The Bend bulletin. (Bend, Deschutes County, Or.) 1917-1963, May 29, 1945, Page 8, Image 8

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    PAGE EIGHT
THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1945
Lord Haw Haw .
Held By British
With British Second army, Ger
many, May 29 nil The British
second army held William (Lord
Huw Haw) Joyce, nasty-tongued
British nazl who ranted at his
homelund over the German radio,
in custody today and sought
means to try him as a war crim
inal. (The authoritative British press
association said Joyce would be
tried for treason in England des
pite his naturalization as a Ger
man subject. It was possible that
Britain would refuse to recognize
the naturalization on grounds
that it occurred during wartime.
Treason can be punished by hang
ing. .
Joyce was captured In north
ern Germany by British second
army officers combing the area
for war criminals.
Taken into custody with Joyce
was a woman representing her
self as his wife. Her full identity
was not revealed immediately.
Joyce's real wife was believed to
have remained In England
throughout the war.
Yokohama Bums
(Continued from Page One)
strong ran interference for the
Superforteresses and tangled
with enemy fighters high over
the port city. Tokyo said Japa
nese anti-aircraft batteries also
were in action.
A Japanese communique said
30 B-29's were shot down and 40
heavily damaged out of a force
it estimated at 500 B-29's and 100
. Mustangs. It said the raid last'
ed an hour and a half with some
bombs also falling on Tokyo and
, Kwasakl, midway between Tokyo
and Yokohama. . -Damage
Told
: "Considerable damage was
caused in the city of Yokohama,"
the communique said.
The raid was the first in
strength on Yokohama; a modern
city of 72 square miles packed
with shipyards, motor vehicle1
plants, steel plants and assorted
aircraft, rubber, radio and pe
troleum works.
Bombs were aimed at three
main areas, Yokohama harbor
with Its docks and breakwaters;
the modern commercial and rest
dentlal sections to the southeast,
and the northeast district, where
numerous war plants lie on re
claimed land jutting out into
Tokyo bay.
Population Thick
Among the plants in the north
east section were the Mitsubishi
heavy industries and the Tokyo
Electric company. The population
in the southeastern district av
eraged 30,000 persons to the
square mile. .
The raid was the largest in day
light since 5o0 B-29s dropped
more-than 3,500 tons of bombs
on Nagoya May 14. It boosted
the number of B-29S over tne
Tokvo.Yokohama area In the past
six days to 1,500 and the tonnage
of bombs dropped to iz.uuu.
Mustang fighters from two
also visited the Tokyo area in
daylight yesterday. They bombed
and strafed tne Kasumgaura na
val a r stat on 32 miles northeast
of central Tokyo and destroyed
or damaged 42 enemy aucrait
Germans View Atrocity Victims
1.'
Fisheries Seek
Solon Dam Study
Portland, Ore., May 29 iW
Congress today was asked by the
Columbia Basin Fisheries De
velopment association to Inquire
into the need ror more power
dams In the northwest before
any new construction program be
gins.
H. N. Jackson, state senator
from Tacoma, Wash., feels that
the northwest's fishing resources
are more important than added
electrical power development. Pro
posed dams at The Dalles and at
Umatilla would hurt the fishing
Industry some members of the
association believe.
Not (o Compete
Champaign, 111., May 29 (IB
Coach Leo Johnson announced to
day that his Illinois track team,
1945 Big-Ten champion, has voted
not to compete In the central col
legiate meet at Great Lakes Sat
urday or the national collegiate
championships at Marquette,
June 9. Illinois is defending cham
pion In both meets.
(ISt.A Telenhnlnl
German clvlllnns are forced to walk past bodies of 30 Jewish women
starved to death by German SS troops In a 300-mile march across Czecho
slovakia. Signal Corps photo.
Government
j J. rtleutotcrit
1 fc1 mtril j
mkts it pei
I fiiblt lor you to enjoy n. n - . .
lj today M ici. Pilot Butte Inn
fjf beering aid pUnned lor
r production efter h ' .
S. C. MITCHELL 10 A. M. o 6 P. M.
214 Miner BUIg.
Kugciic, Oregon
Fear of Dentisfs
Makes Man, 103,
Short Three Teeth
Portland, Ore., May 29 Hit A
mortal fear of dentists has kept
103-year-old John William Bills
from having three missing teeth
replaced.
Bills is In Portland for a family
reunion. He makes his home in
Tacoma, but for the first and
hardest 93 years, Texas was his
front yard.
The peppy, retired physician
and surgeon relaxes by carrying
his great-great-grand daughter,
Karron Marie Whiteside, piggy
back. He is also fond of reading
western stories and taking period
ic round-the-block strolls.
Nippons Shalceup
Naval Command
i San Francisco, May 29 lP)Ad
mlral Soemu Toyoda was re
moved from Japan's three top
naval commands today In a gen
eral shakeup following the
American successes on Okinawa
and carrier-based raids on the
Japonese homeland.
The Japanese Domel agency
said the navy ministry an
nounced that Toyoda had been
relieved as commander In chief
of the combined fleet, common
! der-in-chief of the newly-estab
lished overall naval command
'and commander of the naval es
corts command.
All three posts were given to
Vice Admiral Jisaburo Ozawa,
vice chief of the naval general
staff and president of the naval
staff college, the announcement
said.
WPB Boss Says
Jobs to Dwindle 1
Washington, May 29 Ui War
production boss J. A. Krug today
predicted a sharp new cut In mu
nitions production soon with a
resulting Jump in unemploy
ment. He said, however, that
within six months rapidly . In
creasing civilian production
should be able to begin taking up
the slack of cut back war work
ers and discharged soldiers.
Krug posed the paradox of un
employment in some fields while
other industries were falling
short of meeting renulrements
because of manpower shortages
notably textiles and lumber.'
Ho estimated that the war m'tr
chine would need 2,900,000 less
workers three months from now,
boosting unemployment from a
current 800,000 to 1,900,000.
Carrier Sinking 1
Year Ago Is Told
Washington, May 29 ill') The
escort carrier Block Island, only
U. S. carrier lost in the long and
bloody battle of the Atlantic, was
sunk by a nazl U-boat a year ago
today.
She was quickly avenged by ac
companying destroyer escorts
who sank the attacker and res
cued more than 950 of her crew.
With the battle of the Atlantic
a thing of the past, the navy
finally revealed ' details of the
sinking.
The dramatic, 14 month career
of the Block Island ended when
an enemy submarine pumped
throe torpedoes into the light
carrier.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
Time out to relax . . . Have a Coca-Cola
. . . or refreshment helps in housework
Home chores are easier when you work refreshed. With ice-cold Coca-Cola
in your icebox, you are only a few steps from the pause that refreshes at home.
When it's time to Have a Coke, or to offer it to guests, it's a comfort to know
that you have a supply on hand, ice-cold in your refrigerator. The pause that
refreshes with ice-cold Coca-Cola has won its way into homes everywhere as
refreshing symbol of American living.
OTTltD UNDEt AUTHOIIIT Of THC COCA-COIA COMPANY IT
134 Greenwood COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. Phone 4?
mm
You naturally heir fnr.V1
i called by its friendly abbreviation
1 i-oae . Moth mean the quality prod-
' uct of Tu Coca-Cola Company.
-C 194) The C-C Co.
GROW IN UNDERSTANDING
EVEN WHEN YOU ARE APART
The hardest rule for the war
bride is, "Try to grow In under
standing with your husband, even
wnen you are apart.
The thing that will bring these
war marriages closer together
than anything else is letters. John
Steinbeck reported) after visiting
tne various war sectors. "One
good letter can make the differ
ence between a good soldier and
a sick man." Some soldiers, he
said, worried so much about their
affairs at home, either because
they had received the wrong kind
of letters or none at all, that
they had to be put in the hospital.
An American woman who did
heroic work in France after its
surrender, visiting 70 German
prison camps to assist the French
prisoners, said that a letter from
home, a tangible proof that he
was not forgotten, an assurance
that he was remembered and
loved, was like a tonic to a pris
oner. It - lifted his morale sky
high. And the lifting of one
man's morale, she observed, lifted
the morale of an entire 'prison
camp as nothing else could. Proof
that one man was -not forgotten
aroused hopes in the others that
they, too, were remembered by
someone. That is what one let
ter can do!
'Blessed are letters they are
the monitors," wrote Donald
Grant Mitchell. "They are also
the comforters and they are the
only true heart-talkers."
V
That is why a letter from home
is the most cherished of a sol
dier's possessions. But they must
be cheerful ljjtters, filled with the
little things that make up a day's
happenings the little, things
that, if he were home, he would
tarn and laugn about with nis
wife at the dinner table. A letter
to a soldier is not the place for
recording fears and anxieties and
worries. He has enough of his
own, and ho is helpless to take
care of those at home.
There are so many countless
ways of filling a letter with
laughter and good cheer, with
love and courage, with hope and
plans for the future.
There are also countless let
ters not to write: the letter that
complains about trifling hard
ships at home; the letter that
carries worries about the health
or the finances of the family, the
letter that says, I know you
don't mind my going out with'
other men, I'm so lonely"; the
letter that begins, Now that you
are gone, I find that It was all a
mistake, and that I am not really
in love with you."
"The only true heart-talkers!"
Two people who have been mar
ried in wartime, by talking hon
estly and loyally from the heart,
explaining what they are, what
they think and believe, can ac
quire a profound kknowledge of
each other. Understanding can be
lost, and is lost every day, by
people who live side by side. It
can grow and ripen and develop
when they are thousands of miles
apart.
a
One of the first acts of adjust
ment to marriage, whether the
couple are together or apart, is
to plan together the kind of life
they want. No livable house was
ever built without a blueprint,
no successful life, without a de-
sign.
The number of happy mar
riages can bo . increased when
people plan their lives as they
plan their days, knowing what
they want, what they must do to
accomplish it, and how to go
about it. Unhappiness is often the
result of a lack of Intelligence in
daily living. Boredom and fail
ure are often the result of a kind
of mental Inertia which prevents
us from developing all sides of
our personality and opening the
locked roors of adventure. But
no one ever unlocked those doors
without a key, and the key to
them all is a realistic plan for
your marriage and for the future.
If it is not unreasonable to
hope that world planning will
soon be under way, surely It is
not unreasonable to chart the
course for two lives. .
Oregon VFW Sets
Organizing Record
Portland, Ore., May 29 tin
Oregon is now making a national
record for organizing new veter
ans of foreign wars posts and
extending rehabilitation work to
outstage communities, according
to the chief of staff of the state
department.
New charters have been is
sued to the followmg places:
Tigard, Springfield, Vanport
Drain, Newberg, Forest Grove,
Gresham, Creswell, Lakeview,
General George A. White post
Portland; Philomath, Mollalial
Chiloquin, Merrill, Oswego, Red-
mond,- Rogue River, Adrian, on- i
tario, Woodburn and Stayton.
HURT BY WORLD WAR SHEL?
West Frankfort, 111. (tpinnw
McClement, 17, West Frankfort
became one of the latest casual!
ties of World War I when a 3.
inch gas shell, a .25-year-old sou.
venlr, unexpectedly discharged.
Slivers of metal entered one of
the youth's legs, but hospital au
thorities said he suffered only
flesh wounds.
Next: Why Divorces Are
Increasing.
Buy National War Bonds Now!
WILL
SWAP
Red points for used kitchen "
fats. Our government has '
authorized your dealer to
swap red points, which will
help get you butter, in re
turn for your used fats . .
2 red points and it for each
pound of fat. So save every
drop of used fat every day.
Turn it In promptly 1
Well, folks, what is.'your prediction
of the weather? Of course, it's only
your idea because I have talked to at
least 100 people and have had just that
many prognostications (Boy, get that
vocabularly).
In any event, I gather that it's un
usual, which is very normal, because '
from border to border I have found that
every spot is always blessed (or cursed)
with "unusual" weather.
But when, and if, that sun comes out
again remember that your car should
be ready for that fishing trip.
Incidentally, do you people in Bend
know that you have the most amazing
river in the world running through town?
With all that rain and melting snow it
never changes its level. Can you tell me
why? If you don't know, come in and let
me tell you. I'm just a stranger, so I
asked.
Have you ever written your friends
and told them about that? If not, try it.
Word of mouth advertising is the strong
est there is.
Jack Halbrook.
Halbrook Motors
Friendly
Thai-
Dealer
Mercury
Bond and Minnesota
Lincoln
Phone 680
tt
mm
B)f
DIM
m
til
mm
Jap
The above statement gives you an idea of
the enormous volume of guns, ammunition,
food and medical supplies still needed to
finish the Japs. To produce mountains of
material takes money your money in War
Bonds. ,
This year there will be only two War
Bond drives, not three. But only by buying
more bonds during the 7th War Loan can
two drives take the place of last year's
three. Almost as much money is needed this
year as last to fight the war.
Whea peace comes You'll be dad you have
War Bond savings for educating your child
ren, maybe a new home, a new car, travel,
retirement and a lot of things you can't
buy now.
The point of a bond drive like the 7th is
to buy extra bonds above those you regu
larly buy. You are asked to buy at least one
additional $100 bond during the 7th War
Loan May 14th to June 30th.
The friendly
Southern Pacific
S-IP