i u-u-iifiirv"iryyy' nrrnrrriJiv"i"ti,ii "I " "' Bill On t-rnlnul blast on ilrani and whistles. U tht signal lot a blackout In Klamath Falls. Anothar long blast, during a black out, la a algnal lor all-clear. In precau tionary parlodi, watch your atraat lights. August 21 High 88. Low St Praclpltation u ot August 13, 1941 Last yaar ; 14.29 Normal ; 12.22 Straam yaar to data .. . ,...m.13,17 ASSOC ATPn pdf iki THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES hrnAAAru'irinrn-iri'i'i . - - - . PRICK 5"ln; ,., ..a FALLS. ORKflQN. SATURDAY. AUGUST 22. 1942 Number 9573 M rm 2) ivi UW L d'Uzfqd: .- I II! ' atui EfnMPE UUDD b yD (MZLDD i : Him i! i I'" !;!i III !! I Ih' Hi!1 I! ilii i I II s I1 I UakMrl. i 11111 By FRANK JENKINS l AST Wednesday lilKht, 700 Jii tried a stealthy night ItmdlnK on Olio o( tho Solomon Island where our Marines novo their (col planted. A dm I nil Nlmll.' report of the offulr doesn't say so, but ono guesses they hnd In mind ono of these Infiltrating affair Hint worked so well for them In Ma Inyn and tho Dutch Eat Indies -grccn-palnted Japs swinging from Junglo trco lo JumhIo tree, etc. It didn't work o well this time. - When the Murines not through "counting coos," as our rough plainsmen called It bnck In our Indlon-flghting days, It wo dis covered that 070 ot tho 700 Jnps k.vera dead and tho remaining 30 wcro prisoners. AT this point, this writer would llho to mnko a guess an extremely sn(o ono. As you read ot this exploit by .American boys on ono of tho liir Islands of tho South Sens, your, chest., swells with prUlu. Hot, snlty moisture" WrYgryour eyes. Your fists clinch. Your Jaw sets. 1 You say to yourself: "By , If they want lo Inko my tires nwoy from mo so as to organize belter support for thoso guys who nro fnclng the Jnps down there In tho jungles and showing them whnl's wlmt, IT'S ALL RIGHT WITH ME! They enn have 'em nnd welcome. "I'll wnlk, or stny nt homo. AND LIKE ITI" VOU mny hnvo added Hint the snmo goes for sugnr ration ing and gasoline rationing and meat rationing. If It comes along. Hampered somewhat by tho lump In your throat, you prob ably muttered: "I'll go cheer fully barefooted and llvo on spinach and beets If It will help thoso boys In even tho slightest way," JUST a word hero to the gen tlemen whose business It Is to ducido about the news to be given (or NOT given) to tho American pcoplo: This llttlo story about the Ma rines who cleaned up tho 700 Jnps with a loss to themselves of 28 killed and 72 wounded didn't help tho enemy. Ho knew It anyway. It Inspires us hero at homo no end. Drives tho warbles out of uur bucks. Stops us from grumb ling. Mnkcs REAL PATRIOTS 111 UPi 'TWERE must be hundreds of ' thoso Incidents that can bo given to us without In any way Increasing tho enemy's store ot useful military Information somo of them cnuslng us to swell nnd almost burst with prldo, somo ot them gripping our hearts with their sheer tragedy. Some of them cheerfully hope ful. Some ot them menacingly grave. But ALL OF THEM drama tizing for us the supremely Im portant fact that this Is OUR war; that It is being fought by OUR BOYS, thai NOTHING wo enn do to help It along can pos sibly bo too much to ask of us. . "THESE gentlemen' whoso job It Is to dccldo what enn bo lold to us safely and what can't be told without giving nld to the enemy nnd who so far hnvo been deciding that tho less told In lltf thfl Insa fhn nnnmv nnn hear aro slnccro and pntrlotic Americans. Just as slnccro nnd patriotic as you or I, But In tho press of their other duties, unrlor the weight of re sponsibility that rests on their shoulders, they hnvo been for getting (It seems to this writer) that when the millions of stny- (Continued on Page Two) i I WVDUI & WD UD VIM : rUADd II. S. SUBS GET ni ninn HIHli AULA One Destroyer Possi bly Sunk; Another Ship Damaged WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 (P) Tho navy announced today that American submarines In tho Pa cific huvo sunk four Jnpancse non-combatant ships, possibly sunk ono destroyer and dam aged ono non-combatant ship. One of tho non-combatant ships, a merchant vessel, was sunk In tho Aleutians area. All thu other craft successfully- at tacked were In tho western Pa cific. Navy communique No. 110 said: . "Far East: i "1. United States submarines have reported the following re sults of operations In Far East ern waters: I "(A) Two large cargo ahlps sunk. "(B) Ono large transport sunk. "(C) Ono dc.itrpycr.daiaflgc and possimy sunk. "(D) Ono medium sized cargo ship damaged by one torpedo hit. "2. These actions were not related to tho operations in the Solomon islands. "North Pacific: "3. A United States subma rine has reported the sinking of a largo Jupuncso merchant ship in tho Aleutian area. e '."4. Tho above actions have not been announced In any pre vious navy department commu nique." These successful actions by American undersea craft raised tho toll of Japanese shipping taken by U. S. submarines to 60 ships sunk, 16 possibly sunk, nnd 19 damaged a totnl ot 91 as reported In announcements by tho navy department at Washington, The sinking ot another ship In tho Aleutian area boosted tho total Jap losses in that sec tion from American sea and nlr action to 11 ships sunk, 12 damaged, and one believed sunk. Logging Mishap Takes Life of Alvin Blotter Death of Alvin 'C. Blotter in a logging mishap near Lake o' tho Woods on Saturday brought tho accident toll to two In Klamath county In tho Inst 24 hours. Dr. Gcorgo Adlcr, coronef, said Blotter was struck at 10 a. m, Saturday by a rolling log whllo working for tho Hamakcr Lumber company. ' Follow workmen brought him to the hospital here, but he. was dead when they arrived. He was 31 years of age and a resident of Ashland. Survivors are his wife nnd one son, Teddy Lawrence, of Klamath Falls, , Tho other dcnlh wns that of John Moran, Antelope sheep man, killed Friday when hit by n freight' train nt Until-aiding, nenr Crescent Lake. Dr. Adlcr said Investigation showed Mornn was lying down bcsldo the tracks whilo herding sheep. When n train approached, he started to rise and his head was struck by tho passing loco motive, . THREE EXECUTED LONDON, Aug, 22 (AP) The Norwegian government in Lon don reported lodny that Gcrmnn occupation authorities In Nor way hove exocuted three Nor wegian fishermen for feeding two stnrvlng Russians, found stranded on the Island of Mage roya off the extreme northern tip of Norway, J 4 JAP SHIPS Defense House Sash Produced Here ,j . ..." . .'.; 7', J f 1 i I I ( '"l J - ' -j W -A: J c ' rr i : I twi.iSi inM v.. Wj?-'iii l.jjuM,,.'imYr,u,MtmntiA - Stum Pictura shows E. S. Robinson of the Klamath Cabinet shop putting togothtr one of the 14,000 sash which this local plant Is producing tor deionia houitr in Portland. Soma 20,000 scraans ara also being produced hora for pra-fabrlcatad houses at an ordnance- dapot in Utah. '.. ' '' -...V ,, ,;; . Utile Business Big Part (Editor's Note; This Is tho last In a scries of weekly articles on Klamath's Industrial drive to win tho war). By BOB LEONARD . In reflecting on our wor pro duction effort which, until the OWI gloomed a llttlo last week, was generally regarded as more than Just satisfactory, our thought Is usually confined to enormity. Wo as a nation are presumably dally ejecting planes by tho doz ens, tanks by tho hundreds, guns and shells by the thousands and: millions from gigantic factories wherein equal millions of our boys nnd gals nro sweating but no moro than eight good union hours In every 24. But wo as a nation arc also producing a rhultitudo of little gadgets, odds and edds, and glmcracks from llttlo factories which gain no mention but without which there would bo no millions of our boys and gals sweating eight good union hours out of every 24. Without which there would be no whole. Most of the llttlo gadgets are not only necessary but vital, some aro Important and others nre just essential. Wo hnvo ono in mind. It's screens. Door nnd window screens nnd they're being pro duced right down on Spring street by tho Klamnlh Cabinet shop. , E. S. R o b i n o n Is tho man who's doing tho job. He's better than hnlfwny through on a contract for 20,000 nnd all three zeros are not a typographi cal error screens for prc-fnb-rlcntcd houses going up nt the colossal new ordnance depot tat Ogdcn, Utah. And add to that 14.000 win dow nnd door sashes he's shup Ing for Portland's mushrooming war plnnt housing areas, See what wo monn? Probnbly not ono In ten of you even knew Ihnt Mr. R. wasn't still building cabinets, just plain cabinets for Mr. and Mrs. K. F. As it Js Mr. P. Is employing I Vt I ' L 91 1 .. Plays in War Effort 15 men and considerable ma chinery, some of each of which has been added In the past 12 months just for the purpose of making 20,000 screens and 14, 000 sashes. , ,; . Rather . we should say. .he's employing 14 men and a girl and expects more girls and less men in the very close future. And at the same time main taining a respectable relation (Continued on Pago Two) Spitfires Pay Return Visit To Dieppe ' LONDON, Aug. 22 (fl) Fly ing low over Dieppe, : today RAF Spitfires silenced, an anti aircraft firo post with cannon fire, They reported it was the only opposition they encoun tered on the raid, the air min istry news service' said. Tho planes swooped down on the town at an' altitude under 1000 feet. Tho pilots reported they saw only a . few soldiers and that tho main coastal artil lery battery was inactive. Four Spitfires of a Canadian squadron attacked another gun position east of Dieppe. Wire less masts also were raked with gunflro and here, too, Ger many's heavy gun batteries did not nppear to bo manned. An additional heavy gun bat tery at Dieppe was shot up from zero, nit I tude by Spitfires and on tho way home they machine- gunned light gun positions along tho cliff tops. One pilot described the heavy gun posts as "burned out." , . Two Polish squadrons at tacked targets In northern Franco. One factory wns left in flames. Other targets included rntlwny engines, two air fields and gun positions.' German troops were machine-gunned at one air field and In a low swoop over tho Ostend-Bruges area. SUB SINKINGS BRING ABOUT STATE OF WAR Name Germany, Italy In Declaration; No Details RIO DE JANEIRO, Brazil, Aug. 22 (By telephone to Buenos Aires) (IP) Brazil de clared war on Germany and Italy today. The government refused for the present to permit further details of its action to be trans mitted outside the country or by unofficial channels. WASHINGTON, Aug. 22 W) President Roosevelt cabled President Getulio Vargas of Brazil today that Brazil's declar ation of war against Germany and Italy "has hastened the coming of the inevitable victory of freedom.over oppression." ; . Brazilian Ambassador Carlos Martins officially notified tha state department today that his cdwt.wastt"'wr'Tvit- "-iiaA many and Italy. ' .7 . ' There was no Immediate com ment from the state department although some expression from Secretary. Hull ; was expected later in the day. ' ; BUENOS AIRES, Aug. 22 (ff) Brazil informed all her 20 sister - republics of America to day that a state of war exists between her and Germany and Italy as a result of the recent scries of submarine sinkings of Brazilian ships. : Brazil thus became tho first South American nation formally to enter the conflict against the (Continued on Page Two) Reclassification. Of 1-B's Will Start September 1 ' CAMP MURRAY, Aug. 22 (P) Col. Walter J. DeLong, state director of selective service re ported' today that reclassifica tion of all registrants in the 1-B class (deferred for minor physi cal disabilities) .will start Sep tember 1 and that one fourth of the number found eligible for service will be inducted each month. 1 This action, Colonel DeLong said, is a result of a directive recently received from the na tional headquarters of the selec tive service system. Jtle said all tho reclassified 1-B registrants will be in active service, by the end.of December. The state selectiva service di rector explained there would no longer be any 1-B class for fu ture registrants because this cat egory would bo split into either 1-A for immediate induction or 4-F. Baseball AMERICAN LEAGUE R. H. E Boston; 11 13 1 Philadelphia 3 -8-4 ' Terry. Brown (7) and Conroy, Peacock (7); Knott, Fowler ' (7) nnd Swift. , ; . - R. H. E Washington v. ...v 0 3 3 New-York 14 0 Carrasquel and Evans; Bor owy arid Hemsley. R. H. E. Chicago 3 7 2 Cleveland : 1-7 1 . Smith and Trosh; Dean, Ken nedy (0) and Denning. NATIONAL LEAGUE ' . R. H. E Philadelphia 1,7 0 Boston 2 9 0 Hughes and Livingston; Tobin and JVIasi. (10 Innings), Auto Rests Ufa ai' fe?uiaCgatji' i i in mi ll T--- " i ' v ftliiilktov;si Tha autonpblle of Ealnh,HollingjOTth 4 sho-ten -leaning de jectedly against a tr at .517 East. Main (treat, after, a crash arly Saturday. HollingswOrth was fined- 950 for. reckless .driving, with $25 suspended.. ' . - . . .. ...v .; . ..- . .. BATTLE OF Yank Pilots ..Patrol Straits of Dover, "' France"' By The Associated Press - Marshal Semeon Timoshenko's red armies were reported launch ing a series of violent counter attacks in' the "battle of the bend"; 40 ' niiles nortlnvest of Stalingrad today,"' throwing the Germans back on the defensive, while the invaders' rushed masses of reserves " into' action south of 'the great Volga " steel city. , - - - In the Caucasus, new soviet retreats were acknowledged be low Pyatigorsk and Krasnodar, but red army headquarters said the Russians had wiped Out Ger man vanguards in the hills south east' of. Pyatigorsk and' killed lOOO.nazls in. a three-day battle south of Krasnodar.. .. ' Road to Baku Pyotigorsk' is about half way (Continued on Page Two) . i J WPB Agency Tank Strike Settlement By Tha Associated Press' A wjpr production board agency undertook today to bring to a - quick and peaceful con clusion a strike at the Chrysler tank arsenal in Detroit. i Tho case was in the hands of tto WPB board of review, -which was set up under a stabilization agreement : with the. Building Trades Council of the American Federation of Labor. H. L. Weckler, vice president of the corporation, reported that 475 AFL construction workers had stopped work at the arsenal on orders of Ed Thai, secretary of the Detroit Building Trades Council, in protest against the hiring. of some members of the Congress of Industrial Organi zations. A work stoppage at a plant of tho Aluminum Company of America also drew the' board's attention. At the Vernon plant of Alcoa in Los Angeles 300 aluminum workers walked out After Crash , fux - FDR Learns Son's1 Part in Battle; From Newspaper- WASHINGTON," Aug.- 22 (AP) President Roosevelt heard -about his son .James, part In the'Mak in island raid only -Tvheh he read the newspapers this morn ing,, whereupon he ;remarked to a secretary: Did you see where Jimmy Was in the show?" .; Press Secretary' Stephen Early told.reporters of this in remark ing that neither., the; president nor . Mrs. ; Roosevelt . had any more information on the -whereabouts or activities -of their sons than the - fathers and ; mothers of other, officers and men in the armed services. .... .- i ' "They saw - it, -in , the papers this morning- for the first time," Early added.. . .; , . '. , -While the' two were reading the headlines in the president's bedroom ' at - breakfast, : Mrs. Roosevelt entered the room and asked the chief, executive, wheth er he could tell. her. any more details of Major Roosevelt's par ticipation in the raid. than were In the, morning papers. , . The 'president,., Early related, said he could not as he did not know any more than the papers carried from -Hawaii. Works for CIO officials said the Walkout was unauthorized.- George W. Taylor, vice chairman of ' the war labor board, appealed to the men to go -back to work now "as loyal and patriotic citizens. The workers quickly- voted to return to work immediately. . A spokesman-for on AFL lo cal union said in the capital . that jurisdictional dispute between two AFL unions may "remove thousands of highly skilled jour neymen welders and burners" from their :jobs ih four Henry J. Kaiser shipyards in Richmond, Calif.- But threat Of an imme diate- tie-up. appeared removed when Local 681 voted to Rsk gov ernment aid in settling the dis pute, v 1 -'.'" -,v. i, Ray Stewart,- the. union offi cial, said at .Oakland, .Calif., that a local executive board had recommended , ' , that the, ' men leave their jobs and take work available elsewhere in other .. (Continued xa Page Two) JAP SEAPLANE BASE AT Bl IS Marine Losses Light; Mopping Operations Continue By WALTER B. CLAUSED PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii, Aug. 22 W) United States mar ines stood fast in their hard won positions in the Solomon islands today after wiping out a 700-mar. Japanese- force which tried- a stealthy night landing to pierce the American lines. Other, marines and . American bluejackets, with Major James Roosevelt, the president's eldest son,-, one of their leaders, de stroyed a Japanese seaplane base in an extension of- the United -States offensive to Makin island, in the Gilbert group, 1500 miles northeast of. the; American-held Solomons. '- Surprised '" -- Communiques issued by Ad miral Chester W. Nimitz,' com mander of the U, S. Pacif ie fleet, told of the flareup of fight ing in which the enemy was sur prised and destroyed. : Mopping operations, with daily skirmishes between marina patrols and enemy detachments, nave been .in progress since the initial marine landings the night of Aug. 7, the communique said. cut last Wednesday night 700 weH-equipuadIapaneaa landed from. . highspeed, boats- outside the marines' lines, on an un named : island, and attempted a break-through.. v . . Maneuver ' . "During the - darkness -, only hand to hand fighting was pos sible," the communique said. but with the breaking of day the marines were able to maneu ver.. While, one battalion held the front line another- battalion moved to a flank and drove; the then withdrawing Japanese to the beach. - The action continued until late afternoon. Of the 700 Japs, 670 are dead, the rest pris oners. Marine losses were ia . killed and 72 wounded." - The communique also told- of a marine patrol and a Japanese aeiacnmeni in mo aoiomons last .Wednesday, in which the Ameri cans lost only six killed and 13 wounded while wiping out. the enemy unit of 92 officers and men, who continued resistance "until the last man was killed." Admiral Nimtts said the mar ines made a successful landing (Continued on Page Two) James Cummins Killed in Crash , ' rftVUH ' TV "' AT TTKTr Aug;- 22 (IP) Two automobiles collided head-on ', near Hayden lake, killing James M. Cummins, Klamath Falls, Ore., and injur ing five other persons yesterday.' State police said Cummins was thrown against the windshield of a car driven by Jake Hettinger, Windsor, Colo., with whom he was riding, and that Cummins' throat was cut by broken glass. A James M.-Cummlns former ly worked for the Weyerhaeuser Timber company here, but has not been employed there since April. He gave his address a 2010 South Sixth street. Drunk Driver Kills 7-Year-Old 5 PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 22 (JP) Standing on a street corner, William Rock said to a friend, "look at that car travel. There goes a hospital case." , A block Bway tho car struck his ; seven-year-old daughter, Mnrv Jane. She was dead when fshc reached the hospital. . Police held the drive? on charge of drunken driving. ; News Index City Briefs .L....:...L:...Va&o S Comics and Story Pago 10 Editorial ..i.-,;....,... ...Page 4 Information ........:.......,...Pago 3 Market, Financial Page 3 Our Men in Service ......Pago 3 Pattern Pago 8 Society .....,.,..Pages 8, 6, f, 8 Sports -.i,.i.. ,.....Page 8 DESTROYED