japanese deaths, the navy has said,' total 1791 exclu sive of enemy soldiers killed by air bombing and naval bom bardments and cremated or bur ied before American troops took the island. Small groups of Japanese still were roaming auu, narrassing American troops on Tuesday, the navy said. . Dempsey Fists Flew After Bedroom Scene, Court Tale By CYNTHIA LOWRY ' WHITE PLAINS, N., Y June 4 (ff)The famous fists of Jack Dempsey, the old Manassa maul er of the square ring, struck twice on Benny Woodall, named by Dempsey as co-respondent in his divorce suit against Mrs. Hannah Williams Dempsey, a witness testified today. Lawrence Simeon Hutchens, who gave his address as 1742 West 37th place, Los. Angeles, said he was one of the group of detectives who were with Demp sey in a raid on Mrs. Dempsey's Los Angeles apartment in No vember, 1942, and told a su preme court referee that he saw Dempsey strike Woodall. Hutchens, a gray-haired, slight, elderly man, testified that Woodall sat on the edge of a bed in Mrs. Dempsey's bedroom and did not say a word when Dempsey told his wife: , "This is a nice way to treat me. I'm out trying to defend my country and you're running around with a rat like that." 1 Before Hutchens took the stand, Miss Hazel McNecl, . an LS WLB TACT GS Miners to Be on Job Monday, Deadline ' Set by FR . ' . WASHINGTON, 'June 4 VP) John L.' Lewis called upon the half million miners in his union today to return to work on Mon day President Roosevelt's strike deadline and at the same tfrrie ' accused the war labor board of "abusive tactics." i . c Thus apparently ended a strike throttling the vast soft coal in- . dustry, Lewis telling the mine workers' policy committee:'- : ' "The miners and their leaders, as patriotic Americans, placed the law and the national interest above' their own ungranted and long deferred claims for justice and equity. They have made . and will continue to make their sacrifice to the winning of the war." - - .- : ' He-addressed the policy com, mittee within a half hour after , he disclosed a letter to Secretary ; icites saying ne wouict recom mend "resumption of work. on Monday. . ' . - In a suddenly announced re treat from his adamant stand.' the UMW chief disclosed. he.haa. , writteriyHis reply "to 'a . letter ; from Secretary Ickes, the fed eral rnine bassi" '; " -.' ' , . "I have your-letter of June 4."-' "I have no. power- to direct. I shall,- however,: recommend to the policy committee oi tha United . Mine Workers of America that it direct the mine ; workers to return to work on ' Monday, June. 7. V ; "Sincerely yours,. ' -.. John L. Lewis." - ; ; Ickes- letter -had said: "As ' operator of ; the- coal mines on behalf of the. United- States gov . ernment, I expect that you will i direct the members of the United , Mine Workers of America to re (Continued . on Page Two) . Tacoma Lumber Workers Back After Dispute ... TACOMA,' June 4 . (IP) The. St. Paul and Tacoma Lumber company mill here opened to day - after a four-day stoppage by an estimated 1200 worker in a dispute over vacation pay... The company's camps were; scheduled to open Monday. - Announcement of the appar ent end of the strike came at the conclusion of a meeting of members of the CIp-Sawmlll and Timber " Workers .union.' The union and company said they had: agreed to make no public statements concerning , the walkout settlement, i associate' of Private - Detective Ned H. Peterson of Los Angeles, whose testimony' was yesterday's sensation in. the case, testified ; in corroboration of Peterson' story of a raid on Mrs, Demp sey's apartment. ' Peterson,' who yesterday told the court that he, Dempsey and two other detectives found Mrs. ; Dempsey in bed in a Los An geles apartment and saw Ben- ( ny -Woodall, named by Dempsey as a co-respondent, running from (Continued on Page 'Two) - You're Invited to Free Circus Show! -,. 11 to 1 on Saturday 8th and Main Street! ' - Polack Bros, Animals Ap pearing for Kiwanli June Bond Drle .