?; ; . ; . ; . I 1 3 LJ: J ;, '''K- y ;k ft THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 8, 1945 PAGE FIVE INr LA riON BREEDS PANIC, DISUNITY 4 RED VOTE BEATS HITLER TROOFS CURB UPRISING 1923-32: Discontent and disunity created those seeds, which sprouted as Adolf Hitler's National Socialist party, founded in Munich in 1920. His 1923 Beer Hall Putsch failed and Hitler retired to lick his wounds; Von Hindenburg'i presidency started in 1925. Conflicting political groups held armed truce. Strengthened German troops marched back Into the RuV, and the nation bought Ave years of prosperity with money borrowed from U. S. and Britain. But as depression it the world, inflation spiraled up ward, soup kitchens appeared and worker-communists broke out into open bloody revort. Elections became open warfare between the increasingly strong Communist and Nazi parties. The Reds had their biggest and last victory when Hitler was defeated in the 1932 elections, while the fearful gov- ernment vainly tried to stop the revolutionary .tide with martial law. - M. V Chancellor Hitler and President Von Hindenburg. In 193S. - ' 'I lib" 9 '" Hitler and Goebbels, in 1930. 'THE RISE TO POWER (1924-36): Hitler, Himmler and other military leaders, 193C. After his release from orison, in Hitla. lutfan ki- party ana gamer nis nencnmenM9oermg and Goebbels were amonc -the UrtL a puwci iui tcu nraoHii von ninaenDurg to appoint nim as chancellor of the Reich. The reign of terror began, with the burning of the Reichstag, arrest of SOO Communists, suppression of newspapers and other political parties.. All civil liberties were banished, and with the creation of the Gestapo by Goering, the bloody persecution of the Jews began. . . Hitler quit the League of Nations and disarmament conference, and in 1934 signed a non-aggression pact with jittery Poland. Hitler became President on Von Hindenburg's death that year and assumed the title of "Fuehrer." During. 1935 annexation of the Saar, creation of the Luftwaffe under Goering, and breaking of the Versailles treaty all presented sharp contradiction to the Fuehrer's ,1933 Reichstag speech, when he shouted, "Germany wants nothing that she is not ready to give to others. 'The German people have " uiwugii, vi iiivaumg any t.vuiiu.r. S-Ii j HITLER IN AS CHANCELLOR NAZI POMP AND RITUAL APPEALS TO GERMAN PEOPLE llliifl ifilp JEWS PERSECUTED J f COMMUNISTS HUNTED NAZIS BURN "ANTI-GERMAN" BOOKS 1933-35 Hitler forced the aged and sick Von Hindenburg to appoint him chancellor. Free elec tions vanished and the Reichstag lost all power, bjt the German people entranced by the self-glorification of Nazi svmbolism andlriKialistic splendor mutely joined the Fuehrer's march towards a "glori fied German empire " Nation-wide persecution of Jews began; Communists were hunted down and ex terminated bv the Gestapo. -Nazificati jn worked on the home, the school, the business world, and fail inrto swing the church into line too, gradually exiled it. Withdraw.ng from the League of Nations, hitler '-nureVd'' his own party ranks, and his dream of a. completely rationalized and goose-stepping German nation began t- come true. Labor codes were established wagesc ales cfe x' u"j7 ?b,0'; With the nation healing roicmaiij, """"" k-- ... Nazi-dominated Saar plebiscite brought the coal-rich territory back into the Rech. Lhed. Nazis Had Victory in Grasp After 1940 Race to Channel capitulated after four city, a crack German armored column under Gen. Erwin Rom mel dispersed the Belgian division and emerged from the forest on May 13. Then Rommel began an apparently insane maneuver. He turned westward and raced along behind the allied lines up to the vallpy of the Somme, reaching the English Channel near Abbeville. His supply line was stretched a precarious IdO miles, but the (Br Unittd Press) i ceived little fight. The Nether- Bv Mav 1940 the collapse of lands armies, separated and sur- Norway had set the stage for an : rounaea, all-out German offensive against days. western Europe. The blitzkrieg. I in Belgium, a large body of powerfully armed and smartly j British and French troops advanc- rrnnAi-iliul HiH It aaain. I nri enmp nO miles north of the Motorized German spearheads I border in an attempt to cut off speed of the nazi follow-up assur struckwiftlv into Holland on the; German detachments pouringled the success of Rommel's tac- trol of the country's vaunted wa- io me nonra-ra, . ,'"3 Antwerp. The French were rely : ing on a Belgian division in the Ardennes forest near the Luxem bourg border to cover their right ' flank. It was this right flank that ter defenses within a few hours. Fifth columnists and paratroop ers took over communications , centers and key bridges much as they had done in Poland and Norway. Converging grotina columns closed rapidly on the Hague. Rot- j proved the allies' undoing terdom and Amsterdam. They re-1 Striking with speed and auda- and blocks of infantry streamed swiftly through the gap to build up the German salient. By May 23, the Maginot line was effective ly flankpd and the allied forces to the north cut off and surrounded. 'Miracle' at Dunkirk The main French armies start ed a belated rescue drive from the south, but on May 28, King Leo- 1 L. - u -! v"VT1 ( Hitler. Von Rlbbentrop, ChamoerUin a Munich, i Hltlr. MuaaUnl larm Rome-Berlin Axis. 1938. ', .-,,:M If -, B yV itvA of those left after the Belgian surrender had been taken back to England. .. It was then the nazls did In the words of Neville Chamberlain "miss the bus." England lay ripe for invasion -across a 21-mile strait. The British army, compel led to leave its heavy equipment on the continent, was tired and disorganized. The British braced for assault. Home guards with bayonets on poles drilled to aid the army. Prime Minister Churchill squared his shoulders before a micro phone and promised the world that the British would "light on the beaches, on the landing grounds, in the fields, in the streets arid on the hills." He vowed; "We shall never surrender!" . In that dark hour the American government, eschewing legalities, . Continued on Page tt) 1 Hitler (arrow) rolls mto Vienna, 1938. Hess, Hitler, Goering and others In the beer hall. BEGINNINGS OF CONQUEST (1936-39): The Nazi march toward European domination began in 1938- when German troops, breaking the Locarno Pact, occupied the Rhineland. Next came forma tion of the Rome-Berlin Axis, when Hitler joined with Mussolini in a partnership dedicated to war nd aggression. In 1937, all Nazi male youths were ordered to work or military service, and with the entire German nation now behind him either by choice or domination. Hitler sent an ultimatum to Austria. The bloodless occupation followed in 1938. " Concentrating 200,000 troops on the Czech frontier, the Nazis refused all offers of concessions of tho helpless nation. Chamberlain became the symbol of democratic appeasement when he signed the Munich pact, giving Hitler 11,000 square miles of Czech territory with a population of 3,500 nnn T this same city where the Nazi, "beer haU gang" met each year to celebrate founding of the' party Hitler narrowly escaped death In 1939, when a bomb wrecked the shrine just after he left. The occupation of Austria and Czechoslovakia came just six months after Hitler told the world. Thero is no nation in the world which longs more for peace than Germany." Poles weep aa HiUer and bliUers invade in 1939. "'Her consoles war widow. Hitler rescues the ex-Duce ut 1943. I 11 We'll Do It Again"- to Japan, just as surely as we did it to ; Germany! We'll stick together to the grim end, and pity the misguided Sons of Heaven who dare stand against hs! For we are one united for the one pur- pose of ending war and restoring peace to earth. ' We have the spirit, the weapons, the will to win! ' Let's do it again NOW ! Von Rlbbentrop, Kurusu and Hitler in 1940. VV70RLD WAR II (1939-44): After signing a non-aggression pact with Russia in 1939, Hitler's troops invaded Poland without declaration of war. England and Franco declared war on Germany, and Hitler answered them in 1940 with invasions of Denmark. Norway, Belgium, the Netherlands, Lux embourg and France. Significant were the December, 1940, meetings of Hitler and Japan's Kurusu, then ambassador to Berlin, for a year later the attack on Pearl Harbor came as Kurusu was peace' talking in Washington. Hitler erred gravely in 1941 when, after swallowing the Balk.ins, he invaded vast Russia. Early suc cesses were followed by retreats here, and in North Africa after Germany declared war on the U, S. Italy's capitulation set off a crumbling of the wholo Axis structure and Hitler's dramatic rescue of Mussolini did little to reassure wavering satellite nations. , No amount of propaganda could hide from the German people the steady retreat of their troops from Russia, and faced with increasing Allied military gains and blockbusting bombings, the Fuehr-' er's followers could draw small comfort from his November 9 statement, "If the German people de spair, they wL'V deserve no better than they get I will not be sorry for them if God lets them down." SanBKus ' II l n iii.iliil iKhtmmm"ti&aitdim? Ksiiwl - ' Poles weep as Hitler and Blitzers invade in 1939. Hitler directs war with Russia. Hold Your War Bonds BUY MORE moody's men's wear Hitler rescues the ex-Duce in 1943. 1941 army revolts aucrur civil uprisings as in 1918. WORLD WAR II (1939-44): After signing a non-iigrcssiori p;ici with Russia in 1939. Hitler's troops Invaded Poland England and France declared war on Germany, anrl lluler answered them in 104') with invasions of Denmark. Norway, the Low Countries and France - Significant were the 1940 meet ings of Hitler and Japan's Kurusu. for a year later the Pearl Harbor attack came. Hitler erred gravely in IB4I when, after swallowing the Balkans, he invaded vast Russia, Early successes were followed by increasing retreats here ?nd in North Africa alter U S. entered the war By the end of 1943 Germany had also lost Sicily and pari ol Italy Allied invasion ot France in June ol 1944 lor ed a thrce-liont war on Goimany, already re treating in Italy and Russia Itevolt of his army clique and r-ttcmptcd assassination brought on a "purge" ol Nazi officers, as the Fuehrer dodged blame lor military disasters Faced witn humiliating army retreats and continual air bombardment. Hitler crouched in his ever-shnnkint "Fortress" and desperately told his people thM "Victory will one day compensate each and every one of us for the sorrows sufleicd and the sacrifices made." pold suddenly surrendered the en tire Belgian army. The remaining allied divisions in the trap were ; facing surrender or annihilation. 1 Then help arrived from an un-1 looked for quarter. Steaming miraculously to the rescue at that critical moment came a strange procession a j vast nondescript relief fleet of i vessels hastily ntruiled from England's coastal towns and vil lages. It included ancient trans ports, pleasure steamers, destroy. ers, fishing craft, tughonts and dainty racing vessels. Standing in perilously close to shore, they be gan the seemingly impossible task of removing the trapped troops from Dunkirk's crowded beaches. For our days and nights under a hellish rain of bombs and shrap nel, the motley fleet shuttled back a t). forth across the chan nel. Srures of vessels were sunk but t'.ie rest came back for more. When tho ordeal finally ended, sr.me 300,000 Jlritish and Krench , soldiers roughly three-fourths Now Let's Wipe the Jap off the Map! We've got two-thirds of our enemy out of the way . . . now we can put out all we've got to knock out Hirohito and his , puppets. This will call for cooperation from ALL of us . . . from soldiers, sailors AND civilians. We've got to keep up that production line of tanks, airplanes,, guns, ammunition. That means KEEP BUYING BONDS ! COME ON, BEND, LET'S GO ! George Childs Hardware Co. "A Pleasure To Serve You" Bond and Minnesota Phone 88