Southern Oregon Miner, Thursday, March 1, 1945 GOD IS MY SFATIXC CIRCLE X F F D F F C R 4F T N ew est in Crocheted Chair Set CO-PILOT C ol. R o b e rt L.Scott The t lo r j that far: After grsduatln* fro m W i l l Point, Robert Scott « la s bit "la g s at Kelly Field and takes ap combat ty ta c . He h at been aa Im true tor tor toar years when the w ar breaks oat. and Is told be Is now too old lor combat t y ­ ing' Appealing to several Generals, be la Anally told be caa get late the BgbL He Ries a bomber to India, bat oa ar- rlv a l Is made a terry pilot sad this does not salt him. After a visit to Gen. Chen aa a lt he gets a Klttyhaw k aad soon be­ comes known as the "owe man a ir force," taking heavy gap tall la Burm a. Later be Is made C.O. of the M rd Fighter Group, bat still keeps on knocking down dap planes. His "Old E xterm in ato r" Is badly mauled la a dogAgbt. CHAPTER X X IV As I looked around now the bomb­ ers were gone, but climbing up from the South I saw four twin-engine ships that I thought were 1-45'»; later we decided they were Japa­ nese Messerschmitta. I had plenty of altitude on the leader, and start­ ed shooting at him from long range, concentrating on his right engine. He turned to dive, and I followed him straight for the water. I re­ member grinning, for he had made the usual mistake of diving instead of climbing. But as I drew up on the twin-engine ship, I began to be­ lieve that I had hit him from the tong range. His ship was losing al­ titude rapidly in a power glide, but he was making no effort to turn. I came up to within fifty yards and fired into him until he burned. I saw the ship hit the water and continue to burn. We had been going to­ wards the fog bank in the direction of the Philippines, and I wondered if the Jap had been running for Ma­ nila. I shot at two of the other twin- engine ships from long range but couldn’t climb up to them. Then I passed over Hongkong Island, flying at a thousand feet: I was too low but didn’t want to waste any time climbing. And I saw something that gripped my heart—a fenced-in en­ closure which I knew was Fort Stan­ ley. the British and American prison camp. There was a large group standing in the camp and waving at my ship. My saddest feeling of the war came over me then. Here were soldiers who had been prison- era of the Japanese for nearly a year. Month after month they bad waited (or the sight of Allied airplanes at­ tacking Hongkong—and at last it had come. Even in their suffering they were waving a cheer to the tew United States planes that had finally come, and I swore to myself I’d come back again and again. WN.U. RELEASE emy lines that night, they stopped Sitting there smoking his pipe and. to rest, and the wounded pilot like a football coach, planning the crawled away from them to Insure next week's work. Joe. the Gener­ their getting away to the guerrilla al's little black dashshund, would be lines. They escaped, and later we burrowing Into the rocks, looking for received a letter signed by the other the inevitable rats. When with the two crewmen which said that the passing minutes the P-40'» or the pilot had been captured and was bombers were due to return, the then In a Japanese hospital. The General would begin to watch the letter was a Japanese propaganda eastern sky. There he would sit leaflet that the Japs had dropped without a word until the last ship near Kweilin, but being properly was accounted for. Sometimes . signed. It gave us hope for the re­ thought: The General lives through mainder of the crew, and for the every second of the combat with us. heroic pilot. Lieutenant Alters. With his keen knowledge of tactics That night Morgan led a night and of the Jap too, he sees exactly raid to bomb Canton, and had a what we are doing. successful attack. Later the same Another memory that always night, Ed Bayse led six bombers to brings a smile is Lieutenant Couch’s destroy the power station on Hong­ face when he was explaining what kong Island. In his return to Kwei­ happened the first time he got a Jap lin, five of his ships landed but the Zero In his sight*. The enemy ship other continued to circle— informing was a lone "sitter.” probably some the radioman that he had no air inexperienced Japanese pilot who speed and thus was having difficulty wasn't looking around and didn't bringing the fast bomber in to land. know the P-40 was behind him. Bayse. who had worked all the Couch said he kept moving up closer day and most of the night over ene­ and closer until he knew the Jap my lines, started his ship and went was going to be dead the instant he C 'V ER Y O N E will w ant to follow aloft, got the other ship on his wing pressed his trigger. Then he pressed suit when they se e your ch airs in formation, and told the pilot to —and nothing happened. He beautified with this lovely pineap­ keep the position. And then this squeezed the trigger until he thought ple - crochet basket filled with experienced bomber pilot led the he'd press the top off the stick; he d aisies. younger pilot in to a safe landing. found that he shut his eyes, flinched, • • • It was teamwork of the sort that and bit his lip, but still the guns Daisy medallions—easy Io memorize— had begun to appear among the didn't fire. All thia simple crocheted basket In the lovely pineapple design. Pattern 7W8 has bomber crews, and more important The American pilot from the Caro­ Instructions, stitches. still, as the co-ordinated attack had shown, between the fighters and lina* swore and throttled back, drop­ bombers. This was what Colonel ping to the rear while the Jap kept Cooper had been working for during flying innocently on. After Couch had recharged his guns he began to the past several months. stalk the Zero again, going closer Cooper had done another fine Job, and closer until he could see the one that we learned of only after we enemy pilot at the controls. He set returned to Kunming from the at­ his sights right on the cockpit and tack. In India the field in Assam pressed the trigger once more. And If the knob is pulled off a tight­ again nothing happened. ly closed draw er, u se a plunger Couch came home disgusted, and or a large suction cup to open the I think he worked on his guns all drawer. night Up between Hengyang and Ling- ling we had broken the main Jap force with several attacks and there were only stragglers around the sky. We had been searching them out for fifteen minutes when I saw and heard a remark that was nothing short of classic. From 21,000 feet I observed a lone Zero. But there was a P-40 trailing him, and so I held my altitude and watched. The P-40 closed the gap more and more, following the acrobatics of the Jap. and then drew up for the kill. As the tracers from the six gun* went Into the Zero I heard the voice of Captain Goss say, “There. Hirohlto, you bastard—God rest your soul. Over the radio you could also hear the staccato roll of the six Fifties. TTie Zero slowly rolled over to de­ struction. Then I saw above me the criss­ crossing vapor paths of an area where fighter ships have sped Sometimes the ha.ed Japs haa the through an air attack. They almost Gen. Chennault observes the re­ last word. In regions where the a ir­ covered the sky in a cloud. Here turn of the C.A.T.F. from a raid. warning net was working poorly or and there were darker lines that Lieut. Grossclose at left. not at all, our first knowledge of could have been smoke paths where the approach of the enemy would ships bad burned and gone down to had been raided heavily by the Jap­ be the sight of Japanese bombers destruction. anese at the same hour as our at­ overhead As the bombs blasted the tack on Kowloon, and simultaneous­ runways and the Jap radial engines I was rudely jerked back to at­ tention by a slow voice that yet was ly the Japanese had tried to strike were taking their ships at high altl (harp: “If that’s a P-40 in front of at Kunming with a large force. Colo­ tude back towards their base*, we me, waggle your wings ” I rocked nel Cooper had been left behind in would hear over the radio on our my wings before I looked. Then I the hospital with a sinus Infection. exact frequency, in perfect English: saw the other ship, a P-40 nearly a He was chafing at the bit, and we "So sorry, please, so sorry." mile away. I think from the voice sympathized with him—for after We would just shake our fists and It was Tex HilL I went over to­ having planned the greatest raid of wait for better days. the war in China, he had been forced wards him and together we dove out of accompanying the mission. towards home. But It has always been our con­ When e — at brought "Old Exter- The presence of the other P-40 tention out there that "everything minator” to China, I had painted the made me feel very arrogant and happens for the best.” And it proved number lQ,on the fuselage. Later on egotistical, tor I had shot down four out again. When the enemy planes we used the last three numerals of enemy ships and had damaged oth­ approached Kunming. Cooper left the Air Corps numbers (or call let­ ers. So I looped above Victoria har­ the hospital and took charge of the ters, or were assigned some name bor and dove for the Peninsular defense of the home base. He sent like "ash.” "oak." or "pine.” But Hotel. My tracers ripped into the Schiel’s Squadron towards the South the first time I came back from shining plate-glass of the pent­ at exactly the right time. They not Chungking, late one afternoon. I ap­ houses on its top, and I saw the only intercepted the enemy and proached Kunming down the usual broken windows cascade like snow foiled the attack but shot down eight corridor, expecting that to Identify to the streets, many floors below. I of the enemy. That made the score me automatically, and from far out laughed, for I knew that behind for the Group twenty-seven enemy I called by radio; "One Zero, coming | those windows were Japanese high planes on October 25th, and three in from the North.” Of course 11 pfficers, enjoying that modern ho­ highly successful bombing raids was using the numerals of the num­ tel. When I got closer I could see We were ordered home the next ber "ten” to identify me to the ra­ uniformed figures going down the day, although we now had the ene­ dio-man. Instead, as I came over j fire-escapes, and I shot at them. In my at our mercy without fighter the field I saw anti-aircaft men of I the smoke of Kowloon I could smell protection against future raids to­ the Chinese Army running for their oil and rubber. I turned for one wards Hongkong. But heavy at­ guns, and I saw six P-40's taking more run on the packed fire-escapes tacks had come to India, and we off to shoot the invader down. Mean­ filled with Jap soldiers, but my next ing me. You’ve probably guessed It burst ended very suddenly. I was were needed to protect the terminus by now—the radioman gathered that | of the ferry route to China. out of ammunition. Then, right into We managed, however, to leave a some one had Just warned him that the smoke and through it right down small force of P-40’s under Holloway one enemy Zero was about to strafe to the tree-top levels. I headed the field. Needless to say. I took Northwest to get out of Japanese and Alison, with mission to dive- myself to safer place* for a few min­ bomb shipping in Victoria harbor territory sooner, and went as fast as within the next few days. They utes until I could properly identify I could for Kweilin. my ship. Then I landed and changed j I was the last ship in, and the took eight planes down and dove the fuselage number to lucky “sev- General was anxiously waiting for through the overcast towards some en” —but definitely not seventy. me, scanning the sky for ships to big enemy freighters that were on come in. He knew I had shot down the way South towards the Solo­ There Just wasn’t much relaxa-1 an enemy, for I had come In with mons. Their bombs damaged two my low-altitude roll of victory. But 8,000-ton freighters and sank a 12,- tion In China with Scotch at one| when 1 Jumped from my cramped 000-ton vessel. Captain O’Connell hundred dollars gold a bottle—when 1 you could find IL In fact, we didn’t | seat and said, "General, I got four made this last direct hit by almost definitely,” he shook my hand and taking his bomb down the smoke­ get to drink anything except boiled 1 looked very happy. "That makes stack of the enemy vessel, and in water and that really terrible rice He wine. This we had to learn to down nineteen then,” he said, “for the doing so he was shot down. took the bomb very low, and In re­ with the Chinese and In their man­ fighters and the bombers.” covering from the dive he was at­ ner. which was with the Inevitable! We had lost a fighter and a bomb­ tacked by a single enemy, who got salute, "Gambey,” or “bottoms up ” er. The bomber had become a strag­ one of the best pilots in the Squad­ Then they’d come and proudly show 1 gler when one engine was hit by anti­ ron. Clinger and Alison saw the the bottoms of their glasses, aircraft; then it was shot to pieces enemy ship, but from their dis­ you and you’d have to follow suit with a | by one of the twin-engined Jap fight­ tance they could do nothing In time weak little gambey. ers. The pilot had managed even to save O’Connell. While Alison was then to get it down, but he had re­ getting the lone enemy ship, Clinger Then there was the incessant ring-1 mained in the ship to destroy the dove in anger along the docks of bomb-sight, w d had been shot ing of the telephone* in the warning- Kowloon, strafing three anti-aircraft through the foot by a Jap cannon. positions In the face of very heavy net plotting-room that got on all I Two of the bomber crew had bailed ground-fire. our nerves. After month* I found out that without exception every p ilo t! out and were captured. The other The most vivid memories of our tried not to let other* know of his j two carried the injured pilot until he had begged them to leave him air war in China come from the lit­ nervousness. But it became un­ Like the memory of mistakable, for the tension that built I Alone and escape. They had ban­ tle things. General Chennault, sitting there at up around the card-table* In the! daged his foot tightly, but had re­ the mouth of the cave In Kweilin fused to go without him. alert shack* was not the most ef- through the long hours while we Aa they moved on through the en- were away on the attack missions. '-ctlvely disguised In the world. (TO BE C O N T IN U E D » To rew ind the spring in the roll­ er of a window sh ad e, insert the flattened end in the low er part of a keyhole. —•— Instead of rooting and digging am ong the fa m ily ’s cloth es to find the soiled on es for M onday’s w ash, give each m em b er of the fam ily a laundry bag or b ask et and have him bring nis own cloth es to the laundry room . Due to an unusually large demand and rurrent war conditions, slightly more time la required in tilling order* for a few of the moat popular pattern numbers. Send your order to; Sewing Circle Needleeraft Kept. Box 3217 San Franrlaco (, Calif. 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Big, long- lasting bottle. 11. r m -T A d ta ra -t« ONE WORD SUGGESTION') FOR ACID INDMKST1ON- |//a SORETONE soothes fast with COLD HEAT' ACTIOH in cases of MUSCULAR LUMBAGO OR BACKACHE Sus ts («t I su» t r (> sou r» MUSCULAR PAINS du» to » Id s SORE MUSCLES due ts »«»rworli | M IN O R SPRAINS Y o u can’t see legum e bacteria w ith o u t a p o w e rfu l microscope. I f you c o u ld , you w ou ldn ’t k no w w hether they were good bacteria o r bad. T h e re is one sure way to get p le n ty o f effective ino cula­ tio n . . . just ask f o r N I T R A G I N when you buy. N I T R A G I N is the oldest most w idely used in o c u la n t. F o r 4 5 - years farm ers have used it to get bigger yields o f a lfa lfa , clo ver, soybeans, and to b uild soil fe r tility . I t costs o n ly a few cents an acre; b u t fre q u e n tly boosts yields up to 5 0 % and m ore. I t pays to inoculate every p la n tin g o f legumes. G e t N I T R A G I N where you buy y o u r seed. Look fo r the yellow can. Iks Nltrsjla 0,., |lc , UH N. | Mft IL> m K wi O. i jj , Wlc FREE Beefcltl* “and ¡McKcison make» it” + Though applied cold, ruho- faclent Ingrediente In Hora- tone art like heat to 1 nr relio the iiiperflclal mpply of blood to the area and Induct a (lowing ienao of warniUt Mow to t r o w b o t t o r leg u m oi. W r it e to d a y . Look for tho tradenam e N IT ­ R A G IN on tho yollew con when