THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. OREGOR, VEDNE5PAY. AEftIL 1 1 .19,45 PAGE tHftlE Full Speed Ahead Order Given To Allied Armies Now Racing For Berlin On Broadened Front By Ralph Heinzen .. (United- Prot War Corraixmdcntt The final great concerted offensive in the west with seven allied armies pushing aside the last disconnected German re sistance carried British and American forces to within less tnan iuo miles ot Berlin today at the nearest point. , Vienna fell to the red armies today, a free Austrian broad cast said as the last three nazi-held districts of the Austrian capital, across the Danube from the heart of the city, were cleared. The victory opens the back door to both Germany through the Danube valley, and Hitler's "Berchtesgaden re- uuuuu Sufficient gasoline, ammunition and supplies to carry the Hiiiuu armies over me last lUUy miles to Berlin and the 150 or so miles to make a junction with the red armies has now been accumulated. It was the necessity to allow supplies to eaten up with the armor which forced the American columns into comparative inaction the past few days. But the "full speed ahead" order has been given and gains have averaged 25 miles a day Resistance Collapses Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said that German resistance in the west had collapsed and warned populations of Bremen and Ham burg that destruction of those ports will only increase their hard ships. His proclamation coincided with a stiffening or die-hard re sistance inside of Bremen where strong forces of mixed German troops, sparked by the SS detach ments and .backed by German na val units and forces in the port, battled to hold Bremen as other Germans still hold Dunkirk, St. Nazaire, Lorient and other im portant ports along the French coast. Bremen still was burning from British artillery shelling and the main British effort appeared to have1 swung past Bremen to wards Hamburg and Luebeck. On the central front, four Amer ican armies, the Ninth, First, Third and Seventh, were engaged in a concerted shoulder-to-shoulder drive through a 180-mile wide hole they pounded into the last German positions from Hannover to Crallsheim. Brunswick now was behind the American 9th army front which was near the Elbe riv er loop at Magdebourg. The First army, moving on from captured Nordhausen had Hallo as its next objective. Canucks Active At the northern end of the front, the Canadian First army, after trapping an estimated 150, 000 enemy forces in the lowlands by their capture of Zolle and Meppel, moved on the last Ger man corridor at Groningen.- De prived of all direct railway out lets, the enemy Tiad only a cause way across the Zuider Zee. Even that escape route would be cut if Groningen fell. Both wings of the enemy front in Italy curled back as the Ameri can Fifth army on the Ligurian coast swept on towards the naval base of La Spezia after the fall of Massa. These American troops op erated in difficult terrain. The whole country is mountainous with only a narrow flat coastal shelf. On the Adriatic coast, the Eighth British army gained two and a half miles through three Po vauey towns. 1 . Luzon Jans Licked In the Pacific, the last organized Japanese resistance in southern Luzon was crushed and Gen. Douglas MacArthur announced its im.mlnent liberation. His forces. also seized the whole Sulu archi pelago which provides, an easy stepping stone towards Borneo .nd its oil and mineral wealth. On Okinawa, the enemy held his cave and pillbox positions fanatically on the Naha front and American forces have brought up naval guns, marine artillery and mor tars to support the 24 army corps in its costly drive the last four miles towards Naha. Marines who took the valuable west-coast anchorage of Unten harbor pressed the enemy back to the tips of Okinawa island in the north and Motoou peninsula in the west, in twin drives which continued to meet only light re- sistance. All the Japanese effort on Okinawa appears centered, in the 50 square miles of the south ern tip. Japs Face Problem Continued American progress on Okinawa today, coupled with last week's denunciation of the Russia-Japanese neutrality pact and the severe enemy losses In' the pitched aero-naval battle of the Ryukyus, posed a serious question for the new 'Japanese government. The cabinet must de cide within a few days whether it will defend the homeland against American invasion by withdrawing seasoned troops from Manchuria or will strength en the continental forces holding Manchuria and Korea by with drawing divisions from the slim home defense force. The new cabinet of Admiral Baron Kantaro Suzuki must gam ble. The American menace is im mediate; Russia's denunciation brings the pact to an end only next year. But military necessity demands that Japan build up both her home island and her north China defenses immediately. Su zuki could use the hundreds of thousands of Japanese troops by- passed and isolated on Pacific is land. He cannot abandon terrain in the far-fung Malay and Indo China and south China conquests wunout nsKing seeing all Japa. nese gains wiped out. Yet the in- raw. first robto will MflrJxxjK you to start pocking mm the ycuogstefi htott$f snow-wets, and grt thak lighter Spring tfj3ngBMftdj to wear. Help oatohelpyott by "shopping rty Mine Victim SSi 2.J.J.. (NBA Telephoto) His foot blown oft by a Jap land mine, an American infantryman lie: on his stretcher on Philippine Is land of Cebu. The wounded soldlet was in first wave to land. Signal Corps photo. direct menace of Russia's, action is real. Throughout the war with Ger many, the Russian command has kept 1,000,000 men in the Red Banner far eastern army even after withdrawing many divisions which turned the tide of battle and perhaps of this whole war at Stal ingrad in January, 1943. This Red Banner army has two able commanders, Generals Stern and Guryev. Stern is old but Guryev is one of the most able of the young generals. It was Guryev who whipped the Japanese in the Khalka valley border battles of outer Mongolia. Cloverdale Cloverdale, April 11 (Special) Mr. and Mrs. L. D. McDanielV Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hammack and Lee Goodrich were blood don ers on Tuesday, going to Portland on the bus sponsored by Anthony Roach of Sisters. Lee Goodrich stayed over and visited relatives in Portland and returned home Weddnesday. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Ridge way of Deschutes spent Saturday evening at the hame of Mr. and Mrs. George Coombs. Mrs. Lee Goodrich was hostess to the Redmond Arema club on Tuesday evening at her home. Nine members Were present at the meeting. . ' ' The first meeting In their new office building was held last Mon day night by the board of directors of the Squaw Creek Irrigation dis trict. Those present for the meet ing other than the board ' were Leslie Wills, Joe Howard, George Coombs, Earl Robinson, E. W. Poffenbarger and George Brews ter. . George Billlngsley returned Wednesday from Portland and Salem where he had spent several days transacting business. Mrs. Ray Ijd Bland and her daughter, Suzanne, arrived home Tuesday from, Seattle where they had spent the weekend visiting Ray LeBlanc. ' Plainview Grange honored Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Young Saturday night at a silver wedding anni versary party. About 75 people were in attendance and the sup per was in charge of Mi's. Robert Thompson. A large mirror was presented by members of the grange to Mr. and Mrs. Young and an appropriate program fol lowed by dancing completed the evening entertainment. Mr. and Mrs. W. Boyd Simmons have received word from their daughter, Mrs. James Alcorn, for merly Corporal Margaret Sim' mons that she is soon leaving France for the United States and will arrive in Central Oregon be fore long. Both Mrs. Alcorn and her husband Major Alcorn have been serving in the 9th bombard ment division somewhere in France, They both served In the same unit in England for 14 months before going to France. It is two and a half years since Mrs.' Alcorn has been home. Mrs. S. L. Hall and Mrs. R. L. Young were hostesses Wednesday to the Home Economics club. The meeting was held at the com. munity hall and Easter decora' tions were carried out. It was decided by the club to have their annual community dinner on April 22nd. 2 City Officials Back From Salem Mayor A. T. Niebergall and George Simerville, city recorder, returned yesterday evening from Salem where they attended a ci vilian defense coordinators meet ing, held Monday in the capitol building. Information discussed at the meeting will be relayed to the heads of various defense services, Simerville said. While in Port land en route to Bend, the mayor and city recorder visited Seaton Smith, high school instructor, at' the Hahnemann hospital. 1 FORD MOTOR COMPANY Announces the Appointment of HALBR00K MOTORS 1 Bond and Minnesota Phone 680 , as Authorized FORD DEALER in Bend v '( f Buy National War Bonds Now! in,,",?;ffcr- ing lUl .,, -nt to w'P ' . Crvtce It Is a genuine pleasure to welcome this new dealer ship to the nation-wide family of Ford dealers. This newest member of the Ford dealer organization is well equipped to serve the Ford owners of this com munity, and to offer Ford Protective Service which automatically provides your car with expert service attention every thirty days. This periodic Ford service will add immeasurably to the life and smooth operation of your present car. It is friendly, efficient and economical. Only Authorized Ford Dealers offer it. The Ford' Motor Company has built, through tha years, more than 30,000,000 cars and trucks. Today, millions of them are still serving the vital transportation needs of the country. One reason is the well-known stamina and reliability which have been built into every Ford product Equally important is the universally excellent service provided by Authorized Ford Dealers. .... YW ;..:n to come " " we do ov ..-you'u" STRADIVARI US Tht world's molt outstanding violins were madt by Antonio Stradivari (1644-1737) of Cremona, Italy. Violinists novo waited years to own on of his instruments famed for their beauty of design and sweetness ond richness of tone. One always stands out K !P GUARANTIED tt fk XZZlJ' A ill iatisitino H V4 1 t'iD?yBs?fe?S nhWl il ItfeWilBMIffiP I KEEP ASKING FOR IT V!i BY NAME,.. LJlSLh VI & r.f P,m., rM TL. 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