The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 14, 1945, Page 1, Image 1

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    rnWTnTT! TTDTT7nT7nY TTDTrTTr TT TO
Halse'y Speaks
: "Fighting men are looting for
good newt from home that the
7th war loan has been subscribed."
'1 "Admiral Halsey
Weather Forecast
Mostly cloudy today, tonight and .
Tuesday with showers. Not much
temperature change. . . ,
JL JniJUi lDlMlLi; JO) U Jlj Jb Bi
CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER
TOM
r
1 a
Volume Llll
British Reminded By Churchill
They Still Face Grim Fight to
Beat Japs; Premier Is Defiant
1
Official Releases Pent-Up Ire at Leader of
Irish People; Toils and Troubles of World
Nof Yet Over, Prime Minister Tells People
PWHlMnK? rfd but defiant- P Minister
Churchill indicated in his victory speech last night that he
intends to lead Britain "till the whole task is done and the
world is safe and clean." . m aone .ano in
fiSihfUhhi1JaTrned the PPle of Britain that they still face
a fight to beat Japan and to preserve democracy in Europe
In what observers interpreted as a warning that Britain
wot. d not tolerate strong-arm politics. Churchill said "there
would be little use in punishing Hitlerites if totalitarian or
police government were to take the place of the German in-
Churchill also took the opportunity to let loose five years'
Water Storage
Below Average -
Water storage in the Crane
Prairie, Ochoco and Wickiup res
ervoirs ana crescent lane, is con
siderably below the 10-year aver
age, according to a report released
today by the federal-state coopera
tive snow and irrigation water
survey authorities. The report
was made" as of May 1.
Wickiup reservoir, with a capa
city of 180,000 acre feet, had 63,
800 acre feet of water in it on that
date.
Crane Prairie, with a capacity
of 50,000 acre feet, had 35,130 acre
feet of water In it as against
49,850 in 1944, 48,860 in 1943 and
30,780 in 1942. The 10-year aver
age is 39,217 acre feet. .
Crescent lake held 35,950 acre
feet, as against 53,540 in 1944, 40,
050 in 1943, and 23,000 acre feet
in 1942. The 10-year average was
36,419 acre feet;
The Ochoco reservoir had 17,-
iw au e ictri ui waier as oi May
1. In 1944 it held 26.240 acre feet
on thS same datey 46,520 In-1943,
ana 3t,470 m 1942. Its capacity is
46,000 acre feet and the average
10-year storage was 27,919 acre
feet.
Missing Engineer
Hunted in Woods
Portland, Ore., May 14 IP
Harold D. Farmer, 67, missing
U. S. public roads inspecting en
gineer, was being sought today
by nearly 30 forest service em
ployes, Clackamas county author
ities and others.
Farmer has been missing since
Friday while he was on a mis
sion in the Lake Harriet district
on the upper Clackamas river. He
had left his car above Lake Har
( riot to inspect the route of a tim
ber access road and arranged to
meet Ed Thompson, Portland res
ident engineer, at a point below
the lake.
The search was started two
hours after the time appointed,
and some foresters believe that
Farmer may have slipped from a
footlog crossing the rain-swollen
Oakgroye fork of the Clackamas
river.
The missing public roads engi
neer was well known in Bend,
having visited here on many oc
casions. Soviets Explore
Hitler's Hideout
London, May 14 U A soviet
war correspondent said today that
'it is not even certain that all the
mysteries of Hitler's underground
pity" in Berlin's chancellery have
wi-n explored.
T "It is thought that there may
still be nazis down there, desper
ate cornered rats," said; Mikhail
Doigopolov in the Russian embas
sy publication Soviet War News.
"Fires are still raging in some
underground rooms. Soviet troops
have sealed them off but smoke
seeps through."
Doigopolov said the Russians
found a secret room in which
were members of Hitler's person
al bodyguard.
MOURNING NEARS END
Washington, May 14 HPi When
flags flying at half-staff through
out the nation go down at sun
down 'today they will mark the
end of the nation's 30-day mourn
ing period proclaimed for the late
President Roosevelt. President
Truman ordered the national
. mournine Deriod beeinnine April
111. the day of Mr. Roosevelt's fu-j
koeral.
THINGS REALLY HUMMED
Marietta, Ga., May 14 UP
Things really hummed in Cobb
county today. Two trucks collided
on a hlghwav, resulting in free
ing 46,000,000 bees.
' o - mix v. a i 1 1 1 1 1 it
Minister Eamon De Valera,
scoring him for the "shame"
he had brought Ireland by his
neutrality policy. Churchill de
scribed De Valera's policy as
"so much at variance with the
temper and instinct of thousands
of southern Irishmen who has
tened to the batllefront to prove
their ancient valor."
Not Yet Over
Indicating his desire to stick to
his post, Churchill said:
' "I wish I could tell you tonight
that our toils and troubles were
over. Then indeed I could end my
fiye years' service happily, and,
if you thought vou had had
enough of me and that I ought to
oe put out to grass, I assure you
I would take it with the best of
grace. . ; -
"But, on the contrary. I must
warn you that there is still a lot
to do."
Threaded throughout his speech
were references to his advancing
age and the tremendous load he
has carried in five years at 10
Downing street. Listeners thought
he sounded tired, and lacked his
usual fire. But the old - time
Churchillian rhetoric shone fre
quently and brightly. ;, ij
He said the San Franciscd' con
ference must not become a "shield
for the strong and a mockery for
the weak."
' Losses Are Heavy
"We must make sure that those
causes which we fought for find
recognition at the peace table
in facts as well as words," the
prime minister said.
cnurcniu revealed that one-
third of the troops and one-half of
tne losses In the western front
campaign were British. He said
the royal navy had borne the
brunt of the North Atlantic battle
"while the United States navy has
had to use its immense strength
mainly against Japan.
He again pledged Britain to a
final fight against Japan, saying,
we must never foreet that be
yond all lurks Japan, harrassed
and failing, but still a people of a
hundred million, for -whose war
riors death has few terrors."
He paid this tribute to the
United States:
"Ever since the United States
entered the war have I had the
slightest doubt that we should be
saved and that we only had to do
our duty In order to win."
Soviets Lauded
Churchill, i n reviewing the
war, also praised the soviet na
tion and army, Gen. Dwlght D.
Eisenhower, . the British joint
chiefs of staff, and Field Marshals
Sir Harold Alexander and Sir
Bernard L. Montgomery.
The prime minister disclosed
that the Germans, in addition to
their V-l and V-2 attacks on Eng
land, planned to launch long-range
artillery against London.
"Only just in time did the al
lied armies blast the viper in his
nest,'' he said. "Otherwise the au
tumn of 1944, to say nothing of
1945, might have seen London as
(Continued on Page 3)
Himmler Continues to Play Hide and Seek
With Allies; Nazi Faces Murder Charges
London, May 14 nr The United authorities In northwestern Eu-imloi
Nations war crimes commission
has indicted Gestapo Chief Hcin
rich Himmler on charges of mass
murder in the notorious massacre
of Lidice and the Jewish exter
mination program, it was learned
today.
At least five allied governments
have lodged charges of war crim
inality against Himmler, the be
spectacled former school teacher
who became nazidom's chief hang
man. The war crimes commission has
Indicted him, it was revealed, on
at least seven counts. It ranked
him No. 1 on the list of nazis
charged with the obliteration of
Lidice in an orgy of revenge for
the assassination of Reinhard
Heydrich, and with wholesale
atrocities in nazi concentration
camps.
The disclosure of the indict
ments against Himmler came at
he apparently played an elusive
game of hide and seek with allied
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES
Typical Wac
(NBA Tele photo)
Pvt. Cyndla BosweU, Goldsboro, N.
C., chosen as "Typical WAO" by
enlisted military personnel at Fair-fleld-Suisun
(Calif.) Army Base of
the Air Transport Command's West
.' Coast -Wina-
War Loan Drive
Officially Opened
Washington, May 14 iir The
government today officially op
ened its Seventh war loan drive,
aimed to help finance the war
with Japan and combat continued
inflationary dangers, with a re
minder that "there Is no truce for
the men on Okinawa."
The Seventh war loan, with a
total goal of $14,000,000,000 (B),
will seek to collect 25 per cent
more from sales of $25-1,000
E-bonds to the man in the street
than any previous drive.
The E-bond quota is $4,000,000,-
000 $1,000,000,000 more than the
E-bond goal In the Sixth war loan
which had the same overall quo
ta as the seventh, $14,000,000,000.
Sales goals of bonds to all individ
ual investors in the current drive
is $7,000,000,000 $2,000,000,000
more than in the Sixth war loan.
J - Volunteers To Aid
Pushing the sales of E-bonds,
Intended chiefly for smaller in
come investors, will be the big job
of 6,000,000 volunteer workers en
listed by the treasury for the
campaign.
To meet the $4,000,000,000 quo
ta, these volunteers will have to
sell a bond to virtually every one
of the 85,000,000 people who have
bought bonds at some time dur
ing the war. Some $30,500,000,000
worth of E-bonds have been sold
since May, 1940. There have been.
of course, a good many redemp
tions. Assurance of officials that this
drive would succeed as have all
others so far was voiced by Sec
retary of the Treasury Henry
Morgentnau, Jr., wno said in a
broadcast opening the campaign
"We cannot fail, we cannot fal
ter." Loot of Germans
Located in Cave
London, May 14 tlPi A nazi
treasure cave containing priceless
art loot, 20 crates of Adolf Hit
ler's personal files and his entire
personal library has been found
In the Bavarian Alps east of Salz
burg, a BBC correspondent re
ported last night. '
The treasures were said to have
been hidden in salt mines under
supervision of Dr. Thomas Miek
ler, director of the Vienna mu
seum, with the local gauleiter re
sponsible for general defense of
the mines.
When the Americans ap
proached the gauleiter was said
to have placed bombs so that the
entire treasure could be blown up
uy inruwiiig a swucn.
authorities In northwestern Eu
rope. Reports that he had fallen
into allied hands were denied. One
said he had been seen at the head
quarters of the German high com
mand, under the wing of which
he evidently was seeking sanctu
ary until the status of that body
of Admiral Karl Doenltz's govern
ment is decided.
The Russian government organ
Izvestia demanded the immediate
arrest, trial and execution of
Doenitz. It reflected a soviet feel
ing of urgency that Doenitz,
Reichsmarshal Hermann Goerlng,
Col. Gen. Nikolaus von Falken
horst and other accused war crim
inals be dealt with as soon as pos
sible. The same source which re
vealed that the war crimes com
mission had indicted Himmler
said the Russians also had charg
ed him with mass murder.
Great Britain, Belgium, France,
Czechoslovakia and the Nether
lands have submitted to the com-1
Diehard Nazi
Resistance in
Europe Ended
Guns of War Are Finally
Stilled as Reds Conquer
Europe Holdout Forces
London. May 14 UP r- Red
armies and Yugoslov- patriots
were believed today to have
crushed the last diehard German
resistance in southeast Europe,
finally stilling the guns of war on
the continent nearly a week aftor
the reich's surrender. :"-
(BBC said a detachment of Brit
ish troops has taken possession of
the fortified " German island of
Belogland in the North Sea.) ' "
At sea, 14 German submarines
and two motor torpedo boats had
put into British ports and sur
rendered. Eight more U-boats were ex
pected at the American naval base
at Londonderry in northern Ire
land today. . .; ;'
Million Prisoners' Taken-
A Soviet communique reported
that Red armies had taken 1,060,-J
uuu prisoners in tne iirst live
days after Germany's uncondi
tional surrender became effective
last Tuesday midnight.
Of these, . nearly 800,000 Ger
man troops were captured In
Czechoslovakia and Austria,
where diehard nazis fought on dis
pite their high cortimand's orders
to surrender.
The communique mentioned no
further fighting In these areas,
however, and It was likely that
only a roundup of scattered en
emy remnants remained In south
east Europe.
Tito Forces Active : '
Marshal Tito announced that
his Yugoslav partisan forces had
disarmed four German and 11
pro-nazl Ustachl divisions in
northern Yugoslovla and south
eastern Austria. He reported the
liberation of a number of towns,
among them Maribor, apparently
without opposition. . -.
Bear Admiral Burening,-CT.
man commander in charge of tor-
pedo boat operations from Dutch
bases, accompanied two of the
boats into Felixstowe on the
English coast yesterday. The
boats were escorted into the har
bor by British motor gunboats
and boarded by armed search
parties.
Strides in Radio
Luncheon Topic
Bend Kiwanis club observed the
25th anniversary of radio broad
casting today with a program
featuring an address by Paul
Connet, U. S. navy, in civilian life
nnmmOIVll 'l 1 mo i rrnrt n Iff tt
and KEX in Portland. Addressing
the service club members at their
weekly noon luncheon at the Pine
tavern, Connet outlined the his
tory of radio in this country,
quoted impressive listener statis
tics and predicted tremendous ex
pansion after the war period. He
was introduced by Frank H. Log
gan, manager of KBND. LeRoy
Fox was In charge of the pro
gram. , Following Connet's address,
Dr. Grant Skinner, president of
the club, presented Loggan with
a framed certificate from Kiwanis
International, recognizing the
service rendered by the local sta
tion to the community and na
tion. It pointed to "the contribu
tions which this station and the
radio industry have made to the
prosecution of the war effort, to
keeping the channels of Informa
tion free and unprejudiced, to the
prompt, accurate and continuous
(Continued on Page 6)
mission separate charges of war
criminality against Himmler. The
multiple indictments against him
specifically included mass murder
and systematic terrorism both
listed as war crimes by the Hague
convention. He was named both in
his capacity of nazi interior min
ister and chief of the SS or elite
guard.
Himmler topped the list of 120
nazis and SS officials indicted for
the wiping out of Lidice and the
companion clllage of Lezaky in
June, 1942. Not a building was
left standing in either village. All
the male inhabitants of Lidice
were shot and the 'women and
cniidren were sent off to slavery.
The Czechoslovak government
was believed certain to demand
the death penalty for Himmler.
His name also led the list of nazis
charged by the British, French,
Belgian, Dutch and Czechoslovaks
with concentration camp atrocities.
CpUNTY, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 14. 1945
Coming
..Vladivostok. v5 . IjHOK KAl DO
KYUSHU V- "I
r IT7Wwl;HtW'AftU, wj lWOM II II 1 ' ' I
The Yank fighting man has already cast the shadow ot defeat over
Japan, but giving substance to the shadow will require long months'
of hard fighting by him and hard work by the home front. The
photo above is a poster displayed in all hotels of the Army Ground
and Service Forces Redistribution Station, where veterans of th
European war will be reprocessed for new service in the Pacific.
Sniper and Artillery Fire Stall
Marine Advance on Okinawa
Aboard Admiral Turner's Flagship Off Okinawa, May 14
(HE) Japanese mortar, sniper
American advance- in heavy -
today. ; : ' ' . .
y. Marines battling in the northern approaches of Naha, the
Tcapttal city, and soldiers punching at the' defenses of'ShuH
were brought virtually to a
sistance. ;
The Japanese used a variety of weapons including the
anti-tank "Molotov cocktail
two nrmy divisions attack-
ing along the five-mile Naha-
Shuri Yonabaru defense line,
The sixth marine division
dug in on the northern rim
of Naha, a rubbled community
with a pre-invasion population
of 65,000.
Ahead of the leathernecks lay
wide mud flats of the Asato river
valley. A crossing would take the
marines practically under the
muzzles of Japanese guns.
ilups Muke Landing
The sixth repulsed an attempt
ed counter-landing by Japanese
ln.or,h f the estuary. Marines de-
stroyed six to ten enemy boats
on a reef, killing approximately
40 Japanese.
In the center of the American
line, the 77th army division re
ported slight local gains up to 200
yards in stiff combat which failed
to dent the main defenses of the
town of Shuri.
Shuri, lying midway between
the coastal towns of Naha and
Yonabaru, is the central anchor
of the Japanese defense system
protecting an estimated 40,000
enemy troops.
lire Blankets Hill
The 77th spent Sunday ham
mering at "Chocolate Drop" hill -a
brown, clay hillock less than
1,500 yards northeast of Shuri.
Two of our tanks were knocked
out In close-range fighting on the
hillside..
Japanese mortar fire blanketed
Chocolate Drop hill. Shells crump
ed continuously on the barren
clay, barring the way to our tanks
mounting flame-throwers and .75
mm guns.
Kenneth Preston
Sends Word Home
A Mother's day cable received
here yesterday by Mrs. Eldon I.
Preston from her son, Lt. R. Ken
neth Preston, revealed that the
young Bend officer, Bend Bulletin
circulation manager when he en
tered the service, has been freed
from a German prison camp. The
cable read:
"My love and greetings on
Mother's day. All well and safe.
Hope to see you soon."
First reported missing In action
last June, Lt. Preston later was
, revealed to be in a German prison
j camp. It was later learned that Lt.
Preston had suffered a fractured
'ankle, presumably in the crash of
his bomber In German territory,
i Lt. Preston served as a navi
i gator on a bomber, and was on
;hls 23rd mission when his plane
fell In Germany. Yesterday's tele
gram was the first word Mr. and
I Mrs. Preston received from their
son in several months.
Events
and artillery fire stalled the
fighting on southern Okinawa
standstill by strong enemy re
against the two marine and
:
Chinese Strive
To Clear Port
Chungking. May 14 IIP) 1 Chi
nese troops battled today to clear
Foochow, cninese east coast port
which the Japanese fear may be
come an American Invasion gate
way to China.
Foochow airport south of the
city already was in Chinese hands.
Chinese troops also were at
tacking in the coastal area some
300 miles north of Foochow. Sin-
chang, G5 miles southeast of
Hangchow, fell to the Chinese
in eastern Chekiang Thursday.
The Chinese opened their as
sault on Foochow Thursday and
by the next morning had shatter
ed Japanese positions northwest
of the city. They crashed into the
city proper Friday night.
Ian Seize I'ort
The Japanese, believing Amer
ican landings on the China coast
imminent, captured Foochow last
Oct. 4 after putting ashore troops
north and south of the city. It was
the last of China's great ports to
fall into Japanese hands.
Chinese forces previously had
tnwartea several Japanese at
tempts to seize Foochow, which
lies opposite the northern tip of
Formosa and southwest
of cm-
battled Okinawa,
Dr. Davis Joins
State Game Staff
Portland, Ore., May 14 Ui The
Oregon game commission has
added to its biology staff Dr. H.
S. Davis, who will arrive July 1
from West Virginia to assume du
ties in Clackamas county head
quarters. Dr. Davis gained national rec
ognition with his book, "Care and
Diseases of Trout." He retired re
cently from his position of path
ologist for the United States fish
and wildlife service.
Lost RCA Plane
Found in South '
Oxnard, Cal., May 14 HF The
two-month search for a missing
royal Canadian air force plane
ended last night with discovery
of the wreckage and the five
shattered bodies of its crew on
Mt. Pines, 40 miles due north of
here.
The plane, which disappeared
In bad weather while on a flight
from Riverside to Palmdale, Cal.,
was discovered by a U. S. army
pilot.
Nine Square Miles of Nagoya,
Jap Industrial City, on Fire
Following Raid By Superforts .
17,000-Foot Smoke Column Billows High Over
Big War Factory Hub of Nippon Empire; 500 ' ,
Giant Sky Raiders Join In Blow at Center
Guam, May 14 (U.P) A 17,000-foot smoke column covered
nine square miles of Japan's industrial hub of Nagoya today
after more than 500 Superfortresses dropped 3,500 tons of
bombs in the heaviest and mst concentrated fire raid in
history. '
Returning crew members said that the glow from names
crackling through the heart of the city was visible 60 miles at
sea. They reported no fighter opposition and meager anti
aircraft fire.
The Superforts were believed to have burned out more
than twice the area covered"
in the two night fire raids of
last March. The daylight at
tack made bombing more ef
fective. Lt. Glen F. Jensen of
Manning, la., pilot of one of
the last planes over Nagoya,
said he could see huge columns
of flame bursting all over the
target sector.
Arsenal Is Target -Specific
targets included the
Chlgusa plant of the Nagoya ar
senal, one of Japan's largest, as
well as thousands of home or
"shadow" Industries. Jensen said
the imperial castle of Nagoya is
located almost In the center of
the area where he saw a great
fire column.
Col. Carl Storrle of Denton,
Tex., declared "It was a damn
good job. A couple more like that
and we can scratch that town off
the list. I'm sure the clusters of
fire bombs more than covered the
nine-sauare-mlle target area."
He said the extent of the fires
was difficult to determine be
cause smoke clouds covered all
but the outskirts of the city and
spread out over the harbor area,
Losse Are Light
Early re port 8 indicated our
losseswere yery light, .The. lack
of UuK was atti'ioutea to me iacr
that flames and smoke probably
knocked out ground batteries.
The B-29 armada tlie biggest
of tho war deluged Nagoya, Ja
pans main aircraft manufactur
ing center and third largest city,
with more than 500,750 fire bombs
at the rate of 40 tons a minute for
nearly an hour and a half.
A Japanese communique ad
mitted fires still were burning
five hours after the start of the
raid, but insisted that "most"
had been quelled. It said 400 B-29's
lartlcipated, of whlcn eignt nao
ieen shot down and nine dam
aged. '
The attack exceeded In weight
most raids made by the Ameri
can Elchth air force and RAF
against Germany. It underlined
official warnings that Japan faced
ever greater destruction than the
shattered relch unless she sur
rendered.
Raids Reported
Radio Tokyo said another huge
American air armada ol nearly
1,000 carrier planes was raiding
southern Japan for the second
straight day, apparently concen
trating on bases from which Jap
anese suicide planes have been
attacking American shipping off
Okinawa.
On southern Okinawa, U. S.
marines were slugging it out with
desperate Japanese in the north
ern outskirts of the capital city
of Naha In a battle as bloody as
any on Iwo. One marine com
pany lost 50 per cent of its
strength in the past two days.
GIRL KILLS MOTHER
Los Angeles. May 14 iui Bar
bara Adams, 17-year-old college
student who admitted plunging a
butcher knife through her moth
ers heart while she slept, told
police today she had plotted the
killing for two years.
Countries of Latin America
Accused of Hampering Parley
San Francisco, May 14 UIi The
dispute over reglnoal defense
systems blew wide open today
with charges that Latin American
countries, deliberately or not.
were threatening to "destroy the
world organization at Its birth."
The blast came from Australian
Foreign Minister Herbert V. Evatt
In a statement denouncing the
Ijitln American campaign to give
the Pan-American security sys
tem autonomy from the world or
ganization being set up by the
United Nations conference.
He also voiced openly his sus
picion that trades and deals were
being made backstage and warned
that such devices could only "sub
vert" the proposed peace league.
Evatt said that Australia was
In favor of regional defense sys
tems, but believed firmly that
they should operate directly un
der the security council of the
NO. 136
Kennedy Ordered
From War Zone
Paris, May 14 (in Allied su
preme headquarters announced
today that Edward Kenneay ana
Morton Gudebrod of the Associat
ed Press had been disaccredlted
and ordered to return to the
United States In connection with
the unauthorized dispatch by
Kennedy on the German sur
render at Reims,
Robert Bunnelle, chief of the
AP in the United Kingdom, has
been reinstated, SHAEF announc
ed. He had been suspended from
filing privileges pending an inves
tigation that Kennedy's unauthor
ized flash was sent through the
London bureau of the AP. Ken
nedy has said that he telephoned
his dispatch from France to Lon
don. ',
Statement Made
The text of the SHAEF an
nouncements:
"The investigation of the pre
mature transmission and release
of the story of the unconditional
surrender of the German armed
forces, written by Edward Ken-
narlir Vina htfwn enmnlptMl'
been taken as a result' of tho
investigation, and on authbrlty of
the supreme commander:
"W a r correspondent Edward
Kennedy of the Associated Press;
having deliberately violated the
trust imposed in him by prema
turely releasing through unau
thorized channels and deliberate
ly evading military censorship on
a news story concerning which he
was pledged to secrecy. Is disac
credlted an ordered to return to
the United States.
"War correspondent Morton
Gudebrod of the Associated Press,
having taken an active part in the
nremoture release of the news
story through unauthorized chan
nels, thus violating existing mili
tary censorsnip regulations, is
dlsaccredited and ordered to re
turn to the United States.
"War corespondent Robert Bun
nelle of the Associated Press, who
was suspended, has been rein
stated. "The Associated Press has pub
lished its profound regrets for dis
tribution of the story in advance
of authorization.
"This regrettable Incident Is
nrm?(riernH ah closed bv supreme
headquarters."
Mitchell Marine
Killed in Action
One Central Oregon man has
been killed, and another wounded
In warfare, according to a press
release today by the office of war
Information.
Pfc. Walter K. Norton of the
marines, and son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edmund C. Norton of Mitchell,
was killed In action, and Pfc. Wil
fred S. Quant, son of Mrs. Jessie
A. Quant of Prineville, was
wounded In the Pacific war zone,
the OWI reported.
world organization not independ
ently as the Latin Americans de
mand. "Pan-Americanism Is valuable,"
he declared, "but unless the au
thority of the central security
council is maintained, It may de
velop into a form of isolationism
which is calculated to destroy the
world organization at its birth."
Unless the supremacy of the
security council is clearly estab
lished, he warned, "regional-wars
may be preciplated without the
world organization being given
the right to suppress the aggres
sor." The Australian official said It
was surprising to note how many
Latin American countries coun
tries which originally wanted a
security council of 13 or 13 seats
switched In committee last Sat
urday to keep the council at 11
seats as favored by the big
powers. ,