Light Rules The western defense com mand's new refutations gov erning outdoor lighting , an nounced In today's States man, are available at the Statesman office for study. Save to Win Sixty old toothpaste tubes? TbeyU prerlde ail. the tin needed for solderin elee Irleal connections la Fly big Fortress. Save scrap for Uncle Sam. POUNDQD 1651 NINETY-SECOND YEAH Salem, Oregon. Thursday Morning. August $. 1942 Fries 5a No. ICS German mw SI Strive .New TTTi or Big Plane Doublin g Sought: Decision Left to Military Staffs in Wftt riaii ; Washington, Aug. s-p The w a r production board's committee on cargo plan js has recommended the doubling, at least, of cargo plane production, Chairman Donald M. . Nelson announced Wednesday, but he left squarely VP to the military chiefs of staff the decision wheth er to cut down combat plane pro duction to make the increase pos sible.' . - Three major recommendations called for: 1. An increase in cargo plane output to at least twice the pres ent program, through an increase in : present procurement, and through conversion of certain bombers to cargo type. 2. Further impetus to develop ment of longer-range land and sea planes. 3. A "large increase" in facili ties, for the manufacture and transportation of aviation gasoline to meet the needs of a greatly ex- "If we now undertake to build a substantially larger number of cars planes than is already provided for In our schedule, we must of course cot down the somber of some other airplanes In onr program," Nelson said In releaslnr a direst of the snecial committee's report. of staTfs to make, since it is es sentially a matter of high military board will continue to study the situation to see whether it is go ing to be possible to expand our production oi cargo pianes through new facilities or by using other industries such as shipbuild ers." - In the latter connection, Nelson . said -the committee's study indi cated the giant Martin Mars 70 ton seaplane would be "very suc cessful." . This is the type which Henry J. Kaiser, west coast ship- . building wizard, has proposed to . build in shipyards. - Fifty per cent of all military tnnniin nul! Va oViinruw" nvor w r - seas by air, in the committee's opinion, if .sufficient sky freight ers were available. Twenty per cent of all non-military commodi- . ties which must be exported from the United States in the next year. including machine tools, concen trated foods, chemicals, surgical (Turn to Page 2, CoL 7) Power Change Would Save State Much - The . state board of control has under advisement a new proposal from the Bonneville admin istra , tion, under which it would deliver electric current for all state pur poses in Salem through facilities , of the Portland General Electric company at a price of approxi mately five mills of less per kilo watt hour, plus the cost of deliv- ery to be adjusted later. State Treasurer Leslie M. Scott reported that the state's electric consumption here last year totaled 8.500,000 kilowatt hours at an. av erage price of 11 4 cents. He de clared that the new proposal, if accepted, would result in a sub stantial financial saving to the state. Two plans previously were of fered by the Bonneville adminis? . tration. under which the state . would construct its local transmis 1 sion system. Under one plan the cost of the , transmission system was estimated by Bonneville ad ! ministration" officials at $122,500 and under the other plan $77, 500. ,-. .. Under these proposals the Bon nevflle , administration J, estimated savings to the state ranging from 123,000 to $32,000 a year, depend ;.. Ing upon which plan was accepted and the term of years over which the" service was calculated. ; Scott said the board of control probably would take some. defin ite action in connection with the electric situation in the near fu- " ture. - V . - ': The plan now under considers tion is similar to that in operation at Canby and Forest Grove., For Planes J LT. GEN. HENRY H. ARNOLD Army to Push Cargo Craft West Salem in Housing Area Eligible Area Within Two Miles of Bus for Commuters West Salem is included in the defense housing area "commut ing area" in WPA language re cently announced as approved for Salem through its proximity and bus service to Camp Adair, Fol- ger Johnson, federal housing ad ministration director for Oregon, said here Wednesday night. Giving the first definition is sued as to boundaries of the hous ing area, in which permission to build or remodel housing units for defense workers may. now be obtained, Johnson said eligible sites are those .which lie within two miles of the point from' which bus for Aaair may be boarded, That definition left It up to the Salem chamber of commerce transport committee as to how large the "commuting area" soar be. West Salem is included in the construction approval area be- (Turn to Page 2, CoL 2) Morse Urges Wage Control WLB Stabilization Said . Impossible With no Present Limits , WASHINGTON, Aug. 5 -(ffV The war labor board, applying its wage stabilization formula, re fused a general wage increase Wednesday to 2750 General Cable company employes in New Jersey and advocated government control over all general wage increases, The board's present authority extends only to disputed wage de mands brought before it. "It should be recognized by all concerned," said Dean Wayne L. Morse, who wrote the opin ion, "that the , wase formula adopted by the board will not and can. not result In wage stabilization if it is limited in its application to wage disputes which come before the war la bor board for final determlna tion. If wage stabilization is to be accomplished, the terminal limits set forth in the formula must be applied universally and uniformly (Turn to Page 2, Col. 6) Murray Asks Strike Halt CHICAGO, Aug. S CIO Chief Philip Murray Wednesday urged the American Federation of Labor, to cooperate with the Con gress of Industrial Organizations in a program, .designed to halt jurisdictional strikes for the dura tion of the war. Murray stated he was deeply concerned by work stoppages caused by such differences and recalled that, in a letter to AFL President William Green last Sun day, he had proposed the creation of a joint CIO-AFL committee, with an impartial arbitrator, to hn.i .it riMmnai between the two ' groups. A; Murray defined his views in a speech before the . annual con vention of the United Automobile, Aircraft and'Agricaltural Imple ment Workers union (CIO). Tuesday's Weather 7 Tuesday's max. temp. SI, mis. 9. River Tuesday -3.2 ft By army request, weather fore easts are withheld and temper ature data delayed. - lnlia Wbulr Be Atff Demi Made; Cripps .Declares For Keeping Law BOMBAY, India, Aug. The working; committee of the I all-India - congress, nearing i a showdown with the British em pire on the issue of independ ence, Wednesday adopted a res olution serving notice that India would become an ally ot the United Nations if granted free dom. The working committee's 1200- word resolution demanded the "withdrawal of British power so as to enable India to become an ally of the United Nations and fight aggressors." But, the resolution warned,, the congress party was prepared to launch a civil disobedience strug gle if necessary to gain independ ence. The working committee also drew up a resolution to be pre sented to the full committee meeting here Friday recommen ding that if Britain rejects demand for Indian Independ ence full powers to lead a civil disobedience movement be riv en to Gandhi. ' The draft of the resolution dealing with India's role against aggressor nations in the event of independence said the government 'will wholeheartedly and unre servedly declare itself on the side of the United Nations, agreeing to meet the J apanesa or .any oth-s er aggressor ; with farmed resist ance." LONDON, Thursday, Aug. 6Jf) Sir Stafford Cripps, . whose mis- j sion to settle the Indian problem failed last spring, declared m a I statement Thursday that Britain intended to "preserve law and or der" in India until the war ended. After the war, he said, the In- dian people will be given an op- portunity to attain the self-government which Indian national ist leaders are demanding be granted them now and for which they are preparing to launch a civil disobedience campaign. "We make no threats," Cripps wrote, "but we must assert un-j equivocally our duty to India, to great minorities and to the Unit ed Nations to preserve law. and order until hostilities cease and we can then give as we have. promised . the fullest opportunity for attainment of self government by the Indian people. "It is not yet too late for the Indian people to decide upon rap id and ordered progress. - "I can assure them that the British people are as determin ed upon self government for India as they are themselves. We ask the great masses of In dia to be patient for a short time longer while the cause of freedom Is being fought out, not because we want to delay but because the hard facts of war make a complete change in possible at the moment. "I sincerely hope that we shall all of us face these difficult ques tions with calmness, sincerity and mutual trust because I am con vinced that if both peoples so ex ercise their - will to solve our problems there need be no vio lence. -V.-v "India has indeed a great and free future before her in which she can make her special contri bution to the well-being of man kind.' The first and indispensible part of that contribution is to work with the United Nations for the defeat of fascism and of bru tal aggression." - PrintlW Metals Called in WASHINGTON, Aug. 5.-(ff) The government moved Wednes day - to round up critical metals m newspaper, maga- 2.11 j C ituu vuki juuiuiit catauuaii- ments by forbidding the sale of new metal to those possessing ob solete printing plates. - - The war production board or der, effective October 1, requires that printers and publishers who obtain new metal must certify on their purchase orders that they do 'not have; any obsolete plates m their possession. Uia equip ment should be sold to scrap i dealers for use In war production, I WPB said. - Sapper. Dismantles Nazi Gun in T J v J' I -V An unidentified New Zealand sapper (engineer) b shown la this sound-photo packing a captured Ger man gun with cotton to 'ruin the field piece beyond repair In the event that it should be recaptured by the enemy. The sapper is performing a most Important task of desert warfare in which every piece of equipment counts and is repaired over and over again. This gun is apparently one of the nasi SS-mm. pieces that proved so effective In the early stages of Marshal Rommel's spectacular attempt to capture Cairo.' Raid Wardens Enforce Dimout Willful Cooperation Sought; Fines up to $5000 Provided L A J. SAN FRANCISCO, The. regional office of civilian de- fense Wednesday marshalled the west coast's army of air raid wardens for a new task that of affecting and enforcing a nightly dimout ordered . to begin August 20 the length of the -Pacific sea board. Meeting in special session after Lieut Gen. J. L. DeWitt of the western defense command pub- lishing 9,000,000 people, the re- gional OCD's civilian defense board recommended "plans and policies" to subsidiary defense councils in the three coastal states. The board, headed by James C. Sheppard, regional OCD director, has been designated by General DeWitt as the agency primarily in I charge of securing general corn- pliance with the proclamation. As a first step in its mission, the board arranged to send regulations to all state, county and city de fense councils within the 102,000 square mile restricted lighting area, explaining the dimout .order in detail and outlining .the part local councils are expected to play in its enforcement. Sheppard said In a statement that the councils were being in structed emphatically to obtain voluntary cooperation, wherever possible. Air raid wardens are to be trained Immediately In (Turn to Page 2, Col. 3) Jn Army in Aga V t .. ; r- : i - -r sssnBsassssBossdSssaMssoMSMMnalt jBwrmMMiM Allan G. Carson, Salem attorney war veteran and republican nominee for state senator. whs- Wednesday received telegraphic instructions to report to Miami Beach, Fla- for Induction as eantain In the ' US army air corps. He served as a first lieu tenant in four different army divisions during the World war with the 1st, th, tTtli and 42nd. He plans to leave for his post within a few days. For additional news about men from Salem and - vicinity In the armed forces, turn to pace five of today's Statesman. ImpcnrplMt Held at 500 To Save Time WASHINGTON, Aug. 5-h The war production board Wed nesday restricted imports into the United States to some 500 items xwu-aa--.,emtrgency ship ping priorities, Jlst? Only items on this list will be assigned shipping space on vessels controlled by the war shipping administration and bound for - the United States, with minor exceptions, WPB announced. In instances where shipping .space has' not been entirely taken up by listed goods, im ports of certain low-rated car goes, such as bananas, Scotch whisky and rum, will be per mitted from the Caribbean ar ea, United States territories and possessions, the British Isles, Canada and Newfoundland. The emergency priorities list ing covers such items as oils, wool, sugar, copper and other ores, coffee, hides and skins, rubber and spices. The war shipping administra tion will limit cargoes carried on its ships to save shipping time, it was pointed out, and in instances where vessels unload at foreign ports and are . un able to find, cargoes of items on the priorities list, they will re turn empty. Jury Convicts Silver Shirt 11 Counts of Sedition And Conspiracy Hit William Pelley INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. S.-(P) William Dudley Pelley, former leader of the Silver Shirts . of America, was convicted by a fed' era! court jury Wednesday "night on 11 counts of criminal sedition and conspiracy. Pelley's two associates, Law rence A." Brown and. Miss Marian Agnes Henderson, who were tried with him, were convicted only on count 12 of the indictment, which charged conspiracy. , Judce Bobert CJ Baltzell im mediately set August 12 at 10 ajn. for pronouncement of sentence. Each count carries a maximum penalty of 20 years' Imprisonment " (Turn to Page X-CoL 4) Eastern Yachtsmen Refused Gasoline , WASHINGTON, Aug. 5 -JP)- The office of price administration. rejecting a plea of eastern pleas ure boat owners for larger gaso line rations, . nevertheless asked them Wednesday - nieht to keen their craft in condition? and ready for Service, if needed, "against the submarine menace." - - Three Enlist in Navy PORTLAND, Aug. 5 ($-Navy recruiting headquarters , Wednes day announced the enlistment. o Victor I Kronberg, ML Angel Llewellyn J3... Williams, Dayton, and Paul Pierce, Salem. . African Desert WWWWWKff(FJ li'.' mm Coast's Plane Needs Urged Mott Says Aleutians , Taken Care of hy Army and Navy Belief that; the Aleutian .Islands are , being well taken care or by army and-naval air forces was expressed here Wednesday by Rep. James W. Mott, congressman home for a brief stay following an inspection of Pacific coast naval defenses. "The . Aleutians constitute an immediate danger front," Mott said. "Strong forces of army and navy planes are there to prevent further advances by the Japanese from Kiska island, and the enemy will be attacked and driven out of Kiska as soon as we get planes in sufficient strength up there to do it" Pacific coast bases from the Mexican to the Canadian bor ders were described by the-' congressman as "in first class condition to operate with a full quota of planes patrol bomb ers, fighters and Interceptors." These bases, however, need more planes than they now have, and the naval affairs subcommit tee of which Mott is -a member will recommend they be provided with a. full complement of planes, he announced. "Congress can't conduct this war," Mott added, "but it has been able to change policies, and we hope now to be able to change the existing policy of sending everything out of the country." East as well as west coast bases should be more fully armed with planes for observation and attack, Mott asserted. The congressman declared planes from Tongue Point naval air station near Astoria were now (Turn to Page-2, CoL 5) Bus-Train Crash Fatal to Dozen CRYSTAL SPRINGS, Miss Aug. 5 (JP) At least 12 persons were killed and at least 36 in jured when a crowded bus and a-passenger train collided at a mid-town crossing here Wednes day. . One woman was killed and two others injured when the heavy bus hurtled through the air and overturned on the sidewalk where they were standing. Dead and in jured were- scattered along the tracks. , The train was not derailed and its passengers escaped serious in' jury. .. State . Public Safety ' Commis sioner ,T. P. Brady said , the bus driver- stopped to let a freight train , pass, then . started across without seeing the fast passenger train coming on another track. Late Sports ; COAST LEAGUE ; PORTLAND, Ore Aug. -(fl?- Second night game 19 innings) Seattle , . .' ,.000 001 C22-5 . 7 ; 1 Portland 000 000 020-2 6 Guay and" Kearse; . SchubeL Stine (8) and Mayer, Leovich. Envelopment Move Goes East; Nazis Claim Kropotkin Ilying US GenejralLands in Moscow , To Cheer Soviet; Parachute Troops Force Russian Retreat, Caucasus .By Tbo Associated Press ':'"" German troops which had Tsimlyansk have driven 40 miles to Kotelnikovskl, 95 miles I southwest of StaUn.Tgaffd, in a bold envelopment move against the treat industrial city on the Volge, the Russian high command said early Thursday. The northern arm of the immense weight against the in the elbow of the Don in the the northwest. In the Caucasus where the Night Raiders Hit Germany RAF Strikes Through Storms and Snow, Loses One Bomber LONDON, Thursday, Aug. (HF) Royal air force bombers struck at Germany for the second night in a row Wednesday night, authorita tive British lourcei reported Thursday. " On the home front, a statement said, there was slight german ac tivity over the East Anglian coast and a few bombs were dropped "but neither casualties nor, dam age have been reported."., , ? Wednesday nUM's fiid fol lowed one on the Knhr Iri which bombers flew through thunder storms, solid overcast and even snow at the hlsher altitudes. . "It was like flying through a white woolen blanket" said the gunner in a Halifax bomber,. There was no indication of the size of the attacking force, but de spite the poor weather only one bomber was lost. One fighter" plane was lost on sweeps against trains and other (Turn to Pago 2, CoL 1) Young Boys Admit Thefts Money and Many Small Articles Taken " From Stores The Salem police department brought to a close a crime wave" Wednesday morning when three Salem youths, aged 9, 8 and o years respectively, confessed to a recent string of burglaries and shoplifting. Officer H. Kiggins ap prehended the three youths, the eldest of whom acted as spokes man in confessing. Everything from hands-full of pennies to toy balloons were listed among the loot taken by the boys over a period of approximately two weeks. Most of . the money taken was spent for movies, can dy, ice cream and "treats" to neighborhood companions. Places admittedly looted by the youths, according to police, were the Acme Auto Wreckers, last Sunday, pennies and a dollar bill; Hei-rall-Owens garage,- ah undisclosed "Sum of money; Wool worths, money, chewing gum. flashlights and toy balloons; the Paramount Market , twice, money and i cigarettes; Texaco service station at South Commercial and Bellevue two or three times, ob taining money and empty pop (Turn to Page 2. CoL 1) US Prisoner Relief Ready WASHINGTON, Aug. The American Red Cross reported Wednesday that "substantial" re lief for American prisoners held by the Japanese now was en route to Japan. . "-V - J .- Chairman Norman H. Davis said negotiations also were underway leading to the tlispatch of.addi tional relief . ships. Supplies sent on the relief ship Gripsholm in cluded 20,000 war food parcels. clothing, medicines and tobacco. Davis said, an additional cargo of "supplies had "been assembled and the Bed Cross waa ready to dispatch relief ships "as soon as safe ' conduct can be obtained" from the Japanese government crossed the lower Don near great nutcracker pressing with city still was reported stalled Kletskaya area, 75 miles to Germans said they had cap tured the rail junction of Kropot kin, 60 miles north of the Maikof oil fields, .the Russians insistH that ''stubborn battles" were car ried out in the Belaya Glina area deep below the . Bon, and Kush chevka region, 50 miles belo-n Rostov. " r Even as the Russian, peril grew' increasingly grave, MaJ.-Gen. Fol lett Bradley of the US air forces t landed a bomber, in Moscow and declared he was anxious to fa cilitate the flow of supplies to the embattled soviet, despite increas ing difficulty of German attacks on supply routes. ' T The German drive eastward from the Tsimlyansk bridgeheadi heralded in German commun iques for three days was well to the south p4 txe Don, Kotelnikov skl,1 like Belaya Glina and Salsk, all .are on the Immobilized railway leading ; from Stalingrad to the Black Sea. The Russians said the advance was slight and made only at the cost of heavy casualties. "Soath of Kashchevsks. the Germans are sustaining partic ularly heavy losses." the Rus sian commnniqae said listing 60s enemy killed. Another 1200 nails died In the Kletskaya ar ea In the Don elbow where "re peated enemy attacks were re pelled." It was la the Kash ebevska resiM that the eossseks surprised and killed 3001 Ger mans Tuesday night Gen. Bradley declared in Mos cow: I am here to facilitate any possible way to make aid to Rus sia more effective. We are send ing all we can, and would like to send more. This is the focal point of the war. There is great read- mess in America to contribute ev erything possible here." German parachute troops dropped behind the Russian lines with baby tanks in groups of 100 to 150 men, attacked communica tions. Frontal attacks of masses of tanks and swarms of dive bombers caused the Russians to (Turn to Page 2, CoL 8) Swiss Writer Says Nazis Prepared BERN, Switzerland, Aag. 5.-(JPy-One of a party of neatral journalists taken by the Ger mans on a tour of the occupied channel coast told Wednesday of "mighty fortifications of con crete and Iron" prepared by the nails against any allied Inva sion of Europe. These, the newspaperman said In a Berlin dispatch to the Zurich Die Tat are built tn se ries, one behind the other. The correspondent said sup ply bases for the occupation forces were placed close to the front and there ; were under ground airdromes for bombers and fighters. A Stockholm report to the Basler National Zeitongn said that the German : occnpaUon forces la Norway were buildlng extensiTe defense works on the Lofoten Islands of northern 1 Norway along the allied rent to Russian Arctle ports In or der to make "a single tremen dous bridgehead in Norway to- gether with the fortifications In other Norwegian coastal dis tricts." . ; . Gur, Senators 'ot,