Scrvico Men 1 Our beys ef Salem . and Tkizliy are la uniform with Uncle Sam ever the fact of the globe. Fellow them dally la The Statesman's 'Service Ilea column. . A Houco? Are : yen looking for a llace to lire r for a ten ant? XX so, tors la The Statesman classified adver tising page where, barer and seller get together. ; ..-. tfi Salem, Oregon, Sunday Morning September 6, 1S42 Price 5c Nov 123 9S v is i i i v. u iv v i v i i i i it' Ni . v-."v. - . lit it fi tt iv , . .v u i : rAT7; Warship". -: Lost In ' Jl ilvillv - Destroyer Blue, Trail snort Sunk: Oregon Man Dies . WASHINGTON, Sept. 5 -ffl ; ine aesiroyer oiue ana n smaii . armed transport have been sunk in the South Pacific, 'the navy disclosed Saturday,' bringing to , 48 the number of American warships 1 whose loss has been announced since December 7. At the same time the navy told of severe damage done by fire to the "tender Prairi,' mother ship lor a group oz aesurayers, at Ar gentina, Newfoundland, May 27. The Prairie has now been re- conditioned and restored to ser vice. And another entry for the black side -of the ledger was the program Xor the launching or keel-laying of 150 naval vessels Labor day, described by the navy as a world record Xor .the ship- . building industry. r . ' Twt enlisted men lest their lives fat fifhtinr the tender fire. Casnaltiea in the twe Pacific ' . sinkings were announced aa few, the exact number net being re j ported The Blae bad a normal complement of 17S men and the . transport, the 1068-ton Celhoan, , " eonld have carried 200 men in- rinding a skeleton crew and troops. A communique on the sinkings Said; ". ' . "South Pacific: - "L The US Destroyer Blue and .fhe small auxiliary, transport Col Juaun have been sunk during the past two weeks in the South Pa 'ciCe as a result of enemy action." The lime of the sinkings-r-Mdur-"ing the past two weeks" indicated .that the ships were not casualties of the big sea battle off the Solo mon islands. Whether they were sunk singly or while operating : together was not disclosed. They : could have been engaged in the ; continuing task of carrying sup . plies to United States forces in the Solomons. , ' A 40-knot gale sweeping over r Argentina ' war - responsible to .great extent for the damage to t the - 9450-ton Prairie. She was . taking on supplies .when a- fire 'started in a ship moored direetly .lactcm. Tanned- by the gale, ' the flames . swept along the dock - te -the tender. -- v . C Capt R. VT. Fleming, Cam- - bridge, Mass skipper of the Prai rie,, broke his ship away from the dock , and the flames were brought . under' control after . she bad been moved well away from 'other craft The flames were stopped Just as they reached i "compartment filled with muni' Itions. Aboard the Prairie were -COO -tons of, high explosives, 300 depth charges, 103 warheads for. " (Turn to rage z, coi. oj - r.f tCargo Planes Decision Left To .Army, Navy "WASHINGTON, Sept 5 -(P) ,WPB Chairman Donald M. Nelson Chairman Donald M. Nelson of the war , production board ; was reported authoritatively Saturday to have left to army and navy chiefs the final decision on Henry J. Kaiser's proposal to construct a fleet of cargo planes. : ' A war production board spokes man, who withheld .use . of his liame, said a special committee of four aircraft industry men had made a "somewhat unfavorable but not necessarily fatal 'report to Nelson on the proposal of the west coast shipbuilder. " Shortly after this, friends of Kaiser said Nelson had told them he would be governed by any decision the army and navy officials made at a showdown conference here Wed nesday... . - '.- Nelson is expected also to con fer - next week with Kaiser and bis associate, Howard Hughes, California aircraft designer. Amy and navy officers were represented as reluctant to , em bark on any program of cargo Diane construction which," be- (Turn to Page 2, Col. 4) Friday's 7cailier frlJay's max. temp. SI, mln. 3. River Saturday -3.8 ft By -y re'jest weather iorecasts ! c! J anl temperatore . Dedicates Ov Chaplain Major I R. Lumhi, ef the ninth service command, Fort ' DenrlasUtah. whe Is te preach - the sermon at services at Camp ' Adair today dedicating the post's 11 chapels. The services will take place In the pest station ehapeL Army Slnal Corps photo. Nation Faces New Sacrifice - Solon Says President To Ask Congress" V For Actions .. . WASHINGTON, Sept -iffy- President .Roosevelt, in advance of his eagerly-awaited anti-inflation decree, warned Saturday night that the nation faced "sac rifices of wage increases, crop price : increases, profit, increases, bodily comforts." ,.-, . Thia indication of - the program he will, announce Monday in a messaged to- -eengresa and .an d- J , A'W A.1 W ' . uresa tu uie people was given in a Labor day statement which said mat "all this is little enough for free men to sacrifice in a world where freedom is imperiled." v Government officials who could not be quoted by name reported that the plan Contemplated the setting up of an economic admini strator to supervise the program and. an executive order limiting wages, salaries and farm prices. In this connection. Senator Brown (D-Mich.), whe spon sored the administration's price control law In the senate, said (Turn-to Page 3, Column 3) 4H Fat Stock FeRemnant A. fat- stock show and .auction sale will be -the-main features of the abbreviated 4H club exhibits; only remnant of the 1942 state fair, scheduled to open at the state fairgrounds here Wednesday and continue until Friday, state agricultural department officials announced Saturday: V - - ""- The auction sale-, wilt be .held Friday, September 11, starting at 10 a. m. A committee of the Sa lem chamber of commerce , head ed by G. A. Vandeneynde, is as sisting in building up the auction feature. - No effort is being made to en courage attendance of the public and only 4H youths slated to come to the ; fairgrounds . will be the owners of the fat stock. , ine : usual exmoits - in : crops, garden, home economics and other-dub projects win be limited to winning displays from- each county, and these will be judged on Thursday. - ;X - - - Boys who accompany the ani mala for the auction will be bous ed in the grandstand exhibit quarters. They wm -engage in some showmanship and-judging contests while - on the grounds, but these events wfll be on an individual rather than a team basis. '."v.': , . 11 Army Men Die, Crashes FORT MYERS, Fla, Sept 5-OPi Six army fliers were killed Satur day when a medium 'bomber crashed shortly after taking off a Page field here. : The bomber had left the run way, and was gaining altitude when it suddenly fell to the ground, army officers said. 1 TAMPA, Fla., Sept &-A-Thc entire crew of five army men was killed when , a medium bomber from MacDill field here - crashed into Tampa bay Saturday, army officials at the field announced. Aircraft ; Bombard Barges Smashed . At Buna; Yanks Hit Continent; By -MURLIN SPENCER ; GEN E R A L MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, Australia, Sunday, Sept.. 6 -( Allied air forces smashed at Japanese bases in New Guinea Saturday with three destructive raids on Buna, in which numerous land ing barges, . -boats and other equipment' were ' destroyed, . and with other attacks, on Japanese ground forces at Kokoda to the west and Milne bay to the south, a communique said Sunday. Buna, the enemy base for the land thrust to Kokoda, 60, miles east of the allied base at Port Moresby, suffered the heaviest attacks. A fuel dump was blown up, an - anti - aircraft ; position , si lenced and huts, motor vehicles and gTeanded aircraft destroyed ' without the loss .of a single al- lied plane. The Allied planes strafed enemy positions heavily after unloading their bombs. The communique said allied ground forces, continued mopping up the remnants of Japan etc troops still holding out in the Jun gles near .Milne bay, at the south eastern tip of New .Guinea.. One allied plane-, was- lost w hile ma chine-gunning Japanese positions near . Kokoda. LONDON, Sept- MP-Ameri can airmen in flying fortresses, Boston bombers and fighter planes, made their biggest assault yet on Hitler's transport system Saturday, the bombers , smashing at the Rouen railway yards and the Le Havre docks in France while -the fighters escorted - the bigger planes and engaged in di versionary sweeps. An authoritative announcement said there were no American loss es but the wide activities cost the allies six fighter planes.- Two en emy planes were destroyed. ' ' The attacks foUewed a night of Intensive allied action against Germany. A powerful force of hnndreda of RAF planes start ed big fires in . Bremen, while the Knesian: scattered . noma aa eastern Germany and as tacked Badapest for the first A German war bulletin men tioned the Russian raids without naming the 'cities other than Bu dapest but the British radio quoted- Scandinavian dispatches from Berlin as saying Vienna: in Aus tria Koenigsberg in East Prussia and -Breslau in German Silesia were- among the places hit ,t , ' Sub Reported Of f Coast . . SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. C (Snndar)-jF-Tne Western de fense command said Sunday it was investigating a report that a submarine was surfaced close to shore In the vicinity ef San ta Barbara, Calif, and so far had found nothing to confirm the report The statement said that both military and civilian defense aathorities had been placed "on fall alert" and that an Imme diate search for possible sabo teurs was started la the area, The report of the submarine eaaae from a eivilia railroad , guareV the Western defense command announced. AU high ways In the Santa Barbara ter ' rltery were ; being watched closely. Crash Kills Three . FAIRFLAY, Colo Sept 5-4P) Three persons were killed and another injured Saturday when a private airplane crashed on - the eastern slope of Kenosha pass, Jn mountainous central Colorado. Our Senators Lc:l G-55-2 Enemy r?SH s Labor Bay Means More Labor day has a deeper meaning and the treaeherons Japanese In tanks and ballets te help fight the ' Citixen, the average worker, does line. ;.V j. -. : America to Labor on Monday Stores to Oose . Here; Workers Help in Crops Salem business- houses generally are .expected to -close Monday, Labor' day, as usual. Dr. Henry IL Morris, president of the Salem Retail . Trade , bureau, . reported Saturday. Gov. : Charles A. Sprague and State, county and city offices also are to close for the day. Secretary of State Earl Snell are remaining, jay Salem ever the- week end, while State Treasurer . Leslie M. Scott plana te spend the brief holiday .in Portland. - ..:".X..r- Many state employes. are plan ning to work today and Monday la the bean fields or hop yards.: : USO Program w .. ... fc' Sup ervisorr v: ; ; Arrives To serve as program director of the city's new USO and as R. R. "Bob Boardman's associate gen eral director for the service men's recreation organization here, Roy Kunz arrived in Salem on Sat urday afternoon from San Fran cisco. IV- 1 ; :: , X. - 'f A graduate , of LaCroese, Wis, State Teachers college with a bachelor's $ degree, in ' education from that Institution's college Of physical education, Kunz has had school : and ' orphanage coaching and teaching experience. - For.-he past 8 years he has been employed with the social security v- aides rand during i the past month has worked with the program director of the YMCA at the presidio in San Francisco to gain experience in the specific type of work he is to handle here. : Mrs. Kunx is driving west, ac companied on the trip by her parents. - - Oregon Flier Gets ; DSC in Australia - ' GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, A u s t r a 1 1 a, Sunday, Sept 6-P)-Second Lieut Henry J. Rose of Dallas Tex, was awarded the. Distinguished Service Cross .Saturday for hero ism In guiding an allied striking force to a Japanese aircraft car rier in the Coral sea battle May 5. : The Distinguished Service Cross also was awarded to Capt Robert G. Ruegs of Boring, Ore. LAG f this year aa America fighta for life the Orient ; War plants are hamming, turning ent the guns, planes. enemy. Labor has gene all-out for the war effort. . And John Q. his bit at home while his sen, relative or neighbor mans the fighting --,v - - - . FDR Asserts Yankee Arm WASHINGTON, . Sept S rvffrr President Roosevelt issued Satur day night the ' following Labor day statement:' ' V There has never been a Labor day as significant as thk one. In a great many countries free labor has ceased to exist; a blackout of freedom has darkened Europe from theTtip of Norway to the shores of the Aegean and sturdy working moj who once- walked erect fat the sun now stumble and cower beneath: the lash f the slavemasters. The rights of free labor and free men have vanished in the conquered lands. They, are threatened and besieged ' every This is indeed labors . grave rbour as it is the grve hour f the farmer,-, the mdustrialist, the teacher and preacher, the aproned housewife, the smallest child In the cradle. AH these are the ben eficiaries and heirs of the demo cratic system, and It is demo cracy itself that the evil men of west and east hate and seek to destroy.-' : r V?' . Happily, our good right arm Is strong and growing stronger. In our own country, in the countries c (Turn to Page 3, Column 5) ; Cuba Tabes Noted Spy HAVANA,. Cuba, Sept $Wl Arrest of a 3 1-year-old German whom Cuban police described as "one of the most important spies vet caDtured in America," was announced Saturday. The author ities indicated he would escape the firing squad by becoming a government witness. . Police Identified him as Heinz August Luning, alias Enrique Luni, a native of Bremen and for some years an export and import merchant in Hamburg. He . ar rived in Havana September - 29, 194 lr: they said, on the steamer Villa De Madrid as a transit pas senger for. Honduras, traveling on a 'passport issued by the Hon duras consulate. in Hamburg.," " Maj. Gen. Manuel Benitez, chief of the Cuban national police, said Luni had made a complete con fession of participating in wide spread espionage activities, Stronge This Year against the axis powci m Europe Labor to. Help Launch-Ships;:,; In Portland . PORTLAND, Sept SPV-Labor day win be just another labor day in war industries here Monday. Labor, witt take, part in three Ship : launching ; ceremonies; - but dtherwise it -wUl stay strictly on the Job, foregoing the usual cele brations, picnics and parades.''" The Oregon Shipbuilding cor poration wiU launch the: James Duncan,' named for an early vice president of the ATL, . and Mrs. Tom Ray wife of .the Boilermaker union secretary, win sponsor it ! Commercial iron i work win launch a- pair of subchasers, -lay keels; fox: two more and for two navy tugs." It wfll alee dedicate a $1,000,000. marine railway. 'Comm. Work Fails fflTB i THI BstiTisn EIOnTH A1UT IN TDX mSTEXN DESERT," Sept S (AMasselinr warriors pat ea their first eemmande raid Fri day and for their tremble got arrested by British mUitary police. r An effleer and 13 men landed from rabber beats en the desert coast before dawn. They were armed te the teeth. They crept te a railway line and placed high explosives under the track. A train passed ever the spot bat the explosives did net explode. - Then the eemmandoa hid to the. desert Four military po licemen surprised them and cap tared them... ' ' The commandos offered no re sistance. Nails Released; For Peach Boxes The war production board has released - a supply cf nails for boxmakir4 to relieve an inune- dlately threatciiiE she-'ajre cf peach containers. Gov. Charles A. Sprague announced Saturday af- ternoon. ; , :", ";c The governor said he was ask ed Friday night by local peach men to help get nails -, for the Salem ; Box company, on which they were depending .for their supply of boxes. He asked WPB Saturday morning for release of the needed nails. 'Verdun Macks in:EgyA Ovenvhelming Forces' Fury Held Back; Casualties Said I Hug ;e; Allies Keep Air Hold By RICHARD Associated Proas yuwHuj a; u( auauj iMuaailcu .OTIMI ,lXICrCiXlJZ ' fury- against the strengthening; day, but for the second day. tbe historic battle, already called a Tied Verdun, . ' -The soviet midnight communique said the red army re pelled all attacks both northwest and southwest of the be leaguered Volga river city, despite numerical superiority ojf the Germans. . i . . : "- ' The only German advance acknowledged by . the Rus sian high command was in the Black sea area northwest of Fuel Dealers, ; Users togn ) Possible Rationing Gets Preparation - Here This Week . ' ' In a voluntary, registration which employes of the office of price administration hope will ap proach 100 per cent 1 fuel deal ers and users of Salem are asked to provide information' this week to be Vv.ed as basis for possible rationing of fuel this winter. , Dates for the registration run from Wednesday through Satur day, John F. Vaughn,3 executive secretary for the Salem rationing and war, - price administration board, announced Saturday. - 'Place of registration is to be the office of the ' board, in the city hall council chambers. - Registrants wfll be asked to in dicate ; on especially-prepared blanks the type or types of fuel they aeU or use, the amount used last seeaonv the amount now- on hand, how much additional they estimate they will need this sea son and the type or types of heat-? ing facilities, in their homes . and places pf business. They will also be asked . whether they have fuel on order and if so how much." ? By cooperating fully in , this registration, -which 'is to be han dled only in specified population centers, the fuel consumer and the fuel dealer are likely to protect j .i . e : - ' - W wemseives, , vau&nn sugegsiea. Price, transportatioa facilities and possible ration may be baaed on information thus gathered.- - - Sociologists Fear, Future 3Ianpo wer Being Depleted WASHINGTON. ; Sept ' Sociologists, noting that hundreds of thousands of .'teen age boys and girls arc going into wartime jobs. expressed apprehension Saturday lest the nation cut too deeply now into the undeveloped manpower reserves intended : for tomorrow." Katherine F. Lenroot chief, of the labor department's children's bureau, said twice as many boys and girls between 14 and 18 years old " went to work In 1941 as In 1940, and the numbers have been mounting to 1942 n ? s. VWt are all keenly" ponecious,w she said, "that .whatever Is neces sary to do to win the war must be done, but before permitting an ex odus of children from school for work we must be- certain that what we gained in labor for pro duction now is not lost in needed equipment of future manpower." Bureau records showed that in June of this year, approximately 100,000 boys and girls between 14 and. 18. received employment cer tificates for work. About 18,000 were .14 or 15 years of age. July and - August have ; swelled these figures by thousands more. The figures show the trend was wide spread,., both csographically.- and occupationally, the bureau said. 18 to Be Executed BERN,, SWITZERLAND, : Sept 5-t?VP'Coprts of death sentences for 18 persons in nad-occupied territories on. charges cf treason. illegal possession cf arms or black u Ttam XXUtl&Ck IU1U w " Saturday, Bub City ; Axis McMURRAY War Editor , defenses of Stalingrad Sun-i were fought to a standstill la me soviet naval base at Novoroa sisk. Hee the Russians retreat- ea to new nositions" r k. r5i- mans thMo. .4 . - - iuwij remiorcemenv i against tired Russian forces who already had routed two German companies and a squadron of Ru manian cavalry. . Northwest of Stalingrad the" Russians not only "defended their positions," me communique said, but In some sectors they took the initiative "to launch counterat tacks. . ' , - , . . ;on. ' the second - 'ptnr , auL southwest of the city, the defend ers, met aU German onslaughts , firmly," . the f jmmunique said. .r,uepi considerabie-rtjamert-1 superiority, the Germans failed to advance, t Our : artillery and trench mortars decimated the enemy ranks." , , i - . The Germans grudgingly duB bed the: city the "Red vrrf.. and said it would be hrA although -its fate is sealed." They ; usn press reports that a million Russian troops and thousands of civilian. . fending the city with a bitterneaa uxiuiaicoea ur uie war.- r - The aossians, placing ha fTum to Pair 9 r.i it - v vw. f Oregon Men Write From . Jap Prison PORTLAND", Sent S-Un-T mer Govt-.Ben Olcott said Satur day he had received a letter from his son, Ensign Chet W. Olcotsr wno was. captured on Wake Mi . Tr r. aoayo and dated June 18. ' v ; Young Olcott said he w.V fn . prison on Sblkoku Island In south era Japan and that the Americans were -oeing rightly treated." -' f T His fathenaaid the typewritten , letter was not in the style usually written by his sen but that the signature appeared genuine. Food in .- the prison camp the letter said was "sufficient but no vel, consisting mainly of soup, vegetables and rice.", ALBANY, Sent s 5 - Wani n and Mrs. P.' A. Glewer. Ratom day received the first letter from weir axav W- David D. Kliewer, marine corps flyer, since his can- iurc at w axe island. The letter was written t. Shikoku Island, Japan. The lieu- xenant said his health was good and he was "doing OJC" The par ents said the letter , was typewrit ten, but the signature and the style was that of their sons, j : CHe Meithof i Di-o in Action Charles Henry MeiUioL fireman second class, U. S. navy, as been killed la action, according to In formation received bv his narenfct Mr. and Hrs. Joseph Meithof, route one. Brooks. K -;; u . ; Meithof .was 19 years, old on July 5. The' last letter received, from bin by his family was one written . on . his birthday' to, his sister, Lira.; Ted Nolan of Wood burn. lip . enlisted . in the , navy, January . 8, 13il, and was home on leave in March, 1941." ; Other i surviving relatives are four sisters, Mrs. Lawrence VTarg nier, oi GerVais, Mary, IIat-1da and, Margaret Meithof, ' Crocks; three brothers, John Menhcf. Ea- I lum. nfl Edward and Albert I.Iei- r t thof, Brocks.,