4 Jonnraal Buy War Bonds Keep 'Em Flying 54th Year, No. 190 5SS?JUS econd olui Salem, Oregon B Tuesday, August 11, 1942 Price Five Cents Oregon fWeVe Holding Our Qwnv raoiomon usies U.5. Bombers Spur Chinese to Continue Fight V War Effort in Gear with New Faith in Leaders Many Munition Plants By Morris J. Harris and J, D. While Returnlnn ("War correspondents Rio de Janeiro, Aug. 11 VP) United States bombers have gone to China and spurred her to a new faith in the sixth year of a war she has fought alone until now, and still fights with unwav ering sacrifice and devotion. Ammunition dumps and camps in China and China's 400, 000,000 have new faith in their leaders and the long-range course they follow. Didn't they predict that China and the Unit ed States together would whip Japan? Puppets Wavering Even Japan's Chinese puppets have begun to waver. They have told American missionary doc tors in the over-run areas how they and the forces under them now are holding on, playing at cooperation with the enemy because non-cooperation means death for themselves and all the Chinese around them until the day comes to strike. To sympathetic American ears they whisper that they have learned that there is no such thing as cooperation with the Japanese, only slavery under China's war effort is in top gear. Behind the lines, far from smoke of countless daily battles, millions of Chinese men, wom en and children toil in thous-; ands of small factories. China's War Plants China's war factories, bombed by the" Japanese almost without opposition for five years, are scattered and camouflaged in hundreds of mud-walled villages. Not only are they the arsenal of China's struggle for survival, they also are the pattern of a new China. They raise commun ity living .standards and spread employment and wealth to the impoverished laboring classes. When the war ends they will make ploughs Instead of swords. At the front, huge armies continue to play .heir old game of walt-and-pounce, a wily scheme which has kept the in vader at bay despite his wealth of armament. - millions n.eep uoming The Chinese pay heavily In men because the Japanese know the game now and blast at the inexhaustible manpower which flows against them: But China's millions keep coming. More millions of communist and other guerrilla forces harry the., invaders' communications, ambush his transports, massacre outlying garrisons and sabotage his political and economic schemes in the dominated re gions.";' Even poorer armed than the regulars, the guerrillas show a morale and courage which flam es more passionately today than ever. . -. i Last spring and summer, the Japanese sent division after di vision against the communists in north China in what was an nounced as the final anti-guerrilla mop-up. The JapaneM an nounced, as usual, that the guar lillas wara annihilated. Tha next r st tea hit-and-rrn Ureters ' i :iina e-'- -1ti Ailed r - ? jut had r f i Laval Calls Troops, Fears Coup d'etat London, Aug. 11 VP) A Reu ters dispatch from Stockholm to day . quoted the Vichy corre spondent of the newspaper Svenska Dagbladet as saying Pierre Laval had called up police and troop reinforcements to protect the Vichy government against a rumored coup d'etat. (Vichy dispatches said that Laval was at Compicgne today to greet 1,000 returning French war prisoners released by the Germans in return for French workmen going into German industry.) 1,000 Strike at War Plant Bayonne, N.J., Aug. 11 VP) An estimated 1,000 workers struck today at the.. General Cable Corporation to protest the refusal of the management and the war labor board to grant wage increases and vacations with pay. Michael Petrakian, strike chairman, who made the esti mate, said the walkout was an independent one and not spon sored by Local 868, International Brotherhood of Electrical Work ers, AFL, of which the workers are members. The strike started at midnight and picked lines were formed immediately at the plant gates. No attempts to pass through the lines were made by employes due at 8 a.m,, Petrakian said He said the strike was "100 per cent effective." . Petrakian said the workers seek ten-cent-an-hour increases over undisclosed present rates and two-week vacations with pay after two years' oj, service. Insane Patients Bomb Victims London, Aug. 11 VP) Several patients and staff members of an East Anglian mental institu tion were killed last night by a direct hit from a German plane during raids on East Anglia and southeast England. Emergency squads toiled through the night to recover the dead and rescue the injured at the institution. By noon 12 bodies had been brought out of two flattened wards. The Germans scattered a large number of their new phosphor ous fire bombs in the surround ing district without causing dam ages or casualties. (The German radio said Hast ings, on the English Channel, and Colchester, 50 miles north east of London, were the main targets of the night raiders.). - London's air raid sirens shrill ed early this morning but the all clear followed shortly and no bombings' were reported, Kaiser Told, to Draft Cargo Plane Plans Washington, Aug. 11 (U.R) Henry J. Kaiser, west coast ship builder who wants to build giant troop and cargo-carrying flying boats, today was told to draft his final plans and submit them to the war production board rind- the navy department for ap provai. WPB Chairman Donald M. Nelson gave Ka.er a letter au thorising him to prepare engin eering plant and data on what ha would heed to build 500 plan ar Previously WPB officials had talked about a "letter of intent" under which Kaiser would have had the government's word to back him up if he could build the planet without interfering with the military program laid down by President Roosevelt. Apparently Nelson backed down somewhat, however, be cause he could not get navy notion for the first proposal. Kelson, in hit letter, stressed Nit Kaiser wis to satisfy both ttn and the navy that the cargo 'ana program would not inter Anti-foreign Turn Taken in Indian Rioting Strike Paralysis Creep ing Over Country Hits War Industry By John R. Morris Bombay, India, Aug. 11 ttl.R) Rioting, strikes and independ ence disorders in which an an gry crowd set fire to a Delhi municipal office lorry and slightly injured three officials continued to spread today after police again fired on demon strators in Bombay and Delhi. Government officials issued a warning that the sternest mea sures would be taken against rioters. Police, bolstered by troops, who took part in some clashes, were still unable to control riot ing in Bombay and Delhi, the seat of the British viceroy, and the riots were more serious this afternoon in northern Bombay, where trains were attacked, traf fic paralyzed and fires started. The Matunga post office was forced to close. Death Toll Grows Disorders and fighting which added to the earlier toll of ap proximately 20 dead and more than 200 injured also were re ported from war industrial sec tors, many of which were closed by strikes, and provincial cen ters, especially in the Lucknow 'area;Jn "thainorUjV'-'-'ii.-.rvf Renewed disorders in Bom bay, where the crowds displayed an. anti-foreign attitude as well as shouting demands for the British to quit India, were most severe in the north part of the city. The task of fighting the riot ers was still in the hands of police although troops had been called and stood by at strategic points and sometimes helped dis perse crowds. But the govern ment warning that persons re sponsible for disorders would be sternly punished and the spreading riots suggested that the military might be forced to take more active measures. Police fired on thousands of student rioters outside the great Bombay municipal hospital, killing two and wounding many. The death toll here had reached 17, and 209 persons had been wounded before today. There were casualties so far unestimated when police fired on rioters at Poone and Luck now. Bombay Unsafe The students demanded the hats and neckties symbols of their white race of their pro fessors and burned them in bon fires. In fact, Bombay's turbulent northern suburbs, where police had fired 10 times on rioters yes terday, was unsafe for anyone wearing western clothing. (Concluded on Face 12, Column 7)' fere with the president's "blue print for victory" calling for 80, 000 war planes. WPB officials admitted yesterday that there might not be enough raw mater ials even to meet this schedule. Kaiser has said that he could get the needed materials from sources outside the normal ones supplying the war effort. Work ing with department of interior geologists, he says he has uncov ered possible new sources of many critical materials! Nelson also told Kaiser to go ahead with designing of a 200 ton flying boat which would be nearly three timet at big at the Martin "Mart." The WPB chair man said he would appoint a committee of experts from the aircraft industry to work with Kaiter. . pet Gandhi's Followers Defy India Police Mohandas Gandhi's "do or die" zealots defied po lice bullets time after time in Bombay and elsewhere in response to the all-India congress campaign of mass civil disobedience against British rule. Here Gandhi (center), confers with leaders of the all-India congress: Maulana Abdul Kalan Azad (right), the party's president, and J. B. Kripalani (left), general secretary of the party. Gandhi and Kalan Azad were un der arrest. Associated Press Photo from March of Time. Nazi Gun Squads Kill 100 Hostages (By the Associated Press) Second-front talk increased in Europe's conquered nations today as nazi firing'squads took nearly 100 more Jives and the an uprising in the 'event of an allied invasion of Europe. Ninety- three Frenchmen . wore executed in .old; Czecbo-Sl6vakia, the latter Seek Annex to Legion Building Advised that the northwest vital area board has shelved the proposal to remodel the Ray mond garage building for use as a permanent USO center in Sa lem, for which $18,700 was al located by the federal security agency, and that $12,000 had been approved by the board for renovating the American Legion hall,, sponsors of the recreation center project were today rush ing plans and estimates for a 2 story annex to the hall to com pletion. ; Indications are that the board will approve the allocation of an additional $5,000 .to defray the cost of- the annex, v , If the proposal is formally ap proved the USO will move , im mediately in the Legion- build ing and function from there un til the. annex is completed, ac cording to R. R. Boardman, di rector .for Marion and Polk counties. r It would require three to six months to. make the- Raymond building ready for occupancy, it is estimated,. ;, , , ! Under the new plan the Le gion would, be paid ' $200 a month for rental of the building which, with the annex, would be turned ;over to the city ,for use as a museum or public gath ering place after the war, . Nuns and Priests Train in Aviation New Orleans, Aug. 11 VP) Two nuns, a priest and five re ligious brothers at Loyola Uni versity of the south here have actively joined the war effort to defeat the axis. . With tome 40 other high school teachers, Sister Mary Elphege and Sister Mary Aldan and the priest and brothers have begun - training In a v I a 1 1 o n courses heretofore not included in the curriculum of the reli gious. The course is . jointly sponsored by the civil aeronau tics authority and the United States office , of , education to train high school teachers Who will in turn teach their students. Studlet in meteorology, navi gation, general service of air craft and aircraft regulation are being taught thii month. . epr mm Bar mmWmmi- '.:; in Paris and. afrleaSt' Siit , Czechs r:pri charges of "high treason and ; favoring .the enemy." ; France seethed with' ' bitter . uhrest. Roundabout reports from Vichy said pro-German Premier Pierre Laval had. called up police and troop reinforcements to protect the hated Vichy regime against a rumored coup d'etat. ' Simultaneously,- the Dutch news agency Aneta quoted Swiss reports that the Germans had seized 200 more Dutch hostages to be "held responsible with their lives for the conduct of The Netherlands people in the event of a British invasion of Holland.'! . , , More than 1,500 prominent Dutch clergymen, physicians and business men had previously been, taken as hostages by the Germans, Aneta said, in their attempt to forestall a bloody re volt when the allies attempt to open a second front in western Europe. . '. Dispatches from Bern, Switz erland, said the Germans had threatened reprisals against ev ery man, woman and child in occupied France as an aftermath of new antl-nazi . outbreaks which sent the ,93 more French men to their deaths before Ger man firing squads. The German military com mander in Paris was quoted as threatening to "take measures for which the whole population will suffer" unless those respon sible for attacks on German sol diers were brought to light. Underground reports from Belgium arid Holland told of new preparations' by the Ger mans against a possible allied Invasion, i One report said a high nazi officer in Belgium had been au thorized toi apply 1 the torch to everything 'in. sight if. the Ger mans were, forced to retreat be fore allied armies. British Aircraft' Carrier Said Sunk London, ,-Aug; ll.() The German radio, , in a social an nouncement, reported that the British aircraft carrier Eagle had been sunk by a German submar ine today, in 'the western Medi terranean. Four -torpedoes hit the ship, the radio laid. The Eagle, wat in a ttrongly protected convoy ' and., was at tacked "at midday," according to the Germans. . The Eagle completed in 1MB. hid a displacement of 22,600 tons With a eomDlemftnt nf 74R land carried 11 aircraft. , Ask Army to Save Russia Moscow, Aug. 11 (P) The of ficial mouthpieces of the red army, the communist party and the soviet government appealed the, fighting forces today to save Russia,.. acknowledging in the plainest 'words the gravity of the position as axis armies ground through the smoking Maikop oil fields and the scorch ed wheatlands near Krasnodar. "The fate of our country is being decided in the violent bat. ties on the Don and the Ku ban," declared Red Star, organ of the red army. It quoted the-Russian 18th century general who told his troops: "we are surrounded by mountains ... to retreat is shame . . . we cannot expect help from anybody ... we stand on the edge of the abyss." Izveslia, the government news paper, asserted "the danger hanging over our country has increased" and said "the en emy,, despite tremendous losses, continues to rush into the depths of the nation. In the name of freedom and independence of the fatherland, of your people and your children, halt and re pulse the enemy." Pravda, the. communist or gan, urged: "by iron firmness, bar every way to the German hordes." The newspaper said "the enemy drives deeper into the country. Disregarding losses, the Hitlerite fascists summon all their, forces to occupy new, im portant districts." ' The German drive into the Caucasus placed the red fleet's Black Sea naval stations at Nov- orossisk and Tuapse in grave danger. Hankow Bombed by American ' Chungking, Aug. 11 IP) Fighler-cscorlcd American bombers In-a low-altltudc attack on Hankow and vicinity bombed newly constructed warehouses and other objectives yesterday, Lieut. Gen. Joseph W. Stilwcll's head- quarters announced today Hankow, Japan's greatest in land base in China, is on the Yangtze river and has been a frequent target of the American bombers. The headquarters bulletin said there was no anti-aircraft fire and no air opposition, "Incendiary as well as high explosive bombs were dropped," it said. v"A number of hits were scored in the town and on new ly-constructed warehouses. At least two large fires were start ed." The Hankow raid followed one Sunday by American airmen on Haiphong, French Indo-Cliina port where a Chinese army spokesman said today Japanese reinforcements for Thailand and Burma landed around July 27, Germans Launch New Offensive On Leningrad Use Volunteers from Oc cupied Lands Drive in Caucasus Continues By Henry Shapiro Moscow, Aug. 11 (U.R) Large volunteer legions from Spain, France, Belgium and Scandina via are being thrown into Adolf Hitler's offensive threatening the red fleet's vital Black sea bases after overwhelming sov iet defenses around the Maikop oil fields, according to front-line advices today. In a new offensive toward Stalingrad on the Volga and its important war industries, Ger man armored forces were re ported attacking Russian posi tions in the Kletskaya sector to the northwest and striking with masses of tanks in the Kotelnik- ovo region on the south. Legionnaires Used Front-line advices said it had been disclosed by the testimony of prisoners taken during the last 10 days that fresh Legion naires from Spain, France, Bel gium, Norway and Denmark were being rushed into the battle to fill the gaps caused by the nazis heavy losses. German advances in the Kras nodar and Armavir sectors of the North Caucasus threatened the Maikop, oil fields, and the Russian Black Sea fleet's main bases. ' The Novorossisk naval base lies only 65 mile.i west of Krns nodar and Ihc port of Anapa is only slightly northward near the Crimean straits. German Claims (The German high command said that Russian troops were at tempting to escape by sea from the ports of Novorissisk, Tuapse and Anapa just west of the Kras nodar-Armavir battle area under constant nazi aerial bombard ment that has sunk 11- trans ports totaling 12,500 tons and damaged nine other transports.) The reports from the Caucasus front were serious inasmuch as they showed the enemy rapidly approaching the Black Sea coast, apparently attempting to cut off the Novorossisk naval base some 65 miles from Krasno dar, but the danger to Stalin grad also was greatly increased following two weeks of heavy fighting in which attacks had been repulsed, In Maikop Oil Fields Around Maikop, it was believ ed, the Russians were fighting almost in sight of the derricks of their valuable oil-fields. At Krasnodar, Armavir and Maikop, the Germans followed by strong tank assaults on nar row sectors to split up Russian detachments and drive them back. (Concluded on Fakc 11, Column 'I) Planes These enemy forces and others which arrived at the same lime at Saigon, farther down the In-do-China coast, possibly will be used in an attack on India or Yunnan province in southern China, this informant said. Japanese troops were report ed also massing in Formosa with Japanese warships again active off the southeast coast, indicat ing a possible new invasion of Fukicn province, it was slated. The Chinese high command said its troops had dislodged Jap anese forces entrenched in the western suburbs of Linchwan (Fuchow), forcing them to fall back inside the walled city in central Klangsi province, A Japanese sortie at the south ern outskirts of the city was ro ported repulsed. Marines Beat-off Jap Attacks in 5-Day Battle ; Allied Gains Greatly Outweigh Losses New Supplies Arrive General MacArthur's Head quarters, Australia, Aug. 11 OP) The allied forces which ac complished their planned land ings in an air, land and sea borne attack on the Solomon is lands are under strong Japanese counterattack, but "we are hold ing our own," Australian Prime Minister John Curtin announced today. Curtin said that American Ad miral Ernest J. King's Wash ington announcement yesterday, despite its listing of the loss of one allied cruiser sunk and two cruisers, two destroyers and one transport damaged, indicated al lied gains so far have greatly outweighed losses. First Offensive Admiral King spoke of "a large number" of enemy planes destroyed and "surface units put out of action," and referred definitely to the Tulagi opera lion as "our first assumption of the initiative and of the offen sive." The prime minister's brief statement was' the first word from an oflicial source in Aus tralia on the main operations in the Solomons. Communiques issued by General MacArthur's headquarters have dealt only with air support given the inva sion thrust directed by Vice Admiral Robert L. Ghormley, supreme commander of allied naval forces in the south Pa cific area. 1 Rahrul Assaulted Today's communique told of a third destructive assault in as many days upon Rabaul, main Japanese flank base in New Britain, and attacks on Japan ese shipping below Timor, more than 2,000 miles to the west, in which a heavy destroyer and two merchant ships were knock ed out. It also was disclosed that Aus tralian land forces were not involved in the Solomon islands attack, but that Australian na val units participated and Aus tralian air forces were cooper ating in the increasingly-powc ful attacks on Japanese bases. (Concluded on Page 11, Column 6) Russia to Fight On Says Molotov Moscow, Aug. 11 VP) Russia is convinced that its army will remain intact and that if it loses the north Caucasus, it can stand Indefinitely on the Volga or, if necessary, in the Ural moun tains, Admiral William H. Slnndlcy, United States ambas sador, said today after a talk with Foreign Commissar Viach cslnv Molotov. Standlcy saw Molotov yester day and informed him that Ma jor General Follett Bradley, President Roosevelt's newly ar rived special envoy had brought Premier Josef Stalin a letter from the president. As the result of his visit here from Kuibyshev, where the dip lomatic corps had had its head quarters since soon after Rus sia was invaded, Standlcy has received the impression that the Russians realized the seriousness of their situation but do not think developments In the north Caucasus before Stalingrad are decisive. "The are convinced that the Red army Is Intact and will re main Intact," he said. "The Russians may continue to with draw but there is not the slight est indication thnt they have the slightest intention of quitting." Standlcy said he had not heard any complaints by Russian authorities regarding allied de lay in starting a second front, but he added that the Russian people were naturally disap pointed.