Service Men Our boys of Salem and vicinity are In uniform with Uncle Sam over the face f the globe. Follow them daily In The Statesman's 'Service Men' column. No Draft ' PORTLAND, June 15-tf) Carl Herinr. 40, Madras, chairman of the Jefferson county selective service beard, made certain he wouldn't have to draft him self. He enlisted in the navy. NINETY-SECOND YEAH Salem. Oregon. Tuesday Morning. June 16. 1942 Price 5c. No. 60 Jlciiiuiaim Miraeiai sink' &0 A ItaKaBS Claim Sea Battle; TTTT m. Tl A f - w esi st ii ii ji II a Effort on Pincers Front Salem Council Elects Member, Deletes Bonus Budget Bill Receives Two Readings, New Amendments Slated Salem city councilman Monday night cut a $50 bonus from the monthly salary of the city engi neer, made official the granting of their chambers as an office to i the city-county rationing board, sold a $40,000 issue of refunding improvement bonds, established a grass cutting fund, and over ac cusations of "railroading," elected Dr. M. E. Gadwa to the ward seven post left vacant by the resignation of James M. Clark. Snarling- occasionally over what they declared were impli cations they had not intended when they authorized a cut in next year's budget, they let pass for its first two readings an ordinance to reorganize the of fices of city engineer and build ing inspector into a joint setup under control of the engineer, but declared they wanted the matter studied before it comes to a vote two weeks hence. . Scheduled for a vote at that ' -. . . A . . I time also, when public hearpig chm the matter has been called is the " proposed city budget, passed Mon day night for first two readings. Only technicalities barred presen tation of amendments to that doc ument, which would have put back into the expenditure side of the sheet $3365 and have lopped off $4500, Alderman Lloyd Rig don stated following the session. The amendment will be presented two weeks hence, he sa in sufficient votes are assured to carry the amendment, he said, ex plaining that Ihe additions would include $1000 of the larger sum cut from the city library, $500 to the emergency fund, the money cut from the city attorney's ste nographer's salary and some as sistance in what he termed the "already short-handed street cleaning department." Deletions, he said, would be asked in the - street lighting fund, which under present conditions, he declared, . would not be utilized in full and from the bridge fund, maintain ing that the money budgeted for bridges could not be expended for them. Voting to notify an applicant for refund of the city's $5 liquor license fee that the money was for investigation in securing the license a.d not for the license it self, whicn the city has no author ity to issue, the council declared it time to establish a policy in the matter. In preceding incidents the money has been refunded, but al dermen explained that there had been other questions involved which would have made refusal to return the fee apparently a type of persecution. No personalities were involved this time, it was declared, and the policy would hitherto be in effect. In accord with its contract of last year with Architect Lyle P. Bartholomew, the councU au thorized payment for his serv ices in preparation of plans for an airport administration build ing, now fully approved but ap parently not to be built during the war. The building plans call for expenditure of $37,000; Bartholomew's pay, at 60 per cent of 5 per cent of the. total cost, would amount to $1110. The $50 allotted to the city en gineer's monthly salary from the eewage disposal bond funds for extra work involved in prepara tion for and construction of the proposed plant, now by general agreement apparently not to be built until the close of the war, was canceled from that salary without any argument, by resolu tion. Y After the council had voted per mission to the city-county ration ing board to use city Mil council chambers as an office, expenses to be borne jointly by city -and county at summer rates, Alderman L. F. LeGarie urged that the search for "more suitable Quar ters" be contirued. Stairs to the council room are difficult, he de (Turn to Page 2. Col. 4) A O i -na mm fi -n- Radio Announces Two British Cruisers Sunk in Big Convoy; Libyan Decision Said Near ROME (From Italian Broadcasts), June 15. (AP) A violent battle raged through its second day in the Mediter ranean Monday as Italian warplanes pounced upon "remain ing enemy units" of one of two huge British convoys which the high command declared had already lost two escorting cruisers and a destroyer and suffered great damage to an aircraft carrier, a battleship and three other warships in an effort to break through from the Atlantic. (British quarters in London had no comment to make on the report which so far sources.) The convoy, declared by II Gi ornale d'ltalia to be the biggest ever sent into the Mediterranean by Britain and said to consist of about 30 units a battleship, two aircraft carriers, four cruisers, 10 destroyers and 12 to 14 transports was believed bound for Alex andria or Malta. Twenty Italian planes were lost and 15 planes which rose from the two defending carriers were shot down, the Italians said. LONDON, June 15--On battlefields 1500 miles apart Adolf Hitler's armies smashed across the tortured sands of Northern Africa and Russia's wreckage-littered Ukraine Mon day night in a supreme effort, aimed eventually at closing - a vast pincers about the coveted oil fields of the Middle East for which his need grows daily. These coordinated thrusts to ward the great land bridge be tween the Caucasus and Suez, an area producing a seventh of the world's petroleum supply, ap peared to be the opening phases of a campaign on which the nazi fuehrer is expected to gamble everything for victory in 1942. In the Libyan battle, on which hangs the fate of Egypt, the Ger mans were hammering at the ap proaches to Tobruk and the Ital ians claimed they had smashed through to the Mediterranean to isolate South Africans west of Ain El Gazala, plainly a dangerous threat to the allies. There the British eighth army counter-attacked up and down the fluid desert line in a series of blows designed to thwart Marshal (Turn to Page 2, Col. 5) V. A. Douglas Changes Task County Health Officer Commissioned, Takes Civil Defense Post Dr. Vernon A. Douglas, for the past 14 years director of the Mar ion county deparement of health, has received a commission as surgeon in the reserve of the United States Public Health ser vice. He has been appointed by Dr. Fred T. Foard, San Francisco, regional medical officer, as medi- 6.'. i DR. V. A, DOUGLAS cal -officer for Oregon civilian defense. He took over his new duties Monday and his office will be located in the state civilian defense headquarters. Dr. Douglas has been serv ing as state medical officer on a volunteer basis since his ap pointment by Gov. Charles A. Sprague in March. As medical (Turn to Page 2, Col. 1) V I . i ' ' I &4 ' ' jT had come entirely from axis Scrap Rubber Starts Trek Most Adults Refuse Payment; Basements Yield Material WASHINGTON, June 15.-() Boy Scouts bearing baskets of old rubber heels, housewives with discarded hot water bottles and farmers toting old tractor tires flocked to the nation's filling sta tions Monday in a collection drive designed to help offset Japan's blows a? the United Nations rub ber supply. The campaign was started on orders of President Roosevelt, and on its outcome may depend the question of whether 3 nation-wide system of gasoline rationing will be instituted to save tires. Filling stations were author ized to pay a penny a pound for the scrap, but many people con tributed it w i t h o u t charge. "Early returns indicated the campaign will be an outstanding success," said William R. Boyd, jr., chairman of the petroleum industry war council. At New York, however, Sol Herzog, counsel for the Eastern States Gasoline Dealers associa tion, said he believed the initial collections were slow because "this was dumped on the dealers so quickly and without prepara tion they were unable to make any plans." He added few gaso line stations were equipped with scales to weigh rubber. Many communities planned house-to-house canvasses by Boy Scouts and school children to make sure contents of garrets and cellars were thoroughly combed. The Seattle Goodwill Industries, a philanthropic organization, had a head start with five tons of scrap rubber collected in recent weeks. Salvage stations reported scarcely any adults would accept payment. Children trying to earn pin money scoured neighborhoods with their play wagons. Salem service station opera tors, used to selling auto tires before rationing assumed their (Turn to Page 2. Col. 6) Plus $25,000 Tax Is Urged WASHINGTON, June 15.-() Super-levies to take from single persons all income over $25,000 after payment of regular taxes and from married " couples all above $50,000 were formally rec ommended by the treasury Mon aay wun tne declaration that ; a nation at war cannot afford "lux- urious living for a few." The idea of such a wartime tax was first advanced by President Roosevelt in his April 27 message to congress outlining his anti inflation program. Monday, Ran' dolph Paul, tax adviser to Secre tary Morgenthau, laid the specific plan before the house ways and means-committee. - Lutherans at Albany ALBANY, June 15--The 29th annual Oregon-Washington conference of the Lutheran church will open here Tuesday with delegates from Alaska, Idaho, Washington and Oregon in at tendance. Makes 0 -v- , It' v- 4 'v'" i - rx? ;t : .wiiiiiwiniiaii'iii'iii'HiiinniiiwiiiniiwiMiiif J-YrMiinniiiMimiw imimiiiiiii.n.ujiinTrfgif,- f 't.v The Martin B-26 US army bomber near the Aleutian islands. Four of the ships were- used in the attempt to drive the enemy from the area, and their hits Included one on a carrier. The B-26 is a medium bomber with a total of 3700 horse power, range of 2000 miles and speed in excess of 350 miles per hour. Reds Hold ' IT WBELGOROD lO 2QO s, t DNipERQpETRovsy f VL -4 ' ' ""N ROSTOV Y&wT ! ASTRAKHAN:;:::::;::; onATiillIiKiSus.s.R. Jp11!1! RUMANIA WMWMSjs!jooiiR feCaspiang Buiiiiiiffeia ANKARA K. p Fl mf TURKEY M ! Huge axis forces, outnumbering Russians in some instances as much 15-mile deep defenses of Sevastopol (A) on all sides in the first general offensive against the Crimean port since last December, but Soviets reported their army holding ground. The Germans were said to have driven wedges in red army lines at some points on the Kharkov (B) front by repeated onslaughts but the general advance was reported checked. Dotted arrows indicate how Germans hope to apply a pincer to Rostov, and from there strike at ports of Astrakhan and Batum. Solid arrows show where main nazi armies are now trying to strike eastward. A Reuters correspondent reported seeing three US bombers at Ankara (1), Turkish capital. Gill Praises Farm Unions Apparent Failure of Dairy Unionizing Said Pleasing MILWAUKIE, June 15. -(P) Ray W. Gill, retiring master of the Oregon state grange, Monday lauded the "apparent failure" of an attempt to unionize Oregon's dairy industry and said, "If there is to be a ceiling on farm prices there should be a ceiling on labor and industry." Addressing the C9th annual convention of the state grange, Gill said he was "pleased to note" that the attempt of John I Lewis' United Mine Workers to organize dairymen did not have the national or state sup port of the AFX. and the "reg ular branch of the CIO." Observing that unionization had failed to make much headway, he predicted that "the astonishing strength and speed with which the farm and cooperative organiza tions of the country united in op position to the movement of Mr. Lewis ought to settle this ques tion for a long time." If farmers expect to make prog ress through - unionization, they should Join the national farm groups and cooperatives, Gill said. He said the war emergency was no time for strikes or unreason able demands and urged that re strictions on labor's hours be re laxed to attain full production. "What we say of labor we say with equal: force to .business and professional men," Gill declared. Gill, master of the state grange for 10 years, will be succeeded by Morton Tompkins, former state overseer, who will be Installed Friday night as the convention closes. Secretary of State Earl Snell predicted the Pacific northwest will have great industrial develop ment which will provide larger markets for agricultural com modities. v Good News in Pacific was credited Monday with the sinking of a Japanese cruiser operating Germans on Two Fronts Lost on Carrier Warren William Page, 18-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Page of Salem Heights, who was re ported missing in action after the battle of the Coral Sea. He was on the aircraft carrier Ix ington, having been assigned to it tn May. 1941. Mrs. Wright Reelected - Mrs. David Wright was reelect ed to the board of directors of Salem school district No. 24 Mon day - after an election held that afternoon. A comparatively light vote of 74 ballots was cast with Mrs. Wright, only announced can didate, receiving 71. Two write-in candidates, Percy Cupper and L. M. Flagg, re ceived r two and one votes re spectively. Mrs. Wright has served as a director for several years and at the present time is chairman. Otto Hoppes was chairman of the elec tion board. ' as five or six to one, slashed at the Oregon Labor Said Example State Federation Opens Annual Meet; Salem Men Elected MARSHFIELD, June 15.-) Oregon State Federation of Labor leaders told their 40th annual convention Monday that Oregon labor's strikeless war production is "an example for.the nation" and the federal proposal to freeze workers In their present jobs holds an "alarming" threat. President Paul E. Gurske said not a single day has been lost be cause of strikes in the state's war industries, operated on a union shop basis. "The desirability of that type of operation and acceptance of the principle of collective bar gaining have here been dr-non-strated as the most eff erent method for industry," he said. Executive Secretary D. E. Nick erson predicted thaf the AFL wil intervene if the manpower com mission's freezing plan proposes a system "which would be unjust to union labor and would lower efficiency in the placement of labor." A flood of resolutions was in troduced during the opening ses sions. They included: 1. Treating conscientious objec tors as aliens and deserters and making; them ineligible to work for $2.50 a day. 2. Favoring the Brown amend merit to the Hatch act to permit teachers to participate in politics. 3. Making civil service status mandatory for state, county and municipal employes. -4. Seeking amendment of the nBtni loyraent compensation law to Include employers with a quarterly payroll of $150, with one or more employes. . Nickerson, in his annual report, said that "one phase of the freez ing process that of requiring j all (Turn to Fags 2, CoL S) Seven Duma W Wi in Words Scarce on New Blows Against Alaskan Invaders; Aircraft Carrier Struck JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, June 15 (AP)-Striking again at the Japanese, this time far north in the Aleutians, American air power has sunk at least one cruiser and damaged seven other vessels, including an aircraft car rier, it was officially disclosed Monday night. The blows were delivered against a Jap force striv ing desperately to break into the western hemisphere by conquering a few bleak islands far out in the north ern Pacific. While officials refrained from making any de cisive claims, it appeared third great American sea-air Vessel in Gulf Victim of Subs 5 Reported Sinkings Boost Atlantic Toll Of War to 270 By The Associated Press Deadly axis U-boats have crept Mick into-the gulf of Mexico, free from underwater raiders for two weeks, the navy reported Monday night in announcing the sinking of a large Panamanian merchant vessel. Blasting of this, ship and four others elsewhere boosted the an nounced sinkings in the Atlantic and adjacent waters to 270 since Pearl Harbor. In addition the navy authorized an announcement of the disap pearance of the New Orleans freighter Miraflores of the Stand ard Fruit and Steamship Co. The 2158-ton ship sailed from Haiti February 14 for New York and has been unreported since. She carried a crew of 34. The other four ships torpedoed were an American merchantman, a small US merchant vessel, the Norwegian tanker South Africa and an unidentified craft. At least 186 seamen were rescued from these four and the Panamanian merchantman and at least nine were killed. Only one life was lost when a submarine sank the ship in the Gulf June 11 and 58 sailors were saved. Survivors reported two quick torpedoes caused the ship to list so badly that its deck gun ners were unable to fire. After a submarine sank the small US merchantman off the south coast of Cuba June 7, one of the U-boat crewmen dived into the water and picked up a life preserver to establish the identity of the victim. The tor pedoing cost six lives and 27 men were rescued. Survivors of the larger Amer ican merchant craft sent to the bottom June 1 south of Cuba, twice out-argued would-be res- (Turn lo Page 2, Col 7) Senate Okelis Family Help WASHINGTON, June 15.-ff) The senate speedily approved Monday legislation to aid the fam ilies of service men through a system of pay allotments and gov ernment grants. The measure, w,hich now goes to the house, clears the way for the drafting of husbands and fathers who are family breadwin ners , if army and navy .heeds should require it. One of its pro visions, however, authorizes the president, to direct draft boards to take into consideration a man's family relationships . when the question, of Inducting him arises. Sunday' Weather Weather. ; forecasts withheld and temperature data delayed by US army request Sunday's max. temp. . 74, Bin, 52. Elver Monday, JL ft. arsniBS JL ed; 3rd to many authorities that a victory was in the making to add to those which only re cently repelled the enemy, in de structive routs, from Australia in the southwest Pacific and Midway island in the mid-Pacific. Breaking a three-day silence on Japan's attempt to gain a hold on the rocky islands at the tip of the Aleutian chain, a navy communique and a report which came indirectly from Lieut. Gen. Henry H. Arnold, army air chief, gave this accounting of Japanese losses: Sunk One cruiser. Damaged One aircraft car rier, three cruisers, one destroy er, one gunboat and one trans port. (The damage to several of these vessels was severe.) Army and navy aircraft, ham pered by fog and foul weather, are continuing their attacks, the communique said, and the indi cation was that more successes might be expected. So far, no American losses have been re ported; - "Except for these continuing air attacks upon the enemy land ing parties and their supporting naval contingents, the general situation in the Aleutian islands appears unchanged," the navy declared. This statement was interpreted authoritatively to mean that no word had come through of fur ther Japanese encroachments on Aleutian territory in addition to those reported last Friday. It was stated at that time that small-scale landing had been effected on Attu island, a rocky (Turn to Page 2, Col. 2) HOW WAS FATHER'S DAY CONCEIVED? It was a Mrs. JohnJSruce Dodd, 'way back in 1 909 in Seattle, Washington . . , seems her Father was a swell guy In addition to the everyday kind of goodhearte dness he shared with most Fathers . . . his concessions that the living room rug was no ash tray, and his yield ing of the family horse-and-buggy to the kid3 for a date (sometimes!) . . he must have had something" unforgettable, singular.'or even great ql? out hirh. Looking back,-after she was married. "Mrs.- Dodd resolved to" ho h o r" her Jather with something no i one seems to have.mought of before . . . ix national holiday " dedicated, to r ALL Fathers. - So t he r e you have it ... In 1909 Fath er's Day came into being. in Making If