Weather Y LAbk :43 at t Ij Warmer Editorial Price Ceiling Structure Crumbles VOL. LII No. 42-S ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 13, 1942 2:15 AM. FINAL --- - Midwest Blackout Finds Ann Arbor. Very .Cooperative Mortenson Declares Effort 'Better Than Ever'; Main Street Completely Dark; Scattered Lights Found On State Street By BOB MANTHO and HENRY PETERSON "Better than ever," Chief of Police Sherman Mortenson said last night shortly after Ann Arbor had lighted up after an Army-ordered blackout, second for the city in a month and the first covering an extended area of 50,000 square miles which includes the vital war production aircraft plants, tank factories, steel mills and munitions plants of the Midwest. "State Street was much better than the last time and Main Street was completely dark," Mortenson reported. The blackout-most extensive yet undergone by the United States Violence Is Decreasing In Riot-Scarred India Occasional Gunfire Still Disrupting Return To Quiet; Four Killed At Poona Where Gandhi Is Interned H. R. TIMSO U.S. Marines Consolidate Positions Around Tulagi; 9 to prepare against a possible enemy a ern Michigan and lasted from 10 to 10:30 p.m. Eastern War Time. One hour later under Central War Time 36 counties in northern Illinois, nine Wisconsin counties bordering Lake Michigan and three townships in Lake County, Indiana, also ob- served their half-hour trial blackout. Deputy Sheriff Thomas Fitzgerald, observing the city from a county ci- vilian defense plane, said that "un- identified scattered lights were bare- ly visible throughout the south-cen- tral portion of the county. I could see construction lights along Michi- gan Avenue which made the entire approach to the Willow Run bomber plant visible." Wardens Alert A Daily reporter riding in Police Car No. 2 through the western part of Ann Arbor said that the air raid wardens were especially alert in preventing unauthorized automobile traffic. They stopped police cars in every district and required identi- fication, he reported. Some lights were left burning dur- ing the entire blackout period. Ob- servers reported a light on 4th Ave., which "made a solid lighted block plainly visible from the air." Police were informed of the light scant minutes before the sirens screamedtihe blackout warning. They checked and discovered that the night watchman of the building had no keys and was locked out. An officer patrolling State Street reported five lights which were burn- ing in his district would have made it possible "for bombers to dump ex- plosives right on people's doorsteps." A light in a restaurant on State St. made the whole campus visible, he said. 'V'-For-Victory A State Street dress shop had a large "V"-for-Victory sign in the window which showed plainly during the blackout, reporters observed. A men's clothing store made every preparation against an air attack- everything inside the shop was care- fully covered up-but neglected to turn out a small light. A store on William Street and a parked car left their lights burning. Near the city hall, an insurance company showed a bright light for the full half-hour 6T the air alert and policemen stationed at head- quarters to take all incoming tele- phone calls could not locate the pro- per authorities to . get the light turned out. After twenty minutes of the black- out, Sergeant Hitchingham brought in an unidentified man who had bur- glar tools in his possession. The man pleaded innocence, claiming that he "had trouble with his car" and wanted to fix it. He was locked up and will be arraigned before the court today. Truck With Lights A truck coming in from Dixboro on Plymouth Road passed a patrolman with its lights on and was immedi- ately reported at headquarters be- fore it reached the Ann Arbor, city limits. At 814 Sybil Ave. amiddle-aged lady was reading in the front, room by a dim light near the window. A police cruiser stopped outside and a patrolman went to the door. As soon as he rang the bell the light went out and the lady appeared at the door to explain she "had just forgotten the blackout." She had made apparent preparations, however, and the pa- trolman was satisfied. All of the local war plants except one made efforts to dim-out and still continue normal operations. Al- though they could be seen from ob- servation planes in the air, from the ground they showed little light. The police department's radio man worked at the controls for the full ir raid-covered 41 counties in south- UA14W Heads Send Appeal To Roosevelt Wire Charges Distortion By Press; President To StudySlow-Ups By The Associated Press f MUSKEGON, MICH., Aug. 12.-A union request that President Roose- velt order an investigation of work- ing conditions at the Muskegon, Mich., branch of the Sealed Power Corp. today followed the disclosure, in the President's press conference, that he would study war plant slow- ups attributed to labor organizations. In a telegram addressed to the chief executive, Local 637 of the United Automobile Workers-CIO said it "urgently requests you to or- der investigation of the entire situa- tion at the Sealed Power Corporation in Muskegon." "Press distortion and management misrepresentation are creating a ser- ious situation with workers' morale," the message asserted. The telegram, signed by Roy S. Pettit, President of the local union, and Leonard Woodcock, UAW re- gional representative, said a similar request was being forwarded to Don- ald M. Nelson, chairman of the War Production Board. At his White House pess confer- ence yesterday, President Roosevelt demanded reports from federal au- thorities on slowdowns which a re- porter told him existed in Muskegon and in Flint, Mich. South Atlantic Raids Expected Loss Of Carrier 'Eagle' Revealed .By British By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 12. - Indications that the Axis is starting a strong surface-raider and submarine cam- paign in the south Atlantic was re- ported by informed British naval sources today while the Germans said a great British convoy was now under attack in the western Med- iterranean. The British Admiralty announced loss of the 22,600-ton aircraft carrier Eagle in the Mediterranean and said' at least one enemy submarine oper- ating in the same area already had been sunk, but did not refer to a convoy attack. Later the Admiralty said 930 sur- vivors including Captain L. D. Mack- intosh, the commander, had been ac- counted for. Apparentlynmost of the men were saved, for the normal com- plement of the carrier was only 748. The Germans, reporting they sank the Eagle Tuesday with four torpedo hits, said she was a member of the convoy escort, which included the bulk of the British Mediterranean fleet and was enroute east from Gib- raltar. The Italians claimed they had hit another warship in convoy. Britain is left with five carriers. Two more, the Implacable and In- defatigable, are due for completion this year. Nervous Clark Gable Enlists As Private r nq A~fT1rRRSAwx 19_0_ ,L H. R. STIMSON Associated Press Correspondent BOMBAY, Aug. 12.-The upheaval of riot and bloodshed which; has marked Mohandas K.dGandhi's do- or - die independence movement showed signs of wearing itself out in its fifth day today, although gunfire twice resounded through Bombay's streets where violence has been at its height. There was marked improvement in the attendance of millworkers in the factory area, train and tram services were fairly normal again, barricades erected in the streets by rioters were being pulled down, and the mill area presented an appearance of compar- ative quiet except for scattered inci- dents. Violence still flared in many of India's cities, however, and at Poona where Gandhi is interned four per- sons were reported killed by gunfire late this afternoon. Ten were injured. Police said the mobs appeared to be getting tired of their activities. The bulk of the rowdyism in Bombay could be traced to not more than 50 persons using students and others to keep it going, officers asserted, and so far -few members of Gandhi's Con- gress Party had taken part. The congress party press also as- serted the rioters contained few if any genuine congressmen, and the Bombay Chronicle castigated the; Hooligan, element, telling the rioters that they were betraying Gandhi who, said last Saturday that if the public resorted to violence they might never see him alive again. The paper warned the rioters that Gandhi might start another of his] fasts as a. protest against the vio- lence, So far the toll of violence stoodat 31 dead and 250 wounded in Bombay alone, but incomplete reports from other places in India indicated that at least 56 had been killed and prob- ably 300 injured. At the moment the unrest in New Delhi appeared to be more intense than in Bombay. A large crowd put the torch to the town hall there and burned the in- come tax office, and most serious of all a Moslem sub-inspector of police was slain by the crowd. *** U.S. Forces A void Indian Conflict WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.-(P)- American armed forces are in India solely to prosecute the war against the Axis and have been warned to avoid scrupulously any participation in internal troubles there, the State Department said tonight. The presence of American Forces in India, the department revealed, is primarily to aid China. In the event of disturbances where they are stationed they are author- ized to resort to defensive measures only, "should their own personal safety or that of other American citi- zens be endangered." The announcement pointed out that the policy of the United States Government in this emergency al- ready had been made part of the or- ders issued to American Forces who have been in India for some time. . I Germans Break Through Rostov-Baku Railway Line Russians Still Hold Firm At Approaches To Stalingrad But Retire In Caucasus 7 Face Justice Departnment Seeks Criminal Indictments Against Saboteurs' Aides Biddle Will Seek Severe Penalties By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 12. - The Justice Department disclosed today that it would ask grand juries to re- turn treason indictments against at least seven persons alleged to have aided the eight Nazis who came by submarine to wreck America's war production program. Attorney General Biddle an- nounced that, in all, criminal indict- ments would be sought against 12 persons, while the remaining two of the 14 originally seized as alleged accomplices have been interned as dangerous enemy aliens. Evidence against the latter two does not war- rant criminal prosecution, Biddle said at a press conference. The Justice Department intends to ask the strongest charges warranted by the evidence available, the Attor- ney General said. He said in response to a question that it was believed the evidence would justify indictment for treason-the most extreme crime and one which carries the death pen- alty-in "more than half" of the cases. Other Statutes Where the evidence does not justi- fy a treason charge, indictment will be sought under other statutes, Bid- dle said. The 14 persons have been in cus- tody a minimum of six weeks. Four are held as enemy aliens without' criminal charge. Two of these, Mrs. Marie Kerling, widow of Edward John Kerling, leader of one group of four saboteurs, and Ernst Herman Kerkhof, have been ordered interned for the duration of the war. Indict- ments will be sought against the other two, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jaq- ues, the Justice Department said. The 12 persons against whom evi- dence will be placed before grand juries are: At Chicago-Mr. and Mrs. Jaques; Mr. and Mrs. Hans Max Haupt, par- ents of Herbert Haupt, who was one of six saboteurs executed Saturday; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wilhelm Froeh- ling, uncle and aunt of Herbert Haupt and whose home allegedly was to have been a clearing house and hideout for the saboteurs; Mr. and Mrs. Otto Richard Wergin, described as close friends of the Haupt family. At New York At New York City-Helmut Leiner of Astoria, Long Island, alleged to be a closefriend of Kerling; Anthony Cramer, a friend of Werner Thiel, one of the executed saboteurs; Miss Hedwig Engemann, the only native American in the group, alleged to have aided Kerling. At Brooklyn - Herman Heinrich Faje of Astoria, Long Island, de- scribed as a friend of Heinrich Heinck, one of the executed sabo- teurs. Biddle said that arrangements have been made to turn over to the Federal Prisons Bureau George John Dasch and Ernest Peter Burger, con- victed saboteurs whose lives were spared because they assisted the gov- ernment. [reasonCharges By EDDY GILMORE Associated Press Correspondent MOSCOW, Aug. 13 (Thursday).- German troops have punched an- other hole in Russian positions astride the Rostov-Baku railroad in the Cherkessk area, but the Red Army is holding .firmly on the ap- proaches to Stalingrad, the Soviets announced early today. "In the area of Cherkessk our troops have retired to new positions," the Russian communique said. Cherkessk is.-70 miles southeast of Armavir and about 200 miles from the rich Grozny oil fields, and the Germans thus are continuing their hard drive southeastward along the northern fringe of the Caucasian Mountains. The Red Army was still fighting heavy defensive battles in the Mai- kop oil fields west of Cherkessk, and also at Krasnodar on the Kuban River, 60 miles northwest of Maikop. Nearly 2,000 Germans were re- ported killed and 22 tanks destroyed during the last 24 hours in Nazi ef- forts to bridge a waterline (probably the Kuban) in the Krasnodar sector, the Russians said. The apparent German goal in the west is twofold: to reach the Soviet Black Sea ports of Novorossisk and Tuapse. A railroad from Krasnodar leads to the former, and another spur from Maikop goes through 3,000-foot mountains to Tuapse. Northwest of Stalingrad in the Don River bend the Red Army was reported to have fought off repeated German attacks at Kletskaya and south of that city, which is 75 miles from Stalingrad. (The Germans claimed on Wednesday the capture of 57,000 Russians in this area, in- cluding most of the 62nd Red Army.) South of the Don in the Kotelni- kovski sector the Russians reported offensive successes. The communi- que said the Germans- in some re- gions had been forced onto the de- fensive and added: "Our troops launched a series of successful attacks and are mauling the enemy, not giving him a chance to consolidate." Far to the north on the upper Don the Russians said their troops fight- ing on the west bank of the river in the Voronezh sector had killed an- other 500 Germans in two days. On the Germans' exposed upper Don flank before Voronezh, the Rus- sians recrossed the river to the west in several more places and captured at least five villages on the west bank in 24 hours. South of the city German counterattacks were report- ed generally halted, although the Nazi tanks wedged themselves into one Red Army position. At one or two places the Germans still were entrenched in the city's approaches. Pelley, Fellow Defendants Get Prison Terms Silver Shirt Head Draws 15-Year Penalty; Aide Brown Given Five By The Associated Press INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 12. - Wil- liam Dudley Pelley, spruce little goateed founder of the Silver Shirts of America, only shook his head in Federal court today when asked if he had anything to say in his own behalf and then drew a 15-year pri- son sentence on charges of criminal sedition. "I don't kndw how long the war will last," Judge Robert C. Baltzell said in pronouncing the penalty; "but the sentence should be such that we will be assured that no fur- ther harm will be done for the dura- tion." Pelley's secretary and co-defen- dant, Miss Agnes Marian Henderson, sobbed out a promise to disassociate herself from the Pelley activities and received a two-year suspended sen- tence. Lawrence A. Brown, associa- ted with Pelley in his Noblesville, Ind., publishing firm, Fellowship Press, Inc., was sentenced to five years' imprisonment and the firm it- self was fined $5,000. All were convicted a week ago- Pelley on eleven counts and Brown and Miss Henderson each on one count of conspiracy-in the govern- ment's first major sedition case since Pearl Harbor. RAF Watchers See Bombers Wreck Mainz New Observation System Brings Raid Description; Warned Of Nazi Revenge By The Associated Press LONDON, Aug. 12.-Picked bomb- er crews who circled over the Ger- man city of Mainz from start to fin- ish of a heavy raid last night in a new technique of RAF observation described tonight how the bursts of hundreds of tons of bombs flickered across the target like "lights of a pin table" and started more fires than they could count. The Air Ministry news service's re- port of the stories related' by these specially chosen observers said the bombs, including more than 50,000 incendiaries, blasted and enflamed the city, an important center and river port which handles most of the grain traffic in the Rhine-Mainz area. An RAF commentator said the raiding force was made up of "be- tween 250 and 400 bombers." Hun- dreds of high explosive bombs and thousands of incendiaries left a 15,- 000-foot pillar.of smoke over the city as a testimonial of havoc. The observation crews hovered over the city for 46 minutes while plane after plane roared in, dumped its bombs and streaked for home. "Ordinary" British raids by no more than 200 planes now are drop- ping a 'greater weight of bombs on Germany than the Germans man- aged to hurl in their heaviest night assaults on Britain, an RAF com- mentator declared, although he warned that by pulling planes from the Russian front the Nazis could make 1,000'-bomber attacks on Brit- ain if it suited their policy. Orient Is Topic Of Panel Group Assistant-Dean Lloyd S. Wood- burne of the Literary College will be chairman of this week's session of the Post-War Council to be held at 7:55 p. m. today in the Grand Rapids Room of the Michigan League. Confirmation Of Landings On 3 Islands Received; Details Still Unavailable Solomon Action Still In Progress WASHINGTON, Aug. 12. -The Navy reported tonight that marines have landed on three islands in the vicinity of Tulagi, in the Solomons, and are now engaged in consolidat- ing their positions. A communique said: "1. Operations in the Solomons are still in progress. "2 It has been confirmed that the United States Marines have landed as scheduled on three islands in the vicinity of Tulagi. The marines are engaged in consolidating their posi- tions. Supporting Naval forces have been engaged in bitter fighting, de- tails of which are not yet available. United States Army and Australian aircraft are continuing attacks on enemy landing fields and shore- based aircraft. Japs Planned Base "3 'T'here is substantial evidence that the Japanese had planned and had well under way the development of an enemy base in the Tulagi area. "4 Until more details are available it is impossible to elaborate further on these operations. All available communication facilities are over- taxed by urgent messages concern- ing operations." The Navy did not identify the three islands on which landings have been affected. The town of Tulagi itself is on an island bearing the name Tulagi and that island is practically a part of larger Florida Island Between Two Islands Florida lies between two larger is- lands in the Solomons group, Guad- alcanal and Malaita. The disclosure of evidence that the Japanese had well under way the development of a base in the Tulagi irea recalled to Naval men the fact that Tulagi offers one of the finest naval base sites in the southwestern Pacific and a major installation there would have constituted a direct threat to Australia and islands guarding the United States-Australia supply line. Used As Base This was brought out by Admiral Ernest J. King, Commander-in-Chief of the U.S. Fleet, in a statement earlier this week in which he said that the enemy "have been in process of consolidating their positions" in the Solomons with the purpose of using them "as a base of offensive operations against our positions which cover the line of communica- tions to Australia and New Zealand." The Navy gave no information as to the sequence of landings on the three islands or whether they were carried out simultaneously. Previously disclosures on landing operations had been given out here only in King's statement which said merely that "planned landings" had been accomplished, WLB To Open Miner Wages Hearings Soon By The Associated Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 12.-The National War Labor Board announc- ed today it would consider the wage and union shop demands of 20,000 copper, lead, and zinc miners and smelter workers on an industry-wide basis, with hearings to open in Wash- ington a week from today. t The announcement indicated the Board hoped to help solve the man- power shortage in copper mines through its wage determination, not- ing that "lack of manpower in the mines has been mentioned as a major obstacle to increased production." WLB acted in -consultation with four other agencies, all of which have been working on methods of increas- ing output of copper and other non- ferrous metals, it was stated. The agencies are the War Man- power Commission, the Army Ser- s I Interpreting The War News: Chances Of Victory In Tulagi Area Are GoodAccording To NewsAnalyst By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER Wide World War Analyst The chances for a successful con- quest of the Tulagi Area of the Solo- mon Islands appear better than even, despite probable heavy American losses, but even a complete victory in that section at this time should give rise to no wave of optimism about the progress of the war. For great issues which bear direct- ly upon the final outcome of the con- flict are now being decided on the battlefields of Southern Russia, and from there the news is grave. A victory in the Solomons would go a nnor wyo tnorei (1) epitri -ngthe the battle of the Caucasus are far- reaching and, at worst, may decide the ability of the Russians to keep the main strength of Adolf Hitler's armies engaged until the crushing weight of British and American pow- er can be thrown into decisive action against them. A Russian defeat in the Caucasus, probably would mean that a large part of the Red forces would with- draw north and east of the Volga River, where their position would be almost entirely defensive, for the time being at least. The Germans, having gained a huge wealth of nat- ural resources, would need compara- ern Egypt or by moving through the Island of Cyprus into Syria, the con- quest of Cyprus being necessary to give them secure supply lines across the eastern Mediterranean. It seems obvious that if the Ger- mans pressed these possible develop- ments of their strategy to successful conclusions, the difficulties in the way of a final, smashing United Na-' tions victory would be immeasurably increased, and the conclusion of the war would be indefinitely delayed. Yesterday's news, insofar as it bears on these long-range possibili- ties, was not good, on the whole. Al- though British military men said Rfl CC.c c rPCifitnhnr.P wn o fi ffpnin Er nnf