The Klamath News WEATHER NEWS Warm High 70i Lew til Midnight II 24 hours to 5 p. m. , .00 Season to data H f ft Normal precipitation .'. . , 10.53 Last year to data , ,, , , H,tj PICTURESl live local newsptcture and en - ,v.'...g etalt provide News and Herald readers with comprehensive photograph ic service. IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND ''' Vol. J, No. 147 Price Kivo (Junta TWO SKCTIONS KLAMATH FALLS, OREGON, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1941 (Every Morning Except Monday); 3 In Th e Day's News By FRANK JENKINS TODAY aobsrer second thoughts on Hess' fantaitlc dvantura an bobbing up in k people's mindi and ara being ' pa Had by tha British cenaor. , -t TN London, Churchill postpones for a day hla promised Statement to parhanirnt on the Hess affair. - Ernest Bcvln. hard-headed British mlnlitrr of labor aayi: "I believe lli-sa fk'W to Scotland with the full knowledge of Hit ler. I'm not going to be deceived by hli flight, which ii the sort of atunt I've seen tried over and over again by totalitarian gentle men and communists. "Mesa Is not a man 1 would EVEK negotiate with." TN Los Angeles (not subject to censorship) Randolph Leigh, war correspondent and author. Who was a guest of Hess in Munich In 1836, says Hess told him then that "either England . or tha United States could be i stopped at a critical moment by QUIXOTIC gesture." Leigh adds: "Hess told ma that if England and America ever lost world leadership it would be through an excess of SENTIMENTAL ISM. If. by creating the impres sion there is a crack-up witnin Germany, he can soften Ameri can sentiment so as to retard ac tion only a tew weeks, it might be a high service." TN London (passed by the cen- sor) a "high American source" (one of these big boys who is willing to talk but unwilling to put his name to it) blames the British for casting too rosy a glow on the incident. He thinks the British are run- nine tha risk of lulling them l aelvcl with false hopes aiui-llius getting softened up for new blows by Germany. THIS writer's advice: 1 Do no wishful thinking about Hess. Do no wishful thinking about ANYTHING. In critical times, wishful thinking Is a dangerous habit. IF you are historically minded mnA l,n t th thenrv thnt what has happened once can happen again, you recau mc sun . fate of the Trojans when they took the Greek horse unsuspect ingly into their walls. XJEANWHILE. the new war storm thnt has been gath ering seems about ready to break today. London announces that Ger k many is moving Into Iraq ' by f way of French-mandated Syria -apparently with French per mission. According to the cen' sored London announcement 'they are using Syrian airfields for Luftwaffe (German air force) stopovers. That indicates they are send ing in heavy air forces and arc probably ferrying in troops by means of transport planqs. . Eden, British war minister, says full authority has been given to British forces to attack German planes in Syria (which Is French territory.) A XIS planes are reported to day as having been bomb ing Crete heavily for two days. The nazis report air attacks on Hied (British and maybe Greek) troops landing in Suda Bay (in . Crete.) ) ; ' fLD Marshal Pctain, in a .short speech to the French people says "Hitler and Darlan have lighted the road to the fut ure." (Indicating some sort of German-French deal.) He warns the French "not to draw conclusions from what is going on and stresses the "con tinuing power of France and the future of her colonial empire." More advice: Do no wishful thinking about France. France appears to be decayed and impotent. Looking Backward By The Associated Prass May IS, 1040 German tanks tear gaps In allied positions on i Meuse; French admit situation Is ' serious. British dig in at Lou vain. , May 15, 1916 Germans shift attacks to Champagne front af ter fire wanes against Verdun. CHURCHILL TO CONFER WITH DUKE ON HESS Bevin Doubts Plans Of German, Visions Threat To Britain LONDON, Friday, May 16 (UP) Tha Duke of Hamilton and Ivone Klrkpatrlck, fresh from questioning R jdolf Hess in the Scottish hospital where the former nail deputy fuehrer is being held, flew to London last night for a conference of the duke and Prime Minister Win ston Churchill. The duke is the man Hess flew to Britain to see presum ably in hope of ending the war. Klrkpatrlck. a foreign office of ficial, knew Hess In Berlin be fore the war and has spent hours questioning him. They saw Hess together Just before they took off for London, carry ing a pair of bulky, locked dis patch cases. Second Visit It was learned this was the aecond time the duke had flown to London since Hess dropped ! mi nf fh kv nn the duke's estate near Glasgow. On the previous occasion, the date of which was not dlclosed, he con ferred with Churchill and gave the prime minister details of his first talks with the former No. 3 nazi. The pair arrived at a London airfield at 8 30 p. m. Thursday and went to the air ministry and the ministry of information. They conferred for an hour with Alfred Duff Cooper, minister of (Continued on Page Two) AIRMEN MAKE Small Plane Releases 'Chutist Dangling in Air From Transport SAN DIEGO, Calif., May 15 iP Lieut. Walter S. Osipoff, 23. Akron. O., dangling for 30 min utes from a parachute caught in the tall assembly of a marine transport plane, was released head first Into a navy "hell diver" craft in a mid-air rescue today over the ocean off Point Loma. The rescue plane was piloted by Lieut. W. W. Lowrcy, 34, Dallas, Texas, and J. R. Mc Cants, 40. aviation machinist's mate, Jordan, Mont. Propeller Cuts Cords Both fliers in the rescue plane arc test pilots attached to the navy air station. Osipoff was un conscious when the two-seater "hell diver" type diver landed on North Island. To effect the rescue the navy said the pilot of the rescue ship cut the shroud cords of the para chute with the propeller. The rescue ship came so close to the transport in effecting Osipoff's release, that the propeller also cut off a piece of metal under the tail of the larger ship. Involuntary Jump The navy disclosed Osipoff's leap from the transport, which (Continued on Page Two) German-French Plea From VICHY, France, May 15 Wl Chief of State Marshal Petaln told the French people tonight "It Is up to you .... to follow me without mental reservations" after he had informed them the German-French negotiations have lighted "the pathway to the fu ture." Tho marshal assured the na tion If, "In the strict discipline of our public mentality," France is ablo successfully to carry on tho negotiations with Germany she "will be able to rise above ilier defeat and maintain her world rank as a European and colonial power." This Is the whole text of Pc tain's two-minute suddenly-announced radio message on the negotiations still continuing be tween Adolf Hitler and Admiral Jean Darlan, the French vice premier and foreign minister: "Frenchmen! "You have learned that Ad miral Darlan recently had an in Pictures Patrons on the Spot BaBaaaBaaaaaaaBMBaaBaaaBBialBMSjeB' , .-. . . - " jTaas mt , jmft If j r p .- '"-.' Newaat wrinkle in picketing was developed in San Fran cisco whan pickets of the AFL Laundry Drivers' union wars equipped with cameras to take pictures of persons entering a cleaning establishment being picketed by tha union. STRIKE THREAT OVERFOR GMC Company Promises 1 0-Cent Pay Boost To 250,000 Workers WASHINGTON. Friday, May 16 (UP) A strike of 160.000 workers in the far-flung General Motors corporation empire was averted early today when the company accepted a defense mediation board peace formula providing a 10-cents an hour in crease. , The United Automobile Work era (CIO) had accepted the form ula 24 hours earlier. Tho agreement constituted a compromise under which the union forfeited its right to a closed shop in exchange for the wage hike. The poet does not become effective until rotuiea by the union local. This is ex pected to be a mere formality. Up S50.000.000 Company officials said the wage increase would be spread out to affect a total of 250,000 employes in 89 plants and would increase their annual payroll by $50,000,000. Company acceptance was an nounced by Vice Chairman Wil liam H. Davis of the mediation board only a few hours before a strike of 61 GMC plants was to have become effective at 7 a. m. (EST). A walkout would have af fected work on $750,000,000 worth of defense orders. The board recommended that the 10-cent wage increase be in cluded in a contract covering a period of one year from April 28. the date the dispute was certified to the mediation board. The increase will be retroac tive to that date. Acceptance by the company was announced by C. E. Wilson, president, in a letter to Davis. Best Thing "After a very careful con slderation and review of the (Continued on Poge Two) Talks Bring Marshal Petain terview with the chancellor In Germany. I had approved the idea of such a meeting. "This new Interview permits us to light up the pathway to the future and continue discus sions undertaken with the Ger man government. "Today it is no longer up to public opinion, often worried because ill-Informed, to weigh our chances, measure our risks, Judge our actions. "It Is up to you, the French, to follow me without mental reservations on the road of honor and of national Interest. "If in the strict discipline of our public mentality we are ablo successfully to carry on ne gotiations under way, France will be able to rise above her defeat and maintain her world rank as a European and colonial power. "That, my friends, Is all I have to tell you today." , Hess Affair Sparks U. S. Peace Talk WASHINGTON, May 15 P) Citing the flight of Rudolf Hess as indication the time may be propitious, senatorial critics of administration foreign policy made suggestions today that President Roosevelt use his good offices now to bring about peace between Great Britain and Germany. Senator Wheeler (D-Mont.) said -that the escape of the No a man in the nazi helrarchy Je Scotland "Is bound to have a profoundly . adverse effect on the morale of the German peo ple. Opportunity Moreover, he told reporters. the incident seemed to have created "an opportunity for the president of the United States to step out and try to prevent the further slaughter of human beings." Pepper Disagrees On the other hand. Senator Pepper (D-Fla.) said he believed Hess' landing in Scotland might be part of a preconceived plan by Hitler to bring peace terms to the attention of the English without personally appearing to oner me olive branch. Battleship 'Washington' Commissioned PHILADELPHIA, May 15 (P) As bugles sounded "to the col ors" and her crew stood smartly to attention, the 35.000-ton bat tleship Washington was commis sioned today a full-fledged mem ber of the US fleet and the navy promptly labeled her "the finest man-of-war" on the uvn n Built at a cost of $70,000,000 ana completed six months ahead of schedule, the powerful dread naught raises the American bat tleship si ngth to 17. With Secretary of the Navy Knox rjartieinntinff nnH Hm.1oi. ing "the US navy should insure aeuvery oi the goods we are making for England," the secre tary's four-Starred nennnnt w flown to the main truck as the giant ships commission flag. Rear Admiral A. E. Watson, commandant of the navy yard, announced to the assembled throng the Washington would be "ready to Join the fleet by July 1" after minor details are com pleted. Just a month ago the Wash ington's sister shin Nnrlh ram. Una was commissioner at Brook lyn navy yard. They are the first battleships built by this county in 18 years and are the first of 17 ordered in the de fense epanslon program to give tho nation a two-ocean navy. GERMANY RAIDED BERLIN. Frirlnv Msv 1A mm British planes bombed several uerman cities last night, caus ing some damaffe. Thv flw against Berlin only to be turned Deck at the suburbs by anti aircraft fire, a communique re ported today. FINAL SOUTH SIXTH STREET PLANS READY Engineer To Present Three-lane Plan To Commission May 22 Final recommendation for a three-lane highway on South Sixth street will be made to the highway commission on May 22, it was announced by R. H. Baldock, state highway engi neer, on a brief stop in Klamath Falls Thursday. Baldock stated the engineer ing plan for South Sixth's Im provement is to construct three travel lanes, two 8-foot parking strips and provide space for two 6-foot sidewalks. No right-of-way acquisition will be neces sary under this program. Starts From Viaduct The improvement will start from the viaduct. The first unit will carry to the Midland road, and the second will carry to Al tamont drive or a short distance beyond that point. The highway engineer said that because of the cost of right-of-way acquisition, the construc tion will proceed on the 60-foot right-of-way now established instead of an 80-foot strip. Action Sought Baldock said that his business is to present the engineering plan to the commission and the latter body must decide when the work will be done. The Klamath chamber of commerce immediately announced it would be represented at the May 22 meeting to press for immediate action on Baldock s recommen dations. The engineer said that the commission is already aware of the . seriousness of the traffic problem on South Sixth street and the commissioners have personally viewed the street and surrounding territory. . ; , i Sidewalk Space Asked atfout sidewalks "Ton South Sixth,- he said the high way department will provide the space but that construction must be done t by abutting property owners as is the case with all sidewalk, construction. Baldock also. announced while here that further work is to -be contracted for In the early sum' mer on The Dalles -California . (Continued on Page Two). Band to Play First Concert Friday Night The city band, spic and span in new uniforms, will present its first concert of the season at 7 o'clock Friday night on the big lawn on Conger avenue. Charles Stanfield, director, has planned an interesting program for his initial appearance as head of the city band. The concert is being given In connection with the annual May festival of the Riverside PTA. Supper will be served from 5 p. m. until all are accommodat ed. Crowning of the May queen will take place at 7 o'clock with two numbers played by the band, one to accompany the first graders in a military march in costume. The public is invited to attend the supper which will include everything from hamburgers and pies to chicken and noodles. A fish dish will also be served. Tables will be set under the trees for the several hundred persons expected to attend. Mrs. C. S. Elliot is in charge of the supper, Mrs. Harlan P. Bos worth, entertainment. Following is the band pro gram as announced by Stan field: March, "Invincible America," Losey. Concert Spanish march, "Am- panto Roca, Lexidor. Overture, "Daphins," Holmes. March, . "Washington Post," Sousa. Oriental fantasy, "In a Chi nese Temple Garden," Ketelbey Grand march, "Nordic March," Leidzen. March, "Heart of America,' Pryor. Finale, "The Star Spangled Banner, Key. Through the courtesy of George F. Conners Radio Serv ice company, a public address system will be installed so that all can hear the program. Con ners has kindly donated his serv ices in the -past and Riverside PTA appreciates his efforts in its behalf. Children as well as grownups are invited to the fes tivities and to hear the concert. France Urged LONDON ACTS TO HALT NAZI IRAQFLIGHTS France Lets Planes Use Base En Route, Says Anthony Eden LONDON, May 15 (UP) The British government announced today it has ordered "full ac tion" against French air bases In Syria which are being used by German planes en route to Iraq There were reports of nazi de mands for the right to move war materials across Turkey. Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden told the house of com mons France in a "clear breach" of her neutrality is permitting German planes to use Syrian air dromes en route to aid the Ira qis in their revolt against the British. The United States has been kept "fully informed" of the new nazi menace In the Near East and "full action" has been ordered, presumably by the royal air force which stands ready to bomb and machine-gun the German planes at the Syrian air bases. New War Phases Imminent and major war de velopments in the Near East were anticipated as result of Eden's disclosure, perhaps launching the third phase of the Germans' 1941 campaign as a sequel to - the conquests in the Balkans and. eastern Libya. - Foreign embassies in London received reports'- German Am bassador Baron - i-Frenz jv on Papen returned to 'Ankara from Berlin with Adolf Hitler's orders to seek Turkey's consent for the passage of German heavy --mechanized equipment across Turkish -territory. "The Germans, according . to these, unconfirmed reports, are' seeking the use of the railroad from. Smyrna to -Aleppo which branches out to- the Mosul oil fields of Iraq- and also to Palestine.- CAIRO, Egypt, May 15 (P German bombers and fighting planes, carrying- a few techni cians, have landed in Iraq, in formed quarters said today, but no troop-carrying transports have yet arrived. Italian and German staff offi cers, including two generals, also have arrived by plane at Bagh dad, going by way of Syria, it was said in unconfirmed reports. No Opposition ' The German planes were re ported to have flown to Iraq from the Italians' Dodecanese islands and landed at Aleppo, in north Syria. From there they were reputedly distributed to va rious airfields in Iraq. It was reported here that French authorities in Syria did (Continued on Page Two) Work Halted On Honolulu Defense Jobs HONOLULU, May 15 (jP)-! Members of all construction crafts except structural iron workers halted work today on defense projects at Pearl Harbor naval base. Hick am field and projects outside Pearl Harbor's gates. H. C. Skeels. union official, said the work stoppages were a demonstration while conferences were bing held with employers over wages and working condi tions, "definitely" were not strikes and would be temporary. By The Associated Press The United Automobile Work ers (CIO) union called a strike against three Hudson Motor company plants in Detroit to day and General Motors corpor ation reported a walkout at Its Flint, Mich.. Chevrolet works de spite agreement to postpone a strike against GM until Friday. The defense mediation board early this morning, only a few hours before a strike was set for 60 plants of General Motors In 22 states, announced a postpone ment for one day In the walkout. The stoppage at General Mo tors also, spread to the Bulck plant and two Fisher body plants, with company officials estimating that upwards of 35, 000 workerg were Idle. Resist AlliaMj Talks To Hess vA'' ' 4 Mil German source reported Ru dolf Hess, who flew to Scotland aad bailed out Item army plane, made the trip in an effort to contact the Duke oi Hamil ton -(above). Informed British sources said Hess actually land ed a few miles from the duke's estate. . The duke and Iron Klrkpatrlck are reported to have had a recent talk with Hess EASTERN FIRE Philadelphia Blaze ' Destroys Lumber in Block-square Area PHILADELPHIA, May 15 (A3) Philadelphia's most disast rous fire in a decade today des troyed a block-square . Port Richmond lumber yard, half a dozen neighboring homes, and ate its way into the newly-rehabilitated Cramps shipyard be fore being brought under con trol. Loss to the lumber yard alone was estimated by firemen at well over a million dollars. A physician was killed in a traffic accident while hurrying to the scene. A score of persons firemen, spectators, and i oc cupants of the burned homes were injured, but none seriously- Michael Regan, night watch man at the lumber yard, was missing, and his employers said they believed that if he had gotten out alive he would have reported to them. ' Destroyed in the lumber yard were 22,000,000 feet of lumber all consigned to defense in dustries. The fire started in the yard. Agents of the federal bureau of investigation were dispatch ed to the scene and a spokesman said "we believe there is a pos sibility of sabotage." California Bid Low on Klamath Airport Job PORTLAND, May 15 (P) Bids for construction on tho Klamath Falls airport were opened by U. S. engineers with that of Jones and King, Hay ward. Calif., low at $279. 356.50. subject to engineers' checking. Second low among the four bids was that of Clifford A. Dunn, Klamath Falls at $339. - 339.50. To U.S. GUARDS 13 FRENCH SHIPS INEASTPORTS Liner Normandie in Group Boarded as Bill Passage Nears WASHINGTON, May 15 (UP) President Roosevelt, in an ap parent eleventh-hour attempt to forestall France-German collab oration, tonight appealed to the French people over the heads of their leaders. He asked them to resist an alliance with a power whose policy calls for "utter de struction of liberty, freedom and popular institutions' every where." He issued a formal statement only a few hours after Marshal Henri Philippe Petain, head of the French Vichy government, said that France must collabor ate with Germany in Europe and Africa and called upon the French people to follow him "without questioning" in his negotiations with Adolf Hitler. The statement was broadcast almost immediately by short wave to the French people. Hint Word Broken Mr. Roosevelt said that such collaboration would mean that the French . government had gone back on its word to the United States, given after the Franco-German armistice, and hinted that relations between the two governments would b jeopardized. Almost simultaneous with his statement,') the - treasury" 6prt ment ordered the coast guard to place armed guards aboard 13 French ships tied up in U. S. ports, including the $80,000,000 luxury liner Normandie at New York, and two at St. Thomas. Virgin Islands. The order pre sumably was Inspired by the White House. The boarding of the French ships and the president's state ment emphasized again the close collaboration between the United States and Great Britain. WASHINGTON, May 15 (UP) Coastguardsmen boarded French ships in United States harbors tonight under an order from the treasury as congressional circles predicted final passage tomor row for the bill authorizing President Roosevelt to requisi tion and use as he sees fit the more than 100 foreign ships im mobilized in U. S. ports. The senate cleared the way for the legislation today when it approved it 59 to 20 after non-interventionists abandoned plans for a showdown fight with the administration on the explosive convoy issue. The house already has ap proved the measure and only ac ceptance of senate amendments stands in the way of final en actment. F. R. Will Sign Word from the White House is that Mr. Roosevelt will sign it the moment it is received. It would affect German, Italian and Danish ships along with 13 French vessels which armed coast guardsmen boarded to night. The French ships include the $80,000,000 luxury liner Normandie. Eleven of the French vessels were in mainland ports. Two. the Fame and Bernadett, small (Continued on Page Two) Judge Brand To Move to Salem SALEM, Ore., May 15 (UP) Justice James T. Brand said to day he will take his new post on the state supreme court with in the next ten days. Justice Brand said he plans to have Mrs. Brand and his son move to Salem as soon as the Marshfield schools close for the summer vacation. News Index Agriculture Page 19 City Briefs ...Page 9 Cnmlex and Storv Pale 18 Courthouse Records ..... Page 2 Editorials Page 4 High School News . Page 10 Information .. ...Page 8 Market, Financial Page 14 Midland Empire News . Page 11 Pattern -....Page 8 Sports Pages 12, 13 1. . -,!jbj .trjr'i.-t'-