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Oakland Tribune from Oakland, California • Page 5

Publication:
Oakland Tribunei
Location:
Oakland, California
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Oakland TribuneXTuesday Oct. 1 6, 1 945 FAMED ALIENIST HERIrHEXT -OF ARTHUR'S 16,300 Soldiers rP.G.E. Rate Cut LIGHT SHOWERS TO FOLLOW FdGr WEATHERMAN-SAYS- Orpestroys Home inXanyon ADDRESS OF Easf Arriving TOTESIIFFfO MRSMANSfEtDt i With Superior Court, arraignment TOKYO, "Oct "ieT-iPKPemoinihe catastrophic fact of military de feafitself. They have for the first time seen the free way of life in actual, action, and it has stunned them into new thought and Safr matron, lor a at 629TTtedwoocF Hie'jealouiy-slaying of-2-Nurse4yo'n last Tn cat -f. v.U.

j. 10 000 damaee. rVa'da Martin set for caused $10,000 damage nejdeas-reTOlutioh-TrrriorejBostonand Newport $Jews, Va, of involving 11 7,000,000 at home' and abroad. beencoriipIeTe'd intoe most "Tnctioniess operatibn'oi ilsVkind in history. General MacArthur an- nounced yesterday in a world-broad-, cast On schedule, October "Japa-' nese armed forces ceased to exist as 'the -Allied commander said, but warned that "it will take much time and $a- in the area and that his department -was' called when sufficient water'.

could, not be pumped up the hill bylhe-Tolunteer tucks. derttif ieaVeailorrwas-fcirrt when butane tank at the rear oJ the house exploded, hurling him into. uie -atr ne reiusea nospftai treat- -ment an4 would n6t 'give his nam to authorities. jThecause of the fire- is unde-terminprl aportsmen 10 Meet OAKLEY, Oct 16.J-New member will be' guests.t a social meeting of the "Oakley Sportsmen's Club to be new here tomorrow. Final plan for a turkey shoot to be held No vember be discussed Light showers probably will' fol low today's overcast, the weather-.

metropolitan Oakland-area. His of-1 icial" report: Franrisco Cloudv to day and WKiielit. LiEht showers" rob- ably tonight. Wednesday Little temperature change. Moderate Ao occasionally fresh westerly wind.

-iortnecn caiuornia scauerea ciouas today end Wednesday with scattered showers -in mountains: light ram ln north coast Wednesday: cooler sputn interior today: gentle -moderate aorta? westerlv wind off coast. SierrajNvaflaPartly. cloudy today, a night' and Wednesday with scattered cooler. aacramento valley scattered ciouas today, tonight and Wednesday: not much change in temperature. San Joaquin Valley Scattered clouds today; tonight1 and Wednesday; cooler today and tonight.

Livermore. Santa Clara- and Salinas Valleys-Scattered clouds- today, tonight and Wednesday; morning high much change in temperature. OAKLAND PRECIPITATION Last 24 hours, last year, this tience to restore the dignity freedom of the common the beaten demoralized'empire. O1 But, he added, "herein lies the way to true, and. final peace." The supreme ppmmander lauded American soldiers for giving the Japanese people their first insight "into a free man's way of Jife in actual action and it stunned them into new thoughts and new ideas." pacific coast temperatures- He particularly praised -the re- irtraint so exhausted, its' morale so treated their former emulating the ruthlessness of the' Japanese when they were vic- I 1 r- torious.

The, American victory," Mac Ar irv By the Associated Press 'About 16,300 servicemen are sched- Statpy frnm Kurnpff frrirtnarrl -nine. troop-carriers docking' at New York. Four the Queen are due at New York with more than 12,500 four vessels withymore- than 3800 at Rnqton and rme Mn parrvino oosion, ana oh.b snip carrying troops at" Newport News, Ships and Army units arriving; At New York (Aboard" Queen Mary), 11,328 troops including headquarters' of the 20th, 56th, 78th fighter groups; 61st, 77th, 82nd, 83rd, 84th fighter squedrOhs; headquarters 'and base service 440th, 446th air Service groups; i-S19th, 822nd, 866th air engineering squadrons; 643rd. 646th, 690th ah-- materiel squadrons; 22nd general hospital; several thousand miscellaneous troops, 600 ACS. and haval personnel.

(Aboard Smith Thompson, diverted from Boston) 608 trbijps, units. (Aboard hospi-tal ship Huddleston), 572 soldier patientsr-Abtratd Themistojjles) 27 miscellaneous.Jr6ops. At Boston (Aboard Howard Vic tory), 1969 troops, including the ist Anu-Aircrait, tahon; 455th AAA Battalioh; 998th Engineering treadway Bridge-Corn panytl682ha Engineer survey liaison team and high -score nersonnet. lAOoard James Hftrland), 32 miscel Jawous personnia; (Aboard Exche- i nni 1 1 Fighter Mfahr'-'Wlh Ordnance Company- 468th Ordn; tion (Jompany anoVuMBScellaneous personnel (AbMSThef stein Veb- len). 41 miscellanaiiti's-rnnns At Newport News( Aboard Hoyal S.

Copeland), SSmisceUaneous pej- sonnei. Police Pjess 4robe In S.F;": Nisej Attack San Francisco police today nressed an investigation into a new incident resulting in damage ownea Dy a Japanese-American. oricKs were nuriea tnrougn living pom and bedroom windows of an unoccupied home at 1917 28th' Ave nue, sanTancisco, some time sun- 'highfc'officerjLsaid. 'he house is owned by Wesley K. Ojroma, 36, operator of a food store at 12 Geary" Street, police said, they were told.

The incident was reported by Miss Nan" Hayano, 23, who said she was Oyoma fiancee. Oyoma, a gradu- ain.nam,ianta thur said, was triumph for the concept of the complete integration three dimensions war lesson fbrjhe Friday, defense c'ouhsei announced today that" Dr. Josejih Ca'tton, B5ttr-TPsychiatrist, will testify in her behalf. -James M. Maclnni's.

one nfrl1 Mansfeldt's attorneys, sawfpr! Cat-ton. who gained fame as a defense witness in the notorious Winnie Ruth Judd murder case, will aid the defense'eontention that the titian-haired widow was insane- at the time she shot and killed Mrs. Martin, whom she suspected of stealing her husband's aiiections. romance' Witnesses both "prosecution and defense claim to haye witnesses who will- iinfc Mrs. Martin and the late John H.

Mansfeldt to-mantiially. as long ias.A year ago. Defense Attorney VmcentrHalli- nan said new prospective wit-- ness would not. divulge, her name because she Js still a. nurse-and it might go hard with her." inis nurse, npwever, saia mat ine situation became oobvious "it got so'-that the nurses were gossiping about vada.

and the doctor. 1 Homicide Detail Inspector, Alvin Corrasa located Mrs7 Marie Moot, 42, a former jatient of Dr. Mans feldt, who refside?" at one. the Hi: titers Point housing projects'. RELATES INCIDENTS' Mrs.

MooreJeTarea-othej-incidents allegedly the doctor- and Mrs. Martin, and claimed to have seen them According to Corrasa. Mrs. Moore saiefene naa Been a patient of Dr. Mansfeldt's since June.

On five calls that- he made to her home, he was accompanied by a woman in the ear. Shown a photograph 'of. Mrs. Martin by corrasa, Mrs. Moore de clared on at leasr tnree of tue occasions; Mrs; Martin was in'the ea.

ew Solon'sJEarail SeeslSeno teat-Work' 16 -VP) iit: i H. L.I H. i. 5fl Reno 64 39 891 Riverside 83 60 80 57iRoseburg 1 Sacramento 74 55 59 -5nlSalinaii DM 57 il5HSa-Diego 13 65 85 62 1 San Francisco 1. Barbara 54 79 ShKsanta Kosa -ez as 74 61 Seattle 64 Sola Springs 64 Spokane 78 6t 56 82 49 Stockton Susanville 60 SO fillTnnnnflh AO 76.

42 Williams -83 65 '53i Winnemueca 72 63 Yuma PRECIPITATION Bakersfield. .01 Rniu 04 Kt-trh neicny. roiana, KefW. San Francisco Airporti 01; Auburn Bakersfield 88 Boise Colusa Eureka FQrtBragg Fresno Imprfat. "9 tung city Los Angeles Merced Needles -Oakland Paso Robles -Phoenix Pocatella Portland Red Bluff In Bay Plies and Yallejo "arevamong seven" Northern California -cities JwMchilljKmeJ uituuciiTOi a new.

wnoiesaie rate telle Jul Pafrlicttas am -today Dy uie uaiuorma-Kni'Miaci-Cfflmmis- sion. schedule reduces the charees to the municipalities using power from P. G. E. and retailine it-ito individual.

andbusinessr -consumers. Reductions are based upon 1944J figuresi- I Approved for Alameda was a re duction of 9.8: per cent and for Vallejo, of 9.6 per cent rP' Other reductions authorized, SajltiClaf 9.4: Point .1.9: Palo Alto, 11, and Redding, 14. jtne. scneauie is retroactive' to August 27; 1944, and can be -put into- enect witnui 20 days, the commis sion the case thej pef "cent reduttlbn JRedfJIRg authorized aufe competitrve factor introduced by the Shasta project, the commission declare! that any possible loss. in that conv munitylrom4he new rate must be borne within the community, and may not be passed on jo other cities.

PLANE FIRM PICKS. Oakland Airport The. Pacifip Aircraft Company, holding a five-State distributorship for Beechcraft plane and a uuu oacKiog of orders, chose Jhe uaKiana Municipal' -Airport for its Pacific Coast headquarters. John F. Hassler, chairman-of the Oakland Chamber i of Cornmerce -Aviation Committee, announced today.

nKf eT part- ners, ivar AKseisen, Morman Larsen and Tirey Ford, has appUed to the Oakland Port Commission for nvfoncilrCf Vrtir rtnr tarn Jl rt-Fi nm -awtitA nimnrt jphrre bwitiiij Wt-VWUJW, wic iWrrl in BstnWfch VOcrjnnDf eala I and service base foriiatiOnal manu facturersat Oakland. The other ttrtyision or Mircrart Ljorporation i and xayiorcratt Much of the credit for Oakland's sutfeess. in coast flying fields for the- Pacific Aircraft Company business goes the Chamber's Aviation Committee and Howard Waldorf, manager of the aviation division of the Cham ber, Port officials said. The Pacific Aircraft Company holds the Beechcraft distributorship lor uaiiiornia, Nevada, Oregon, Art zona and Washington. y.

future, is that success fn the art of i. war Hepends on the complete, in te-r gration of 'text of address 1 Followihg is" the "text of General MacArthur's address: Vx Kosa, Seattle, Today the Japanese armed forces throughout Japan completed their demobilization and ceased to exist as such; These -forces are now com- uttahml winnemueca, i Hunt Pressed for Wounded Bandit Oakland police today continued a search for bandits, pne of them wounae wno escaped witff sauouj. in ana two rings vawedat 10nn vnrbmlnv tW fFred Kelson, 54 proprietor of tavern at 351 10th Street i 1. Lknow of no demobilization in either in iwar-ot peace, by our own or bjr any other country, that has been accomplished so rap- idly or so frictionlessly. Everythini military, naval or air.

is forbidden to Japan. This ends its military might and its military influence in L- international affairs. It ho longer recKons as -a worm, power ener large or small. Its path in the future, if it is to must be; cenfined to the-ways of peaci. Approximately 7,000,000 armed men, those Kelson shot one of the tfgar snapd thi-SMnmti properly speaking, the evolution-- which will restore the dimity and freedom of the comrhorrmar has It-williake much require great patience, but if world public opinion will permit of these two essential factors, mankind will be repaid.

Herein lies the way. to true final peace. The Japanese armyj- contrary to mam 41 i l- 1 avuic mai mive iKmi nur vocated. was thoroughly defeated before the surrender. The strategic- maneuvering of the Allies so scat tered and divided their thrusts had so immobilized, disin tegrated and split its units; its-; supply and transportation lines were so utterly, destroyed; its equipment shattered, that its early sirrender became inevitable, Ba.stipn after considered -bytti as im- pregnablein barring ur way, had rendered im- potent and -whOe.

o'tacti' cal penetrations tsulted in of many-' It was weak everywhere, fight where it stQpd, nafcH mutual and presented' i fkicture dfidJtg 'abseduteA SURRENDER INEVITABLE The basic cause of the surrender is not to be attributed to. an arbitrary decisipn of It was inevitable because of the strategic andtaettcat-cifcumstarices forced upon it. The-situation had become hopeless, was merely a question of wheniiwith outrtroops poised for final This invasion would have been annihilating," but. might well havl cost hundreds thou- sandsfoiT American lives; Tfhe victory a triumph for the concept of the' complete 'inte gratiotf of ThTeeaimensiohs of war ground, sea' find By a J-horoUgh use of each in conjunction with the eorrespond- mg.utilizatiOTfcf. the; other two, thfe enemv was reduced to a crindi Tof By largely avoid ing 4he-eparate- use of the.

services and by avoiding methods of frontal assault as far as possible, our combined power forceii the surrender withrelative life loss- -probably unparalleled, in any campaigns in history. SIGNIFICANTFEATURE This latter fact indeed was the most 'inspiring and significant feature: unprecedented saving in American life. It is for this- we have to say "TbankGod." Never, was there a iribre intensive application "of the principle of the strategic arid tactical employment of limited forces as compared with the accumulation of overwhelming forces. Illustrating this concept, General Yamashita recently stated an interview in Manila, eAlaining reasons for his defeat, that the diver sity of Japanese command resulted in the complete lack of co-opera- U6n and co-ordination between the services. He complained 'that he was not In supreme command, that the air forces were' run by Field Marshal Terauchi at Saigon, and the fleet run directly from Tokyo, that he only Knew-OTtne intended naval strike at Jfceyte Gulf five days be fore iLgot 'under way and profesedT ignorance of its details.

great lesson-for the future Is that success in4he art of war de pends upon a complete ihtegrationl of the services. In unity will lie military strength. We cannot win with ly back anfl entfa. And.io line however strong can go aiene. Victory will rest with the team.

the rush I ifr'the outlying theaters, have' 'laid oown vneir weapuns. i the accornisKment ofthe ex- tbpiSenaitc" -William F. Knowland of traordinarily difficult and dangerous -surrenderin Japan, unique in. the annals of history, not a shot was 'necessary, not a drop of-Allied blood was 7 VINDICATION COMPLETE in 1. ate 6f the University of Californiajdiamond ring vajued at $400 from MEN'S SHOP 1439 BROADWAY Minn M'-- Fire that could not be quelled by the Redwood Canyorf Volunteer Fire DepaTtmentcausejpfjinta- Faaequate water supply, destroyed Can and battalion Chief Alan Rose of the Oakland Fire-Department said he was called after the volunteer de partment battled -vain to brine the Hlames Xinder control The, home, owiled-by Mrs.

Helen Speck, was destroyed, and the entire hillside of brush and -grass 'was b.urned over. The Hopalong Stables, a riding "academy, was endangered, ow uie maze was stoppea peiore it reached the horses. Rose said there were no It's the perfect and tvll I t': i 1 I 4, .1 r-C -VT Ibrant flame tal charm! Chinese' ttitftt' The vindication of the great 3e- cision of Potsdam is-complete. Notn- ing- could exceed- the abjectness, she humiliation and' the finality of this surrender. It is pot ohljL physically: tnorougn, but has been equally ae? instructive on' Japanese spirit.

From fwaggering arrogance, the former Japanese military have passed to servility and fear. thoroughly beaten and cowed, and ble before, the terrible retribution the surrender terms Impose upon fieir country in punishment -for its jreat sins. Again I wish to pay tribute to the magnificent conduct of Our troops. few exceptionsthey. could well be taken as a model for all time, as a conquering army.

No historian in later years when pas-" sions 'cool can arraign their conduct. They could so easily and understandably have, emulated the ruthlessness which their enemy practised when conditions jcvere But their perfect alance between implacable firm -ress of duty onjthe one hand and resolute restraint from cruelness and bhitalities on- the other taught1 lesson civil population that is sta; its impact JAPS ARE IMPRES Nothing has ser tended; press Japanesethought, not even Veterans get --1-I vit "cu cvajii cjuvicMujf. aKaic an auiumuune parxea The tavern proprietor told police- found the bandits Inside the tavern when he arrived here at 8:30 a.m. yesterday. The pair produced revolvers and took his wallet, containing between $700 and $4000, and $2100 from his desk.

They also removed a $600-. diamond ring he was. wearing and took a woman's the desk. i Scat red, possessing oHen Oakland, successor to the late Sena tor -Hiram Johnson, -had a special audience in the Senate Chamber yesterday; His three chiidren, Eme-lyn, 17, Joseph' William, 15, and Es-telle, 7, saw him perform his duties there. for the first time.

They and their mother were having a look at the-Gapitol before the children entered the Washington schools. the most exciting shade -seen is in Honolulu on business. Tm Gen I 7F' rrMTT -slf 1 shade to wear, tctth. any every costume color A'nd oelng Chen It AkK -MWdMWMU- -f stay lovely much longer Toiletries, Street Floor LESS! V- r'Ht- Without Tcsdrtingto'hook. of crook, avvc" the G.I.s' faVoritc'quick'cKangc rtistsLCould that be because ou'f sbecial I UKqutr, uequeroi, I Llostlek.

1.7S ra i ti Moccas i alteration and fatting for, fiervicemen give them fast service instead of fast excuses? Could AnotHer-SCOOP! Peters Bros, first -ogajrj bringing -to Oakfancf, this, ULL LEATHER SOLE post-war HOADWAY fl or illk -Jrz.

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About Oakland Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
2,392,182
Years Available:
1874-2016