THE MM no Help Win War Turn In your used cooking fata to your butcher and get free meat points. Help win the war! ! Volume LIU May Split Isle Into Two Parts Tokyo Reports Landings On Kume, 52 Miles to West of Battleground Guam, April 2 P American invasion troops have smashed forward more than half-way across Okinawa in a swift ad vance against scattered Japanese sniper - and pillbox resistance, front dispatches reported today. An announcement that Okinawa had been split in two was expect ed hourly. Hard fighting flared on the southern flank of the American army marine front where tank led infantrymen were driving toward Naha, the island's burn ing capital, less than seven miles distant. Tokyo radio reported without allied confirmation that Amer icans completed a new landing today on the island of Kume, 52 miles west of Okinawa, and 340 miles northeast of Formosa. Troops Race Ashore Tens of thousands of troops of the new American 10th army swarmed ashore along a wide beachhead. .Two airfields and more than a' dozen villages were captured. It was indicated U. S. planes soon would be using at least one of the two captured airdromes. f-.i-. - United Press War correspond ent E. G. Valens, accompanying forward elements of two army units driving across Okinawa from the captured Kadena air field, said resistance continued comparatively light. This column was heading downhill toward Noza and the Nagusuku bay naval anchorage on the east side of the Island. "The only enemy resistance," Valens said, "is from a few scat tered pillboxes, snipers, and 100 pound land mines." Civilians Attack A dispatch from the 24th army corps headquarters on Okinawa said an armed band of civilians including women, attacked an (Continued on Page 8) Soft Coa! Miners Halt Strike Plans Washington. April 2 IIP) The nation was assured today of at least another month of strike-free production in the soft coal fields. The threat of . an immediate strike was removed when Presi dent John L. Lewis sent Easter day telegrams to his United Mine Workers, asking them to stay on the job another 30 days under their old contract while he and the mine operators continued efforts to work out a new one. The old contract expired at mid night Saturday. The government, aware of the miners' policy of "no- contract, no work,' appeared ready to seize the mines yester day when Lewis announced that he had requested UMW members to stay on the job. The burly mine chieftain said he was doing so because he was "conscious of the imperative ne , icessity of continuing the produc tion of coal for war." , Discussions Continue He and the operators arranged to continue discussions today, with the war labor board ready to take a direct hand if there is no substantial progress within a week. The first 30 days of nego tiations failed to bring agreement on a single issue. The WLB ordered the contract extension Saturday, stipulating that any wage adjustments agreed upon should be retroactive to April 1. The operators agreed. But a final obstacle arose when Lewis demanded that they give bond or written guarantee that the miners would get any retro active payment coming to them. That the operators refused to do. . The WLB called an unusual Sunday session yesterday. When , it broke ud, there was every indi ' cation that the government would have to seize the mines to keep soft coal production going. Soon afterward, however, came Lewis telegram announcing that he was asking the miners not to strike. NAZI ROCKET Swift Advance D 'Last Reace Proposal' Rumors Circulate Widely in Europe Nazi Propaganda Takes on Desperate Tone; Germans Given Orders to Fight or Perish London, April 2 (U.E) Rumors of a so-called "last peace proposal" by Adolf Hitler circulated today as nazi home propaganda took on a desperate tone, calling on all Germans to "fight or perish" and claiming that an underground nazi "werewolf" movement was arising in occupied German terri lory. . Source of the peace rumor was the "free German" press bureau in Stockholm. - '' ; This source said that Hitler ted asked Foreign Minister Bend's Easter Far From Fair; Ground White Bend's weather on Easter Sun dav April 1, was definitely of the April fool variety, local residents agreed. District forecasts indi cated that Easter Sunday weather would be "generally fair." But this forecast failed to "jell,'.' and the day was one of the most disa greeable Easter Sundays in a number of years. Bend's weather for the day ranged from snow to dust, and finally, as the day ended, snow fell on top of dust and last night the temperature dipped to 14 de grees above zero. Yesterday's maximum was 38 degrees. Heavy showers of snow, at times intermingled with rain, were general over Central -Oregon. Considerable snow fell in the Cascades. v . Nippons Warned Okinawa Vital (By United Prera) The Tokyo newspaper Yomiuri Hochl, in a remarkably frank edi torial on the significance of the Okinawa invasion, warned the Japanese people Monday that the loss of that key position will mean that "there can be no hope of turning the course of the war." The editorial, as quoted by To kyo and recorded by United Press at San Francisco, said the "entire strategy of the Pacific" was based on the battle of Okinawa. "The loss of Okinawa will mean the collapse of the vanguards of Japan proper," the newspaper said. Others Hopeful Two other Tokyo dailies main tained the usual Japanese propa ganda line. The Asalit bhlmbun, according to the broadcast, as serted the invasion "does not mean the war situation is turning in their (allied) .favor," adding that at the "decisive moment everything should be thrown Into the encounter." The Mainichi Shimbun said that "if we succeed in destroying the enemv. we will be able to turn to the offensive." 2,500 POLES RELEASED Paris, April 2 Uli U. S. First and Third army troops have lib erated 2.500 Polish officers, in cluding nine generals, and 246 Russian officers, allied headquar ters announced today. Over 308,000 By MacArthur Bv H. D. Qulffff (United Press War Correspondent) . Manila, April 2 tp Americar troops killed or captured 308.18C Japanese in seizing control of 32 Islands in the Philippines during the last six months, it was an nounced today. Gen. Douglas MacArthur"s com munique, In disclosing the Japa nese casualties, also announced continued gains by U. S. forces on Luzon, Negros, Cebu and Min danao. In the last five days through out the Philippines the Japanese casualties amounted to 10.971 killed and 185 captured,' while the American losses for the same peri od were 340 killed, 48 missing and 919 wounded. The heavy casualties on the Japanese were inflicted by the u s Sixth and Eighth armies which reconquered the main por- tlon of the Philippines, including the capital of Manila, ann icn on - lv one major island Bohol CENTRAL OREGON'S THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. MONDAY, rove lwaro Joachim Von Ribbentrop to deliver to Britain a last peace proposal. The Hitler bid was said to include a request for an im mediate armistice in the west; maintenance of the German ar mies in the east; joint occupation of west Germany by British, American and German armies; and a European peace conference at which Russia would not be rep resented. Rumors Aired Hitler was described as deter mined to continue his war against Russia but was said to be willing to retire if a general election showed he was not wanted by the German populace. He was also said to be prepared to allow Aus tria a plebiscite on whether she desires to continue as part of the relch. ' The so-called underground nazi movement in the west was the subject of innumerable nazi broadcasts. . These said that German men, women, and boys and girls were banding together in an under ground movement, calling them selves "werewolves." Werewolves, in German folk lore, were wolves inhabited by human spirits who made forays at night. Leaders Get Orders All local party leaders were or dered to stay at their posts and anyone 'who left his post was called "a low scoundrel." The "werewolf" movement was said to have instructions to attack any allied soldiers and any Ger man who collaborated witn tnem Train Hits Car; Woman Is Killed Hermiston, Ure., April z tun Mrs. L. L. Mohr, wife of the fire chief at Ordnance, was killed Sat urday night when a Union Pacific passenger train struck her car at a crossing west of Hermiston. Mohr was only slightly hurt. Union Pacific officials said It appeared the Mohr car turned off the highway to go south, missed the crossing, and became caught on the tracks. The approaching train was unable to stop before striking the automobile. Portugal Planning To War on Japs London, April 2 U Portugal is preparing to declare war on Japan and take an active part in the Pacific campaign, according to reports reaching diplomatic quar ters here. Portugal is reported to be as sembling troops and material in Mozambique to use in an offen sive to regain Portuguese Timor which was occupied by the Japa nese early In the war. Japanese Killed s Men in Philippines Action still under Japanese control. On Luzon, ground forces con tinued to compress the Japanese Dockets while Fifth air force bombers again hit the shattered port of Lewaspi, on the south eastern tip of the island, with 200 more tons of explosives. Elements of the 11th corps pushed into the Santa Maria river valley east of Manila at a point nine miles southeast of Tanay", but were meeting increasing re sistance. Two columns of American troops were moving slowly over the rugged terrain in northern Luzon against Baguio, former summer capital and Japanese headquarters in the Philippines. One force was less than three miles south of the city and the second contingent had moved within five miles from the north. Troops of the first cavalry dl j vision advanced 12 miles along ine suuuirm ui uikuiih I bay in southern Luzon to reachlkyus, BASES ALLIED SAL -ir . & ; a ; ft ft ft ' r' ft ft ft & Russian Army Onl " Armored Columns Sent Ahead to Knife Way , Through Nazi Defenses London, April 2 lPu-Red army spearheads were reported only about a dozen miles from the greater Vienna out$kirts today and Russian reports said disor ders had broken out in the Aus trian capital' and elsewhere in Austria. 1 Forward columns of Marshal Feodore Tolbukhin's forces were reported fighting in the Leitha mountains, only about a dozen miles from greater Vienna. The Russians were reported sending armored columns ahead of their main body of troops to kniie through the well-organized German defense system and turn it before the nazls could brace themselves for a stand. -Air Force Aids The red army advance con tinued to be aided by heavy bom bardments of the U. S. 15th air force carried out against Vienna's rail communications. The Moscow radio reported that increasing disorders were spread ing in Carinthia and Styria and also in Vienna itself. Weiner Neustadt. Austria's most important industrial center, and had pushed to within sight of Bratislava, capital of the German puppet state of Slovakia. The London Daily Mall quoted unconfirmed German reports that 30 Russian divisions, possibly 450,000 men, had begun a massive assault on Stettin, Germany's big gest Baltic port, from points on the east bank of the Oder oppo site the city. Keds Near Vienna. Marshal Feodor I, Tolbukhin's Third Ukrainian army group plunged to within 20 miles of Vienna after capturing Trausers dorf, 22 miles southeast of the Austrian capital and just west of Lake IMeusiedler. The advance also .carried to within 10 miles of the "greater Vienna" area delineated by the Germans after the 1938 anschluss and embracing 250 square miles. Both Vienna and Wiener Neus tadt, 24 miles to the south, were outflanked by another column which drove 27 miles inside Aus tria -and captured Kirchau, 36 miles south southwest of Vienna. This force cut the Wiener Neus-tadt-Zagreb railway and advanced to within five miles of the Vienna Venice trunk railway. 14 More Nippon Admirals Killed (By Unite! Prcw) The Dome! news agency an nounced today that 14 more Japa ncse admirals had died in action, I bringing to 108 the number or high enemy naval officers whose! deaths have been reported since. May, 1944. ! The dispatch was recorded by the FCC. or Captured the outskirts of San Pablo city. Mechanized units of the 40th division on Negros pushed 11 miles north of newly-captured! Bacolod, capital of the island, to! Tallsay where the Japanese dug v 12 Miles From Vienna m lor a strong detense of the air-1 man hospital in Portland this nit field, with its 4.500 foot runway, i ernoon that the condition of Sea Bombers and fighters stronelvton Smith, who underwent a ma- supported the ground forces onijor operation Saturday morning, Negros and nearby Cebu and de-!was much improved and that he siroyea 10 grounded Japanese planes. Another was destroyed on uonoi. Philippines -based bombers again raided Formosa and Japa nese shipping throughout the China sea, sinking or damaging at least vessels, including a de stroyer escort. Seven of the Japanese ships alone were destrnvert nff Knr. mosa, where MacArthur's bomb - ers plastered airdromes, factories! and rail Installations. Formosa Is just south of the invaded Ryu - DAILY; NEWSPAPER Caioreal oft OkDimawa LmSIwmm, , i. The huge British battleship base after the warship and other tack on Ryukyus. Church Basement Flooded In Night 1 Bend firemen yesterday re moved approximately 5,000 gal- i.uf .the Christian church? on Isew- port avenue, which had collected there Saturday night as a result of a plug being blown out of the water piping beneath the church. When the flooded condition was discovered there was about AVi feet of water in the basement, according to Fire Chief LeRoy Fox and Engineer Vern Carlon, who removed the water. A pumper from the Ninth Serv ice command ordnance shop was brought into service when it was found that the city's large pumper could not be maneuvered into po sition to get at the water. The water was pumped down to about five inches deep, and thetfiremen bailed out the balance. Aside from possible damage to motors on the air conditioning sVstem, and the thorough wetting of furnace wood, there was no other loss, firemen said. Ex-Marine Gets County Position Harry Johnson, former member of the U. S. marine corps, today accepted the combined position of general deputy sheriff and jailer for Deschutes county, Sheriff Claude McCauley has announced. The former marine succeeds I. M. Wells, who resigned his posi tion with the county to enter busi ness in Salem. Johnson, who has resided at Madras and Redmond, served with the marines during both World Wars and recently re ceived a medical discharge be cause of back injuries suffered while on overseas duty. His wife will serve as matron and cook for the occupants of the : county jail, McCauley reported. I George Brooks, former jailer I and panitor, is now employed by ! the state liquor commission. The positdion of matron and cook had : been previously filled by Mrs. Brooks. SMITH IMPROVING It was reported from the Hahne- is feeling better. "He is apparently; local rink Saturday nignt, some past the critical stage," the Unit-lone opened her purse and stole a ed Press reported after calling the; wallet containing Sfi and some hospital, where Smith, Bend high j valuable papers, Melba Hoselton, school Instructor, is a patient. ot the Shady Nook auto court, re- - j ported to police today. She told 12 MEN KILLED Alamoeorrto. N. M.. April 2 HP) Twelve men of the crew of a iour-ene neo nomoer wen.- run--u ; when the plane crashed eight miles northeast of Alamogordo, : Colonel John W. warren, conv jmanding officer of the army air I field here, announced today. APRIL 2, 1945 British Battleship Joins in War King George V rides at anchor at units ot tne tsrmsn i-acuic tieei. ' Byrnes Resigns as Director; Fred M. Vinson Is Successor "I Think V-Day Is Not Far Distant," Says Chief of War Mobilization and Conversion , Washintrton. Arjril 2 (U.E) dieting that "V-E. day 1 not director of the office of war President Roosevelt, expressing: "heartfelt reirret," ac cepted the resignation and immediately nominated Fred M. Vinson, head of federal loan Vinson formerly was director of economic stabilization. He took over the loan job only a few weeks ago after Jesse II. Jones was ousted by the president. Byrnes had been mobilization director for a year and 10 months. He was charged with' coordinating all home - front phases of the war effort and settling disputes among gov ernment agencies. Blocks Itttclng Ho issued the disputed orders closing race tracks and imposing a midnight curfew on entertain ment places. He promised on Sat urday night these bans would be revoked on V-E day. Byrnes asked that his resigna tion become effective today. But the president requested- that he make it effective on the date that Vinson is confirmed. Byrnes agreed to stay In Washington un til his duties are transferred to Vinson and then will return to his home in Spartanburg, S. C, for a rest. An exchange of correspondence between Byrnes and President Roosevelt recalled that early as last June Byrnes had announced his desire not to remain in office to administer the reconversion program. After the election in No vember Byrnes again reminded the president of his desire to leave. The agreement then was that he would accept the war mo bilization directorship only until V-E day. Still Interested In addition to the exchange of correspondence, Byrnes author ized While House press secretary Jonathan Daniels to make the fol lowing statement for him: j "Though I could not see my way clear to accept the detailed task of reconversion for the peri od I know it will take, it does not lessen in any way my intensive interest in the prosecution of the war and the making of an endur ing peace. I hope I can make some contribution as a private citizen." After reminding the president in his letter of resignation of his previously expressed wishes to re sign, uyrncs sam: "I think V-E day Is not distant. far waii rt is stolen While she was skating at the I otlicers sne naa no suspecis. GENERAL CAPTURED London, April 2 IP The Swiss radio said today that U. S. Third army troops captured German General Von Schulenberg, Identl j fled as a relative of the former I German ambassador to Moscow. on Japs 4 5 a western Pacific American naval joinea American lurccs in we av Justice James F. Byrnes, pre fatt distant,'.' resigned today as mobilization and reconversion agencies, as Byrnes' successor. Air Forts Bomb Big Tokyo Plant Guam, April 2 (1H More than 200 B-29 Superfortresses started big fires, in the Nakajima-Musa-shlno aircraft engine plant In the outskirts of Tokyo Just before dawn today. A Tokyo broadcast acknowledg ed that fires raged out of control In the target area for more than an hour after the hour-long at tack. The giant bombers struck at low level at the sprawling plant, situated about 10 miles north west of the Imperial palace. With the Mitsubishi plant at Nagoya, which was hit last week, the fac tory produced about 75 per cent of the engines for Japanese army and navy planes. Tokyo claimed that 15 B-29's were shot down. (A Tokyo broadcast recorded by the FCC said the raiders drop ped time bombs in some sectors and they exploded 20 minutes to five hours later.) Deschutes Gets Rectograph To Record Legal Documents A massive machine designed to film paper, which Is distributed eliminate possible damage suits which result from inaccurately followed legal documents, proof reading and ragged nerves of courthouse typists has found sanctuary In the counly court room of the courthouse. The rectograph, a substantial appearing mass of sheet and stainless steel' metal, aluminum and fluorescent lighting equip- ment, costing approximately is xonay unuergomg me process of Installation under the supervision of R. W. Kerrigan of the Seattle office of the Haloid company of Rochester, N. Y. Completely eliminating any possible margin for error in ex act reproduction of documents, the rectocrranh will provide a fac - simile of all copy including seals If plumbing and electrical in and signatures. In one eontinu-istallation proceeds according to ous process, it automatically pho-1 plan, the rectograph will be In tographs, develops, washes and running order in several days, dries the prints. No dark room is Nell E. Terwllllgcr, recorder In required. The exposing chamber the county clerk's office, will op holds a 300-foot roll of negative I erate the machine. Weather Forecast Tonight and Tuesday slightly warmer west portion today anil cast portion Tuesday. . , NO. 100 British Units Head for Coast In New Move Holland Liberation Is Objective of Troops; Ruhr Foemen Pocketed Paris. April 2 (IP) British ar- mored divisions drove more than 15 miles beyond Muenster today and struck for Bremen and the Dutch North sea ports In a bid to knock out the nazi V-bomb bases and liberate Holland. Armored vanguards of the Brit ish Second and Canadian First armies were 74 miles southwest ot Bremen, Germany's second port, and about the same distance south of the Dutch seacoast. ... German resistance was broken all along the' broad British front and a swift dash to the coast that would complete the liberation ot Holland appeared well unde way. t Reach Muenster Official reports said the British and supporting American unita were in Muenster and 15 miles beyond at an undisclosed point. Berlin spokesmen placed the al lies 36 miles farther east on both sides of Bielefeld, 189 miles from Berlin, . ' Remnants of the German 25th army, possibly 50,000 strong, were racing eastward from the Dutch seacoast in disorderly flight to escape the British tank columns closing 'across their une joJ,, re- trear. Simultaneously, the American First and Ninth armies closed an armored ring around the Ruhr, and perhaps 150,000 cmck nazi troops were trapped In the Indus trial basin. At the center of the collapsed German battle screen, Lt. Gen. George S. patton's Third army tanks drove more than half-way across the reich to within 152 miles of Berlin. Blackout Lifted. Field Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's 21st army group headquarters lifted the security blackout on the British Second army today to reveal that the Britons were in and beyond the Westphalian capital of Muenster, 227 miles west of Berlin. Scottish and English veterans of El Alamein and Montgomery's march across North Africa were, out in front of the blazing tank drive that promised to clear the naz s from all Holland in a mauer of days and lay open the short road to Berlin. Cierman resistance was report ed melting away In the path of the Biitish tanks. The armor roae down die-hard German gunners in the streets of Muenster, while outriders swept east, northeast and southeast to points 100 miles or more beyond the Rhine. All of the Ruhr basin, Ger many's last and greatest military arsenal, was enveloped by the American First and Ninth armies and doughboys of the two strik ing forces were driving In swittly from the west, nort'?fljnd east to finish off the reivjtits of 1 German divisions caught In the 4,500 square mile pocket. in lots regulated by the number of copies desired. The size of copies produced may vary from one-half the original measure ment to twice the Initial size. The theory of the rectograph was first Invented In 1904, Kerrigan said, and released to the market in 1906. The first machines produced were chiefly of wooden composi tion. Space Allocated Tentative plans, as outlined by County Judge C. L. Allen consist of partitioning the county court room In half, assigning Arthur E. Hill, deputy collector of internal revenue, quarters in the other half and transferring county court proceedings to Hill s pres- : ent office on the second floor.