PAGE TWO THK NKWS ANT THE WERAT.TV KT.AMATIT FAT.T.S. OREGON April B. 1941 JUGOSLAVS JAB ON 1 FRONTS, REPORT SAYS (Continued from Page One) striking five miles across the Al banian frontier, had captured the town of Scutari from the Italians. In the north the Jugoslavs were reported driving toward the Hungarian town of Szeged, 100 miles above Belgrade, but this report lacked confirmation, They also were said to have seized Zara, Italian port of Jugo slavs i Dalmatian coast Italy Faces Trap Italy's battered forces in Al bania faced the prospect of be ing drawn into an inescapable trap, between the Jugoslavs on the north, the Greeks on the south and British submarines, warships and planes along the . Adriatic coast which already have made fascist communica tions perilous. The Germans inferentially ad mitted the strength of the Greek-Jugoslav resistance when they announced that since dawn Sunday the German push bad cut 20 to 25 miles into Jugo slavia and Greece, despite the fact that Jugoslavia is being in vaded across a table-flat plain in the north lacking any real defenses. At least 500,000 of these Ger man troops were in movement against the Greeks and Jugo slavs, 300,000 attacking Jugo slavia from Germany and Hun gary, 150,000 , striking down on Greece through Bulgaria and an equal number attacking Jugo slavia from Bulgaria and Ru mania. The British announced that British bombers on Sunday night carried out a strong at tack on the Bulgarian capital of Sofia as well as against Ger man troops in the Struma val ley. Both the British and Turks professed to see growing indi cations of possible trouble be tween Russia and Germany be cause of Hitler's Balkan venture, a development which would be one of the greatest victories the allies could hope for and one which might shift the entire course of the war. NO THANKS! CLINTON, Mo. UP Louis Schneider, who since 1933 has won four automobiles In radio and magazine contests, doesn't intend to use his latest award. Farmer Schneider, 62, prefers to keep his feet on the ground. Hence the For Sale tag on his airplane. SHOT IN BACK ROME. April 7 UP) One of the British parachutists who landed in southern Italy last February was shot in the back by a firing squad at dawn yes terday as a traitor after he was identified as an Italian citizen, it was announced today. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE Davenport set, per fect condition, $35; Gateleg Dining table $15. Also table model mangle $25. Phone 6540. 4-9 FOUND Pair of glasses on So. 7th. See Jack at Night Hawk Cafe, 829 So. 6th. 4-7 A BUSINESS COURSE com pleted at Interstate Business College assures you a good job at good wages. 4-7 WANTED Girl for housework. 328 So. 4th. 4-12 FOR RENT OR SALE Unfur nished two-bedroom house at 2421 White Ave. CaU between 4 and 8 p. m, 4-9 FREE DIRT for the hauling. In quire at 1727 Oregon avenue. 4098U FOR RENT Modern house, garage and buildings on half acre, close in. Inquire 2128 Orchard. 4-9 WEAR tailor-made clothes and have a fit at Orres Tailors. Our prices are never high. 4-7 ALTERING, Repairing, Clean ing. Sudden service. Orres Tailor Shop, 2221 So. 6th. 4-7 UNIFORMS of all descriptions. Order them through Orres Tailor Shop, South 6th. 4-7 FOR SALE Bed davenport, chair, radio, washing machine, oil heater, household items. Cheap. 2171 California, Ship pington road, corner Front St. 4-7 Looking for Bargains? loth Classified page Turn Gsneral Notices EXPERIENCED AUCTIONEER, livestock, machinery or what have you. California and Oregon, Clarence Brlxey, Phone 0904, Tulelakc, Calif 4-23 Hove You Seen This Man? I .i This Is Geors Parks. 35. wanted as one el the alleged killers of Dr. Salem A. David in the Buffalo lunch hold-up March II. Parka worked last fall and perhaps this winter en potato sorting crews in the southend district. Sheriff Lloyd L. Low is anxious to contact anyone who remembers Parks, worked with him, had him as an employe, or otherwise has had some contact with him. If you remember the name or the face, please get in touch with the sheriff's office. Next 100 Days Important in U. S. Defense, Claim (Continued from Page One) , ,. . to answer Questions. He sug-iint gested that the committee was trying to "whitewash" Miss Perkins and her department. Chairman May (D-Ky.) de nied that there would be any "whitewash," but advised the committee that the secretary had several important defense strike matters to attend to, 'I'd much prefer," said Miss Perkins, "to defer by testimony until two or three of these dif ficult cases are disposed of." Courthouse Records MONDAY Complaints Filed Elma Eunice Brow versus Ed win E. Brow. Suit for divorce. Couple married San Francisco, May 24, 1938. Plaintiff charges cruel and inhuman treatment, requests maiden name, Elma Eu nice Hubbard. J. C. O'Neill, at torney for plaintiff. Ruth Rodgers versun David A. Rodgers. Suit for divorce. Cou ple married November 16. 1929, Lexington Neb. Plaintiff charges desertion, asks care of minor child. W. Lamar Townsend, at torney for plaintiff. Paul W. Sharp and F. C. Adams, doing business as Klam ath Medical clinic, versus George McAnulty and Mrs. George McAnulty. Suit to col lect on note. Plaintiff demands judgment of $208.25, with inter est on sum of $200.25 at 6 per cent interest from September 18, 1940. D. E. Van Vactor, at torney for plaintiff. State of Oregon versus R. E. McGreer. Information of district attorney. Defendant charged with obtaining property under false pretenses. Marriage Application DEBRICK-SMYTH. Clarence Edward Debrick, 26. mill work er. Dairy. Native of Ohio. An nette Ora Smyth, 16, Hillde brand, native of Oregon. Justice Court Richard Lawrence D e 1 c o, drunk on a public highway. Sentence of five days suspended. Harold Eugene Wlllhite, four In front seat of car. Continued. .Leo Joseph Kent, burglary not in a dwelling. Preliminary hearing set 10 a. m. Tuesday. Bond set at $1000 cash or $2000 property. w Is applied. Yew will bt amend at tht efficiency tf thli new Initru tent. Operatic tn any HO-velt lint, AC er DC. Send SI. 00 each, check tr Money Order and wt ill ship prepaid or. If you with, we will ship C. 0. D. -and yen tan pay poctma $1.00 plus a few cents pottage. THE EMSTIRE CO., Dept. B-17 1966 Broadway, New York, N. Y. BRITISH TAKE BA T (Continued from Page One) Ababa, the capital which Ethi opia patriots surrendered to fascist Italy five years ago. ' Ethiopian "patriots" led by the Emperor Haile Selassie I played the chief role in taking Debra Markos after a long siege and "have already inflicted over 100 casualties on the enemy whose withdrawal southward is being closely followed up," the communique said. Fills Into Dust As a result of the fall ot Addis Ababa Premier Musso lini's eastern empire appeared to be falling rapidly into the African dust. British general headquarters here announced that Addis Ababa surrendered without re sistance and with only one con dition that British troops guar antee safety ot the capital's civilian population. The Duke of Aosta, Italian Viceroy of Ethiopia, sent an emissary to a rendezvous in British-held territory April 3 and the British command gave him the guarantee. The British said they believed that perhaps. 70,000 Italian i soldiers already had scattered . . :. I into the desert and mountains to attempt guerilla warfare or make a stand somewhere be tween Addis Ababa and Aduwa to the north. New York Editor Advocates Strict U. S. Censorship NEW YORK, April 7 (UP The Daily News, which today published a detailed story of the arrival of a British warship in the United States, Tuesday will publish an editor's note suggesting "to the government that it put into effect an of ficial censorship: that it issue definite orders, not requests, as to what may be printed and what may not" The statement will be run above a story headlined "Crowds View British Warship" and was described by the News mm V. V. , 1 . mS . MASSAUA NEX w..hr', L, " 7.! 1, ,L" I Chairman Norman H. Davis di Washington by Secretary of the , . ,. . m , ,.,, Navy Frank Knox commending those news organizations which withheld information on "the recent arrival of a British war ship in this country." SHOCKING WATERTOWN. Mass. OP) Next time you receive a big electric light bill smile and think well, it isn't as bad as John A. Hedin's. While fighting a blaze ln the apartment in which Hedin lives, firemen discovered someone had connected wires in an upper floor apartment In such a way that the electricity registered on Hedin's meter. The work was done 15 years ago, firemen said, and Hedin had been paying charges ever since. FUNERAL CHARLES JAMES WATAH The funeral service for the late Charles James Watah, who passed away at Piute camp on Sunday, April 6, will take place from the graveside ln the Piute cemetery at 11 a. m., the Rev. B. V. Bradshaw officiating. Friends are respectfully invited to attend. Ward's Klamath Funeral home in charge of the arrangements. RHEUMATISM SINUS, LUMBAGO ARTHRITIS, NEURALGIA Muscular aches and similar pains re lieved by our amazing electric therapeutic heat manager.' ONLY u W don't tsrs hat ytyTya tried before patent medleineo, hot water bottles, heating pado, etc our ELECTRIC THERAPEUTIC MAS 8AGER Is guaranteed tt help relievt the gains ef RHEUMATISM, SINUS TROUBLE. LUMBAGO, ARTHRITIS, NEURALGIA, MUS CULAR ACHES or we III refund your money. There Is nothing mysterious about sur unit. It It a well-known fact that heat will sen orally relievt tht various peine deteribed above. Our THERAPEUTIC MASSAGER Is the first healing unit aver mad which tnsblet you to MASSAGE tht pslnful area at tht tame time that Invigorating heat Machinists Strike In S. F.; Steel Shutdown Averted (Continued from Page One) with the union and company representatives. The Allis-Chalmers walkout, which has blocked work on $43,000,000 of defense orders since January 22, was virtually settled by the defense mediation board yesterday when manage ment and CIO union officials signed an agreement which needs only union membership ratification to become effective. The company announced it would reopen the plant to its 7800 employes tomorrow. Union leaders said they would ask members to ratify the agree ment and go back to work the same day. In New York northern soft coal mine operators and the CIO United Mine workers made ready a new contract to replace one which expired last week. Southern operators, who claim to produce 33 per cent of the nation's bituminous coal, said they would not sign. Principal UMW demands included wage increases and elimination of a north-south pay differential. RUSSIAN PACT (Continued from Page One) Balkan invasion as "barbaric" and promised that material as sistance would be dispatched to the defenders "as speedily as possible." Indications were that these munitions would be started across the Atlantic, grobably in Yugoslav vessels now in Ameri can ports, either today or by midweek at the latest The ad ministration is understood to have been preparing for several days against the hour when Ger many would launch her Balkan blitzkrieg. Included in the shipments may be the 75 millimeter guns which President Roosevelt said last week would be sent to Greece, as well as machine guns, mor tars, ammunition, bombs and other supplies drawn from the stores of the United States army. In addition to these Imple ments of war more than $1,000, 000 worth c( medical supplies were ordered sent to Yugoslavia rected the Red Cross to furnish "without delay" 10 field hospi tals, ton of medicines and blan kets and an Initial shipment of 2,000.000 surgical dressings. Aircraft were not expected to be included in the munitions shipments since Britain's RAF already is operating in the Bal kan area and has been receiving American planes. More than 100 P-40 fighters have been sent to British squadrons through the West African port of Bath urst ln the last two months. MOSCOW, April 7 (IP) The soviet Russian press published prominently but without com ment today its first accounts of the German declaration of war against Yugoslavia, with whom soviet Russia signed a friendship and non-aggression pact on Sat urday, and against Greece. Pravda, communist party or gan, devoted four columns at the top of Its foreign news page to Tass, soviet official news agen cy, dispatches from Berlin, Rome and Athens on the start of hos tilities. The soviet-Yugoslav accord was cited in Moscow newspapers yesterday as "in the interests of all people who aim to avoid the expansion of war." POSTPAID PARKING METER (Continued from rage One) free use of the pool for IS years. Tho group needs $10,000, and it is hoped 100 member ships in the swimming pool will be sold. Mayor Houston said one membership has been sold al ready. The recreation committee has an additional $10,000 in sight, it was pointed out, and It the balance can bo raised by the membership drive the pool can be constructed. The plan was accepted by the council. Information on the swimming pool membership may be ob- I tained at the office of The Her ald and News. The staff will be glad to assist In receiving mem berships for the recreation com mittee. Licensing of Juke boxes nickel music machines was dis cussed and a suggestion was en tertained that a fee of $400 be placed on each distributor, al lowing 20 machines to each with an additional $10 for each box over 20. The only exception to this rule would be a license ot $10 for each machine when iiW dividually owned. A Mr. Lewis apurared before the group to protest against what he said was too high a license for distributorships. He said he had 10 machines and that he would not be able to continue business if ho had to pay $400. He said he would be willing to pay $200 for the right to operate 20 machines, however. Lewis knew of only one man in the city who had 20 machines. Another man who said he operates three Juke boxes protested the plan would create a monopoly. No action was taken by the council in the matter, the pro posal being held over until next week. Mayor Houston appointed Le Los Mills as a member of the airport committee. Mills, who lives in the Pine Grove district, was appointed Inasmuch as the city and county are cooperating in the airport program, the mayor said, and pointed out the need for an out-of-town mem ber. Woman Killed in Motorcycle Crash BEND, April 7 CP) Mrs. Clyde E. Shaver. 21, Bend, was j of the meeting. Engineers from fatally injured Sunday in the the reclamation project here and crash of a motorcycle on which ' representatives of various Irrl she was riding with her husband j Ration districts and others will and an automobile between Sis- attend. ' ters and Redmond. District Attorney Robert H. Foley, who said he planned an investigation, reported that the motorcycle skidded and lurched into the path of a car operated by Anthony V. Roach. Sisters Mrs. Shaver died shortly after reaching the Redmond hospital Shaver was only slightly hurt. Picture frsming. Goeller's. 230 Main. Phone 6704. 4 (3tnijin wa aaaf . AIR CONOlTlOWIuD TOR HEALTH O 1 131 y V 7 It,sthesk.MssstoiTf7'-7'C' . tcW': th kid ho M to choOM 1, a 'iCiJr ai&J JL-Sl l a. mT ffr between a boxing ring and a . -T i V WMKm wedding rinf...and tha E v" $ CXV SSi9e Transport News U. P. US AGENT FOR KLAMATH FALLS F, A. Fox, general agent of the Union Pacific railroad at Sacramento, announces the ap-' polntmcnt of Mr. B. P. Costello as traveling freight and passen ger agent to represent the Union Pacific In the Klamath Falls dis trict with headquarters at Klam ath Falls. Mr. and Mrs. Costello arrived over the week-end with their 10 months -old daughter and are residing In tho Roose velt apartments. Prior (o his transfer to Klam ath Falls Mr. Costello was lo cated at Boise, Twin Falls and Sun Valley, Ida., having gone to Idaho from Reno. Nov., where he was associated with the Union Pacific in the traffic depart ment. He started his railroad career in the traffic department in the general offices of the Union Pacafic at Omaha, where he had considerable experience In freight rate matters and due to his proficiency has been pro moted to the Klamath Falls position. City Kids Ploy but Payoff Will Come City school kids were Ukins I " "V M"?d.'Jr' buVout ln ne ....... ... 7su,ii,vi 1 1 au their noses to the grindstones as usual. The pay-off will cqme at the end of the school year, when the county unit schools close earlier than the schools in Klamath Falls. Eastbr vacation will be observ ed for the entire week by the city elementary schools and Klamath Union high school. WATER PROSPECTS TOPIC AT MEETING Water prospects for the Klam ath basin and Rogue river val ley will be outlined at the South i crn Oregon Water Outlook con ference to be held at the federal j building here Tuesday. R. A. Work of the soil conser vation service will be In charge Snow surveys of ihe past year will be studied and a report prepared showing the probable I iiiviaiuiv siiuaiiun lor mv com ing ary season. Cronon III J B. Cronon, GN warehouse foreman, has been 111 for the past few days. la the City J. B. Knowlcs, Bieber yardmaster. Is in Klam ath Falls for medical attention. Boy Scouts Travel Through Klomath A special busload of liny Scouts from Sunta Barbara, Calif., stopped In Klamath Falls Monday long enough to have a tiro changed before continuing on to the Wlllainetto valley and the Oregon coast. The lads, about 30 In number and under the leadership of three scoutmasters, were on one ot their annual spring treks to various points in the west. They were members of the Carpcti teria council and will return south by way of the Oregon coast. Last year's Junket took them to the Grand Canyon. First Shipment Of Feeder Cows Arrives in Bosin The first movement of feedrr cows Into the Klamath basin Monday passed through the city en route to Lenz, Ore., via the Southern Pacific. A total of 25 cars comprised the initial shipment fur this year and were the first of 200 cars from the North Sacramento val ley. ETHEL LIEN HEADS Ethel Lien Is the new presi dent of the Primary Teachers association here. She was elected Saturday at a business meeting held In the library of the Fro monl school. Ruth Hale Is vice president and Allene Hough is secrets ry. Following the business meet ing the teachers adjourned to the Pelican grill for a social hour, with Mrs. Phil Brixner. county school supervisor, host ess at tea. Another in the growing num ber of National Labor Relations board bargaining agent elections ln the Klamalh basin will be held heie shortly, local agents i of the American Federation of Labor disclosed Monday on re- ceipt of a notice from labor board hvadquarturs in Washing ton. The newly-ordered ballot will rail for Algoma Lumber com-' pany employes to voto for the , AFL or CIO as their bargaining : agent or declare In favor of i "no union." The poll was ordered follow-1 Ing a hearing in Klamath Falls: ln early February. The order , stipulated the election must be held within 60 days of April 3. Dally Matinee 2 P. Evtnings 6:30 and LATEST WORLD EVENTS Theft of a box of groceries was reported to cily police Mon day by Mrs. A. N. Woolsvy, 135 Sheldon street. According to the report, the $5 worth of food stuffs was taken from car parked In the Safeway parking lot at Twelfth and Main Sunday night. George Tyson. BIS Donald street, reported to officers Sun day night thst his car had been stolen but Tyson later reported he had found the machine a block away. The weekend total of drunks apnearlng before Police Judge Leigh Ackerman amounted to 14. Fourteen traffic violators were heard There were no vugs. Many Eat Cake on Louie's Birthday A lot of people ate rake on Monday because It was State Police Sergeant Louis Johnson's birthday Luuie showed up with a cake ft estimated at two feet In width and 18 inches In breadth. He distributed pieces to members of the police force and the state highway department and took the rest of It to the fire detri ment, where the sergeant used to reside. Everybody declared Louie's birthday a huge success. t Minimi PHONl tUbJ HOWl tM P. M. LAST TIMES TODAY! Here Is the Picture You Will See With Your H.srtl IHDW as a nMI w msnLn Sutims RtmuunrT WCIIInlfaal 111 ininn Ml .AAV. mui-ci I II ' gl ' a- m. Hf Utfc M. Doors Open lt38 liOO Doors Open Si30 IN UNIVERSAL NEWS (r- .'U PLUS "Oeetp CneeriM" OerttM and Uteei UiUvmmI New r1.