u i.lllll.lullllliliill On l-mlnute blast en siren and whistle It the signal for a blackout In Klamath rails. Another long blast, during a black out la a ilgnal lor all-clear. In precau tionary parlodi, watch your ttraat light. Baptambar 14 High 12, Low 47 v Precipitation ai ei September t, 1942 ' Last year .., .....,.1.5 Normal .J, -...-..-... J 2.80 ASSOCIATED PRESS IN THE SHASTA-CASCADE WONDERLAND NEA FEATURES " i - - - - -i ...... ? PRICE P FALLS, OREGON, TUESDAY,. SEPTEMBER 15, 1942 'dllii'll A It VJftl 11 AAlKllWAI.M I WW- Stream year to data , ...,.....ia.2Q i ' 1 M . . . II H I I' . I ...... WVWWW..,. Number 9592 ..'; o)rafn)fn)n7nn n (fmp IB inni By. FRANK JENKINS tCTE have something new to talk , about today the Jiip In- kendlary ' bombing Incident In Curry comity. ... , N'the bail of what we out a, ' lder k n o w which lin't Omuchi-the whole affair looka ecrewy. ' A amall plane aem to have wept In from the ocean. It may have come from a Jop lubrnnrlne. At lent ono of our pnlrol plane sighted an unidentified U-boat some SO mile off the coast and bombed It "with unobserved re suits." A half hour later, the .aame plane (presumably) roared put to tea and disappeared. Meanwhile it I reported to have dropped ONE Incendiary .bomb which started a fire that waa'seen by sharp-eyed forest vlookout who sent out the alarm and than plunged Into the brush and' put out the fire Ingle banded. . ' OT TIES'!) Incendiary bottiba are LIGHT. It would seem that even, small plane, such as could be Jioused In a submarine, could curry several of thorn. , , SEVERAL fire bombp, drop Ded mllea apart from (needing plane, might have caused a lot or tre-uoit.- ; .ir ' CO far, Jap attack on this coast aem to border on the absurd. : First a submarine arose out of the quiet waters of the Santa Barbara channel ono evening and fired a dozen shells at the Goleta oil field, doing no dam age. Then, months Inter, another sub appeared off Astoria ' and lobbed over a few shells,, sgnln rinlnr no damage. ' - Come now thl forest-firing episode,, which appear (on the face of what we know) to have been another dud. 0(A' 8 everyone know who-has watched the moisture that itaya on the grass all day, hu midlty has been high of late, Hleh humidity la UNFAVOR- ABLE to the spread of forest fire. Why didn't the Japs wait for a period of low humldlty7) i THEIR attacks on thl coast (so ." far) lead to me snop juag. tnent that the Jap are a race of simple-minded children, playing what amount to Hallowe'en trick on their enemy. ' But we KNOW BETTER than that.. " In "their South Sea warfare, they i have been shrewd,' Intel' Jlgenl and forcslghtcd. Down there, they made every move count. There was no childish horseplay at 1 Pearl Harbor, at Manila, at Singapore or in tho Dutch East Indies. Everywhere In that port of the orld they: htive figured their hots and have played tor keeps. .7 ' TWHY all this seemingly absurd exhibitionism ovor here? -' Are they deliberately trying to trap, us into the belief Hint they are harmless llttlo savages, not jjo be taken seriously, so that when, (and If) they DO tacklo us for blood we shall be expect ', (Continued on Pago Four) Oregon Soldiers Get Awards for Bravery in Aleuts ANCHORAGE, Alaska, .Sept. 45 (AP), Brig. Gen. Simon Buckncr, commanding tho Alaska defense command, today announced additional awards to soldiers and officers for brav ery In tho Aleutians and other military actions In this area. Air medals went to Lieut. eorge W.. Glllet.t, Bonneville, Q)re., and Lieut. Col. Jack N. T)onohew of Stator, Mo.,, for making repeated Instrument flights over tho. Aleutians, de spite tee and other dnngers, and attacked the armed enemy.. The purple heart was award ed posthumously to seven mom.' bar 6f the crow of a heavy bomber plane lost whllo attack ing the Japanese- during bad weather. GLA M DEEP THRUST Slaughter of; Nazis i Up 6000 In . Last V Three Days MOSCOW, Sept. 15 m Russian soldiers watching the sklea for enemy plane above Stullngrad saw other forma tions overhead, today V' of cranes, geese and ducks flying south away from the snow which soon will be swirling on the Steppes. A correspondent of lzvestla, the government newspaper, said the mornings already had' grown cold and that frost cruated grass was reminding Germans of last winter' dis aster. By ROC3ER O, GREEHB V Associated Press' War Edlter -German military-quarter as serted today that.natl troops were "thrusting deeper" . Into Stalingrad amid heavy street fighting and the German' trans ocean now agency declared without confirmation elsewhere that Stalingrad' main railway station had been captured. . ',-, A nail spokesman again boast ad that. the battle for. tbe big Volga steel city was entering "1U final phase." , . V, '-, Reds Claim Cdge . Russian advices, giving n en tirely different picture,, said massed soviet artillery, ..anti tank barricades and roving tank destroyers had blocked repeated German assaults and declared the red armies were even passing at times to the counter-attack., German field headquarter said only that "the victorious ad vance on Stalingrad, excellently supported by the air force,, ts gaining further ground." Violence Re-doubled With their backs to the Volga, Stalingrad's defenders were .re ported In soviet dispatches to be withstanding the heaviest bomb ing assaults and still command ing hills looking down on the heart of the city. ' The Russians said that tank led nazl troop had redoubled the violence of their attack,-but that German gains were now be (Continucd on Pago Four) Japs Killed Own .', Wounded at Milne Bay, Officer Says GENERAL MacARTHUR'S HEADQUARTERS, Austr alia, Sept. 15 (AP) The Japanese killed their own badly wounded so that no prisoners were taken in tho battle for Milne bay, where allied forces crushed a Japanese landing last month, a senior allied officer reported to day, The officer had just .returned from tho southeastern New Guinea battlefield. , STALINGRAD Habit Led a Couple of Jap SEATTLE, Sept. 15 (JV-The routine habit of a couple of Japanese four-motored bombers led them to tholr destruction in a carefully prepared trap set by U. S. army and navy flyers. Such Is the story told by a group ot naval officers here on leave from the Aleutian battlo front. Study of the enemy flyers habits had convinced military ob servers that the big Jap. navy bombers would be in a certain place at' a certain time, Lieut. W. N. Thlcs, 25, of Washington, D. C, and pilot of b navy Cat allnn flying boat, related. Army and navy flyers got to gether, lie said, and two army fighters, escorted by a Boeing Flying Fortress, hid In the region where the Japs were expected. A tender was sent ahead to act aa a target. .,' . ; When the Japs caught sight ot tlia tanderthey 'came ln for the Yanks V IK Scrambling from lending barga 'which brought them ashore at a. dock on the island ot pew , Caledonia, rrea rrencn-eontroiiee, tatane in the soutnwest Pa cific which' has bwn J!tlpp4. Ihti '- U, Sv ftronghold. Not , French flag 'on- raotor launch, at ... .,.., i . . i-i i ii ,nf , i , '.. i i . ..,;.. f, . Hit , Fpfm Price;' Wage - . . Action Now. . Washington: seot. is (Af) Secretary of Agriculture Wick- ard gave his support today to plan for stabilizing farm prices at' level' averaging parity, de claring that 'he recalled too viV Idly how,. s a farmer, he went lkHt..h '. "Inflnllnn OilH Aetlli. Hon" In-the last war. Wickard appeared before the senate banking committee, which a little earlier had heard Price Administrator Leon Henderson call for stabilization now of farm prices, wages and salaries to head off what ne cauea an inflation disaster ' as deadly as a bomb and as treacherous as the Japanese." ' . income up They testified in the commit tee a study of a resolution by Chairman Wagner (D-N.Y.) and Senator. Brown (D-Mich.) which would direct President Roose velt to stabilize wages, salaries and price at the general level ot last AiiRU.it 15. , Wickard said estimates for 1942 indicated that-cash farm income. . Including government payments, would be flo.oou, Q00.000, considerably more than the' previous high level reached In 1919. ' Control Inadequate - He said net farm income on the amount available to farmers for use In family living and for savings was estimated at $10, 500,000,000 . or almost $1,000, 000,000 greater than the amount available In 1919. Citing steep Increases In the . (Continued ,on Page Four) Bombers to Ruin kill" but before they knew what happened the P-38 army planes blew the first enemy flyer out ofthelr. "The second Jap hit for the clouds, with the Boeing and the fighters. after him," Lieut. Thies, said. "The Bneltig went under the clouds and flWJied him out above.. The P-38' were waiting for him up there, and, flplshed. him off like nothing. .; ,. . .No Japs, have been seen In that area since, he said. Thies told. of bombing a Jap anese ' submarine . and ," being blown '400 to 500 feet into the air by the force of the explosion. The explosion blew the tall off the plane, .ignited one engine and blew the craft into the clouds over the sub, the pilot said. It wa not known whether the sub was hit. Included In the group of pilots here for relaxation was Ensign S. H. Dlnsmore, 22, of Olympia. Land' in New Caledonia mu 'IH nn , 4 t J, f.V: J".. .-.-if f T UsepfKUHS Harvest Help May Be Talked If it develop that the Klanv th basin potato harvest requires help' from Klamath Union high wjfioolt aturten t, the .KUH8 act) oo l board wilf-'meetV'w'lth': County Agent Charles A.:' Henderson to. discus piannqr action.. , -7 -. Thl ,waf.,the-dec4slort of .the Klamath, ; Falls school boards meeting' in- regular session' last night, lh the high school, Super intendent , Arnold ; L. Gralapp aid today. , . ; -. ' Outlying' county, schools- have already decided to declare a three-week, vacation .when the harvest starts. .... .' Gralapp said the . boards also approved an expansion . of the vocational education program at ' (Continued on Page Four) Men With Social Diseases Due To Be Drafted 'v; WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (AP) Major General' Lewis B. Her shey, director of selective serv ice, informed the house com mittee on defense migration to day that on October 1 the army would begin. inducting men suf fering from venereal diseases.' ' His statement was made as he outlined to the. committee the army' expanding requirements for manpower. He said, that the army, now Is. taking, ten: per. cent of illiterates In . each. Induction station and that It was "going to take : more pen day . pretty soon." ; He told newsmen after com pleting his testimony that the supply of single men without de pendents or without occupa tional, deferments would be ex hausted this fall. Hershey testified that 'married men with children could expect to be drafted into' the. services probably by the end of 1943, under the present : demands of the armed forces, but that '.It might be earlier. . ''.' .He said that; it would-be nee essary eventually to take youths of -the 18-19-year-old class, but he did not say definitely when they might be called. . . .. Bomb Explosion Rocks British Relief Office; . - ; BOSTON. Sept,- 15,(AP)-An explosion, which a polfce expert said he believed, was . caused, by a bomb, rocked the quarters of the British War Relief society at Commonwealth', avenue . and Berkeley .street .shortly, before noon today. ...',. . - Sergt. Edward Selbolt, Boston police' ballistics expert, said the explosion, ' which sent several women fleeing to the street, ap parently had been caused by a tlme.bomb. It apparently caused little tdamagatto the. buildings :. uj.ii . n ' i -1 " "I i (rem transport sHps, uoopi'land TAX BILL READY WASH(5TdN,'Sept.vl!l () A record-shattering revenue bill dipping .'directly' into; the'.'pock ets'of more thini aithlrd bf ihe' nation's-" citizens -.for: rnorey. to help fighf the.war'went to.'the technical draftsmen-, today with mixed , approval'.' and. criticism from .members of - the- senate . fi nance committee. . : y About 23,000,000 persons who previously . paid no federal Income-taxes would' join. 20,000; 000 old taxpayers and the cor porations to provide' treasury collections estimated unofficially at more than $25,500,000,000 an nually under terms of the meas ure as it was approved by the committee last night. : : -. f Rebate Limited . ' : The committee ruled ' that a proposed -post-war rebate, for corporations- should be limited to 10 per cent of the excess profits taxes, they paid, Instead of Including also their surtaxes. Corporations .thus were pro vided with; $700,000,000 poten tial rebate's, accompanied by $1,100,000,000 to- be . repaid to individuals under trie victory tax. This represented' a $1,800, 000,000 annual loan .that; would be collected by , the treasury in addition to the $23,774,000,000 estimated return in direct taxes. This compares with $17,000,000.- 000 annual revenue under exist ing, law.. . .-. . - Dieppe Raid Cost Canada 3350 Dead, Wounded, Missing' OTTAWA, Sept 15 (AP) Canadian casualties In the allied raid on Dieppe last month total ed 3350 dead, wounded and missing, the department of na tional defense announced today. v A '134-page casualty list was Issued. ,. Along with casualties prev iously reported, the list brought the total of known dead, to 170. including 40 officers, the wounded-tq33 including 41 officers and - the missing: .to! 2547. in cluding 130 officers. Bulletin LONDON,-Sept.' 15 '(AP). A .Reuters -dispatch- from Stockholm today reported that planes believed 'to be British and American last night bomb ed parts of .Bulgaria. Details were lacking. The Stockholm, reports quoted- Swedish cor-' -re$popdentsnn 'Berlin. ....... . i m CARRIER mn mmDc lULLIlLflllJ I Moresby Drive Stalled; - Jap Prisoners ; Taken . ; '; By The Associated Press . The United States has gained the balance of military and na val striking power over Japan in me rar macule. Rear Admiral W. H. Blahdy declared in Wash ington ; today, while other re port said' American forces were nearlng the. halfway mark In their fight to destroy Japan's airora(t- carrier strength; v , . ....tomirar.-. Blandy, -;returnlng from . ' 28,000-mile -inspe'ctlon .trip,, said .that "for the time be tng; most certainly," the United States had gained the advantage over Japan.'..'' ' "Keep Pushing". Asked If 'tfie allies were In a p o s i 1 1 0, n . "to hold ;'the Japs ;int , anything '.' they, 'might "yes, I thmVwi'afe"' wi can't do. it by merely, ndid ing, (We'ye, got' to - keep, push ing The 'best defense is a strong oflehse.JVe can't, remain static.!' -.Hi statements were made at Secretary Knox' press, confer ence.1-.' -- V '.. Sixth Carrier Sunk . i Dispatches from . Clark Lee. Associated Press - correspondent In' the Pacific, told of . the prob able .linking of a. 7500-ton Japa nese, carrier in a battle off the Solomon; islands on August 24 the sixth enemy; carrier re ported sent to the bottom since Pearl ' Harbor,. Previously, the navy .said a Japanese carrier -of the type - described by Lee had been severely damaged. Lee' said American fliers- reg istered four - bomb hits and a torpedo hit on . the ship' and our pilots think there is every reason to believe it went down." Morejby Drire Stalled . If so, that leaves the enemy only eight known carriers still (Continued on Page Four) lr May Be Strictly A La Carte From Now on In the U. S. By EDITH GAYLORD .. NEW YORK, Sept. 15 (AP) Strictly a la carte is the. order ot a food conservation and man power saving program submitted for - government approval by restauranteurs who foresee war time food scarcities. . The proposal, drawn up by Rene Muller, New York maitre d'hote), seeks elimination of the table d note, plate dinners and other fixed price meals which have become American institutions.- ' : Muller contends much food. is wasted by the public's natural tendency to take everything listed on a fixed price meal, even when that much, food is' n o t wanted. ' 50 PER GEN Klamaih Scrap Harvest ; Grows; FDR Asks Action Klamath Falls' "scrap harvest" was gathering momentum this week with the announcement that scrap metal and rubber gath ered by residents and placed on curbs .would be picked up by truck Saturday afternoon. Jim Kerns Jr., chairman of the industrial salvage committee, said that old electric- irons, aluminum pans, pieces of pipe--anything that has metal in it would be acceptable. He also urged that any and all rubber goods that householders could dig put be placed .on curbs for collection. -i( t Resident .. through6Ut. t h - -4 4 ' ': .' . . - 4 '"'"' Tobruk Raiders Return Safely: To Alexandria CAIRO, Sept. 15 (AP) The British naval force which raid ed Tobruk In the .allies' heavy land-sea-air assault on the Liby an stronghold Sunday, has reached . its . Alexandria -.' base after beating off waves of axis dive-bombers . which followed it almost all the way home,' it was disclosed tonight. : :. . The warships steamed '. Into port safely yesterday under an umbrella -of long-range fighters. - Official sources still were un communicative on details of the raid; but its purpose was de scribed as having been to ."deny to the, enemy, as much as pos sible of the excellent facilities afforded by the vital' port." Large ' formations of ;axis bombers attempted to intercept British .-warships returning from the-raid-but long-range RAF fighters "obliged them to Jettir son-their bombs and: Inflicted casualties,"-, a communique said. "Over . the. Egyptian" battle front, ,-alr activity was .' on- a small- scale yesterday, the bulle tin from the RAF and British headquarters said. ' ;'. - iiiraii Two Raiders Missing ' Out J of .''Hundreds''; Of-Bombers - London; Sept. -is mibe RAF hurled a strong :fbrce-of bombers last night against Wil helmshaven, chief German naval station on the' North sea, and kindled fires which participating pilots said were left spreading "right bang in the middle of the docks." From this assault by perhaps hundreds of bombers only two raiders were 'lost, the air min istry said. Full Swing The Wilhelmshaven . attack was the second by the RAF in as many nights and the -ninth this month upon Germany. ' . Wilhelmshaven, 50 miles air line northwest of " Bremen,' "the main target the night before, is the chief German naval' station on the North sea. - Anniversary - . The constant pounding of Ger many marked a full swing of the pendulum from two years ago when it was Britain which ,un (Continued on Page Four) Bunyanettes Take ' - Oyer In Planer ; ' REEDSPORT, Sept. 15 . (AP) Bunyanettes or lady swamill workers have appeared in this lumbering port of the Oregon coast. - ,-';- The Gardiner Lumber, com pany, announced today employ ment of five women in its planer mill. : The mills hereabout hope to replace men with women in the lighter jobs, thus releasing man power for heavier, work in log ging camps. , .' . county , who are' able' to gather a truck load of scrap In one place,, may call the chamber of commerce, 5193, and a-county dump trQck will be sent to pick it: up,- it was announced by Rob ert McCambrldge, county sal vage committee chairman. Coun ty pick ups will be made all week, it was said. "-. Trucks to collect- the scrap in the city have been donated by local business firms and will be manned by members . of the Teamsters' union who have vol unteered their service. , Klamath Fall ' labor " unions . .(Continued on Page-Four) : FRAGMENTS pnurn nriirii unH i Ln nLVLHL y Smalj Forest Fire Un ': :der Control. After ' ' Sept.- 9 Attack - SAN FRANCISCO, Sept 15 VP) A foot-deep crater,, appar. ehtly caused by an Incendiary bomb, gave evidence today of what may' have been ' the first aerial . assault ' upon " United States home . soil, an apparent attempt to set fire to an isolat ed, forest' on the southern- Ore gon coast. . . ; . . I The army's western .defense command, in a carefully-worded communique, disclosed that an unidentified, . small seaplane of a. type' that might have been carried on a submarine -wa seen, coming inland. just . before dawn September 9, and was heard roaring out to. sea about half an; b,our later, ; ;i if ( "i ?y ' Sub- Bombed-' ' ; ' '-Some'; timai after '. th' ;plain)' wa seen .' circling J the .-'.Mount Emily area, nine miles northeast of - Brookings, Ore., a fire was observed,' and forestry patrols who -' extinguished; ; the'3 blare found a crater arid metal 'frag ments which the ' a r m y ; said bore ' "markings of Japanese ideographs-, which may haye been part of ' a j code indicating the arsenal where the bomb was manufactured." . . , " ; '. Several hours after the : ap pearance 'and disappearance of the', seaplane was reported, an army patrol plane sighted 'and bombed a submarine 30 -mile off the Oregon coast with 'un observed results." ;-. "Excellent Test" . . The army communique noted! "It is possible a plane of this type might have been carried on a submarine." ' Lieut. T. J. Runyan, area 'su pervisor "of the air raid warn- - (Continued on Page Four) Gannett Named -To GOP National Committee Roster ' WASHINGTON, Sept. 15 (AP) Chairman Joseph W. Martin Jr., of the republican national com mittee today appointed Frank Gannett, Rochester, N. Y., pub lisher, to be assistant chairman, Gannett said in a statement: "Like. millions of other Amer icans, 'I am distressed and dis turbed by the bungling, con fusing and inefficient adminis tration of ; our affairs in this great crisis. . " , i.' "We can win this war only by marshaling all our strength, all our resources, all our ability and brain power." ' Deer Season Opens! At Dawn Tomorrow SAN FRANCISCO. Sept. 15 (AP) At dawn tomorrow the deer season will open in '-Call? fornia's northern and eastern mountains. ...... ' . Hunting will start at one-half hour before sunrise, Sept.-16, in these counties: Trinity Del Norte, Siskiyou, Modoc, Lassen, Plumas, Sierra, Alpine Mono, Inyo; that part of . Humboldt north and east of district 11, and parts of counties in district 1 and district li, north and east of Ponderosa way. ! . j , . . : ,; News Index i City Briefs ...Page S Comics and Story ........Page 10 Courthouse Records ....Page ,4 Editorial Page 6 Information , ...; ...;..Page : 8 Market, Financial Page, li Midland Empire News, Page , 9 Our, Men in Service ..Page ' 3 Pattern ,.r...4... Page 7 Sports . ., ...Paga ; I AP MARKINGS