IJnlv of Or Illirarr Check Your fires V I IE BEND BUH Weather Forecast Scattered clouds today, tonight and Saturday. Not much tmMr ature change. From (he day the' Japs attacked Pearl Harbor, tirei have been a valuable jpot in U. S. armor. Be sure to check yours. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAI L Y NEWSPAPER Volume Llll THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1945 NO. 116 MM Yank Troopers Lunge Toward Island Capital Tokyo Reports Landing Attempt Is Made Near Naha; Fight Is Fierce Guam, April 20 P) American troops lunged to within three and a half miles north of Naha, capi tal of Okinawa, in the most power ful offensive of the Pacific war today. Radio Tokyo said other troops attempted to land on the south coast of Okinawa about eight miles southeast of Naha yester day from a 30-ship Invasion fleet, including 20 transports and sev eral battleships. Such a landing would deeply outflank Naha, a city of 65,000, and clamp a pincers on Its garri son of 60,000. Three army divisions possibly 45,000 men smashed deep bulges into both flanks of the Japanese line across southern Okinawa yesterday under cover of the greatest coordinated ship and ar tillery bombardment ever given American troops for the size of the target anywhere in the world. Nearing Capital Front reports said Americans now were less than 6,200 yards north of Naha and approaching Machinato airfield on the west coast and nearing . the northern end of Yonabaru airstrip on the east coast. A hill overlooking Shuri, two miles inland from Naha, was all but cleared in the center of the line. The town of Machinato, a mile north of the -airfield of the same name, was captured in the Initial phases of the offensive yes terday. Maj. Gen.- John R. Hodge, com mander qf the 24th army corps, said his forces had made "good gains" in the heart of the enemy's main line of resistance. Key ground had been won, he said. Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buck- ner, commander of the 10th army, said the offensive was going "just about as we expected." "'""Line Is Powerful . "The Japs have as well an or ganized line as I have ever heard of anywhere," Buckner said. "We all know that we still have to use ' a blow torch and corkscrews to get them out of their caves." Tokyo radio said the amphibi ous forces attempted to land on the southern coast at Chinen and Minatokawa, 4H to 5 miles south of Yonabaru, but were driven off. The enemy report described the American invasion force as com prising 20 transports, two to four battleships, one cruiser and five destroyers. Tokyo also claimed that Japa nese naval units had entered the Okinawa area and shelled two American-held airfields. Deschutes Ghest Of fer Rejected The Deschutes county war chest committee's offer of $500 to the Salvation Army is not satisfactory to the Oregon and southern Idaho division officers of that organiza tion, H. R. Edward, chairman of the local war chest unit, has been notified. The chest officers voted at a recent meeting to allocate S500 to the Salvation Army, with the provision that officers not conduct a drive for funds here this year. Lieutenant Colonel James Dee, divisional commander of the Sal vation Army, with headquarters in Portland, wrote the following letter to Edwards: Letter Quoted "We have just received a letter from Mrs. William Niskanen, sec retary 'of the county war chest committee, of which you are the chairman. Evidently the commit tee met and they offered "us $500. "This, however, is not satisfac tory to us. We have many friends in Deschutes county who have supported our work for many years and we would hardly feel justified In accepting such a small amount. "Therefore we feel it would be : better for you to eliminate the name of the Salvation Army from your coming fall campaign and we will take care of our own ap peal as in the past. This will eliminate confusion and will no doubt be more satisfactory to your committee." German Radio Stations Silent, England Reports London, April 20 iui Regular radio broadcasts virtually disap peared from the air waves today. The United Press listening post in London was unable to hear single German station at 12:30 pm. (DBST), when the German home service news and commen tary usually are broadcast. Last Birthday? St Adolf Hitler Adolf Hitler, the defeated dicta tor, passed his 56th birthday in his dying empire today, and there were no celebrations. There are many who believe that this will be Hitler's last birthday. Hitler Is Silent On 56th Birthday . London, April 20 UP Adolf Hit ler, the defeated dictator, passed his 56th and probably last, birth day today. There were no celebrations In his dying empire for .the most hunted man in history. The only victory salutes came from the guns of allied armies, closing in on him from east and west. : Berlin, where In Hitler's heyday the red flags with the black swas tikas flew and his storm troopers paraded, echoed with the artillery of the oncoming red army, report ed only nine miles away. The German radio, which once boomed Hitler's birthday speech es from Berlin, had only news of fresh defeats to offer, There was no Indication the fuehrer would make a . birthday broadcast, al though a Swiss report said 21 Gauleiters had asked Goebbels last week to persuade Hitler to speak for the sake of morale. ' In Mountains The same dispatch, quoting a Munich source, said Goebbels and Himmler had refused- to act on the matter. The fuehrer was believed to be at his mountain retreat at Berch tesgaden, planning a "twilight of the gods" finale to his career of conquest. Some recent reports have suggested Hitler still was in Berlin, but few believed he would remain that close to the red army if he could help it. A Zurich dispatch, quoting a German diplomat who supposedly left Berlin last week, said the reich capital had been stripped for its capture. According to the re port, all na.i organizations and government offices had been evac uated to the Bavarian redoubt, where Hitler plans his last stand. The dispatch said anything that might identify nazi party mem bers uniforms, emblems, and even books and pictures of Hitler had been destroyed. Redmond Soldier To Be on Radio "Hawaii Calls," a program broadcast from the distant Ha waiian islands, tomorrow will in terview a Redmond soldier, Wil liam V. Hogan, son of Mr. and Mrs. William" Hogan, a telegram received today by The Bulletin from Honolulu states. The interview will be broadcast over KBND Saturday at 3:30 p.m. "Parents of the soldier have been notified and will be listening in. Dorothy Scharff, an Oregon girl serving with the Women Marines, will also be Interviewed. Miss Scharff, who has visited Bend on various occasions, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Scharff, of Amity. L . ii President Truman's Day Starts Very Early; Crowds Gather on Avenue to See New Chief By Mcrrlman Smith , (United rrew stir wrre.por.aent) ing to .work about 300 yards Washington, April 20 HP-Presl- from Blair House to the White dent Truman's favorite thne of House. He says howdy-do to peo day is when the street cars are i pie along the short route, walking just beginning to run, the birds j constantly at a rapid clip. The are after their first worms and most everybody in the city is still asleep. His usual rising time is 6:30 o'clock in the morning. He shuf fles around in his pajamas and bedroom slippers for a while, gets dressed and sits down to break fast about seven. , ! Breakfast starts with fruit j juice then a big bowl of cerea - usually oatmeal topped off with toast and milk :. According to his staff, he is not much of a coffee j drinker. After breakfast, he reads four or five metropolitan newspapers. He's In his office by 8.30 a. m. U.S. fighters GetBeachhead On Moro Gulf Mackmen Unopposed In March Across Island; Yanks Near Davao Port By Don Caswell (United PreM War Correspondent) . Manila, April 20 IIP American troops thrust almost unopposed across Mindanao to within 80 miles of the big port of Davao today. , The'drve was movkig nearly a mile an hour and already had secured an approximate 400- sauare mile beachhead on the eastern shore of Moro gulf. '.At. the same time other U. S. troops occupied without opposi tion Balabac island, south of American-controlled Palawan and only 45 miles from the northern tip of Borneo. Lt. Gen. Robert L. Eichelber gers eighth army troops met only occasional sniper fire as they pushed south along the coast and inland on Mindanao, southern most and last major island in the Philippines not controlled by the Americans. New. Hops Made In a series of shore-to-shore hops from the original landing beachhead, assault forces pushed 15 miles southward to capture the towns of Cotabato and Tamontaka on the north and south shores of the Mindanao river. The river positions were quick ly consolidated and under a heavy air cover the troops drove 22 miles inland on both sides of the river to the road junction of Lomopog. . - , ' Gen. Douglas MacArthur' an nounped that the northern beachv head at Malabang was being rap idly expanded and that its air field, built by the Americans be fore the war, already was In op eratlon. March Unopposed ' While the advance through the heart of Mindanao was virtually unopposed, American troops were meeting continued fierce resis- tance in northern Luzon around the enemy citadel of Baguio. The Japanese attempted to break the siege arc northwest of Baguio Tuesday in a tank-supported counter-attack. But the as sault, which may have been the final enemy offensive attempt at Baguio, was repulsed and all the tanks destroyed. The number of tanks used by the Japanese was not disclosed. Over 20 Men Die In Plane Crash , Sweetwater, Tex., April 20 IP) Between 20 and 25 passengers aboard a twin-engine army trans port plane were killed today when it crashed and burned three miles south of here. Army officials refused at first to release the number of men aboard the plane until an accurate check of the bodies could be made, but local undertakers said that "more than 20 bodies" were in Sweetwater funeral parlors. The plane, based at Midland army air field, was en route to a New Jersey destination when it crashed shortly after 6:30 a. m. Capt. Schumacher was one of the first to arrive at the scene of the crash, about three-fourth of a mile east of the San Angclo highway, and said that all of the occupants were dead by the time he arrived. Deputy fire chief Roy Stephen son of Avenger field's department said the men "had no chance whatever" to escape. Just now Truman Is walk-1 new president likes people very much and is flattered when some of them want to shake his hand. That was all right when he was not president, but he will find now that he has less and less time to be Harry S. Truman and must devote almost every waking hour to being the president of the ' United States and commander-in-j chief of the armed forces. 1 The presidents daily twomin- ute walk from the Blair house to the executive offices started at fj36 aih,,od5yA cfowd ' ")nTe than 500 lined street car loading i piatiorms on Pennsylvania ave-1 nue as Truman appeared. R eels Hitler's Parly ;! Shrine Is Taken On Birthday Conquering Yanks Head For Adolf's Retreat in Mountains of Bavaria Pnrls. Anrll 20 UP The Amer ican Seventh army captured the ruined nazi shrine city of Nuern berg today and struck south for Munich to open the battle for Hit ler's last retreat In the Bavarian. Alps. i All organized resistance ended in Nuernberg after a savage, house-to-house battle that front dispatches said had gutted the once-beautiful medieval city. The last . survivors of a nazi eiite guard corps surrendered to the Americans inside the old wall ed city in the center of Nuernberg late this afternoon Ironically on the 56th birthday of the fuehrer who had ordered his party shrinl? defended to the death. . i IS Cities Fall It was the 15th city of the reich and the third big nazi stronghold to fall to the rampaging American armies in the past 24 hours. Halle and Leipzig were taken by the U. S. First army yesterday after a prolonged fight that outdid in fury even the bloody battle fol Nuernberg. Nuernbe Armored vanguards of the Sew ,. x "''. , y ' : ' v y 1 enth army were racing 25 rmlrlTj ?; TUunjeP ef Batla Heard, on Jaoi' le Shima i? and more bevonri rvuernbere' even befoije the last enemy resistance ended there. They struck within 70 miles or less of Munich, cradle of the nazi party and northern outpost of the Bavarian redoubt where Hitler had boasted his fol lowers would continue the fight even if all else In Germany fell. The Seventh army triumph highlighted a day of unspectacu lar but strategically important gains scored by the allied armies against by-passed German strong holds up and down the western front. British. on Move In the north, Canadian First army troops completed the libera tion of northeastern Holland and wheeled northeast and west for the naval base of Emden and the V-bomb coast of western Holland. British Second army forces seal ed off all but one slim escape route for the Germans in the burning port of Bremen, rammed an armored spearhead within three miles or less south of Ham burg, and battled for a crossing of the Elbe fewer than 120 miles from Berlin. U. S. Ninth army troops on the British right flank deepened their Elbe river bridgehead southeast of Magdeburg against fierce op position and dispersed a strong nazi counterattack near the American-British hinge after the enemy had made some initial gains. Nazi Pilot Lands On U. S. Airstrip With Third Armv. Germany. April 20 (Ui A German fighter plane buzzed an American air strip in Germany yesterday and wagged his wings in greeting. The amazed tower control fired a red flare and ordered all guns to fire. As they opened up, the plane zipped around the field and calmly landed. The German officer nilot stepped out and was captured. The crowd annlaudod. (he nresl. dent grinned and waved and then walked briskly across the street with ftla Dn,n, 1 ...... .... ,tl n,-lvliL. i-aL,,ii. Although Truman likes to walk, he'll probably do most of i his walking In the White House grounds after another week or so. When he moves into the White House, his strolls to work will be only through the corridors of the executive mansion and not down Pennsylvania avenue. He works at a maehlneeun pace during the mnrnlno Whon ! an appointment is scheduled foribers. and Bill, who is in the navy 11:35 and is supposed to end at I air corps, is the son of Mr. and 11:45, it ends at 11:45 This is In Mrs John Currie contrast to . the late President I Two other Bend boys, Ted Roosevelt who etxended the time lls,ed on nls appointment sehed ule because of his habit of "bull Ing" with his callers once business was out of the way. i m it rg Falls to American W 1 .:S a jM VIW w i v ' (NBA Tehpholol . The late Ernie Pyle. famous Sorlpps-Howard- war correspondent killed In action on island of le, near Okinawa, Is pictured here with "That airl" his seldom photographed wife, Mrs. Oeraldlne Pyle, In library of their Albu querque, N. M., home Just before he left for the Pacific. With the couple Is .their pet Shetland sheep dog, .,iV; t Cheetah. Life photo by Bob Landry. Ernie Pyle Buried on n i r i j - oesiae ooiaiers f . . As Coffin Lowered; Doughboys Pay Tribute By Mac R. Johnson . . (United PreM War Correspondent) Okinawa, April 20 (U.E) Ernie Pyle was buried on le Shima this morning beside some of the doughboys he glorified. As a chaDlain read a brief burial service and spoke the final words, a squad of riflemen flag-draped cottin was lowered Even as the final services of the battle the tiny Hoosier crescendo on nearby Okinawa fighting and dying in a drive to Plans Take Shape Plans are rapidly taking shape for the south Central Oregon music competition festival, to be held in Bend on Friday, April 27, with high school units from four counties taking part, It was an nounced today by C. Dale Robbins, In general charge of arrange ments. The competition will be open to the public, and Robbins Is confident that music lovers of Central Oregon will have a real treat. The feature of the festival will! bo the program in the high school gymnasium, at 7:30 p.m. on the I day of competition. Banrls from i Prineville, Redmond, Klamath I Falls and Bend will participate. Each band is to play one quick step march and a longer, more serious number. Also taking part will be five choirs, two of them from Bend. Each choir is to sing two or three numbers. Full Numlier Due The Klamath Falls orchestra is to play a full orchestra number and one string number. On Friday afternoon, at 2:30 p.m. in the Episcopal parish hall, solos will be Judged. There will be eight instrument solos, of various kinds, and eight or ten vocal solos. Ratings will bo given by three national Judges at the end of each program. ' Neighbors Meet In Mail Line on . . AdmirnltV Two boys who lived next door to each other in Bend, Jim Cham bers and Bill Currle, met recently by chance in the distant Admiral ty islands, while waiting in line for mail, local relatives have learned. Jim, a navy torpedomnn, is the Bnn nf Mr nnrl Mm Parv C.httm- Hughes and Don Graham, are In the Admiralties, and, according to word received here, there Is going to be a real "Bend party" in the far Pacific very soon now. ft ft This Was Last Trip Home for Ernie Island u- orified ne . .- fired a volley of shots and the into the ground. were being held, the thunder hated but endured rose to a where other doughboys were attain the enemy's capital city. On le itself, soldiers were struggling to root the Japs from positions on Mount Iegu sugu. The lovable little war corre spondent, killed by Jap machine gun bullets Wednesday, was ac corded a military funeral when It was discovered he was a seaman first class in world war I. That, and not the fighting he did with his typewriter in tills war was decided upon as the official reason he was entitled to be hurled with "appropriate" military honors. Loss In Mourned Here in the Ryukyu Islands, as on every American fighting front, the G. I.'s still mourned the loss of the man who told their story better than anyone else. Ernie was Just getting acquaint ed with the men on le Shima, when he was killed. But they all had read his columns through the war, and each man felt he was a very personal friend of Pyle, be- cause that was the way his col umns affected readers. An ammunition bearer in the flOth division, Pvt. Edwin L. Hill, Kansas City, Kans., put down his load, shook his head and said, "I read his columns and he knew what he was talking about. His death is a great loss to the com mon soldier." Fish Bill Valid, Attorney Rules Salem, Ore., April 20 mi The compromise "fish bill" of the re cent legislative session, which closes a number of coastal streams to commercial fishing, is both constitutional and valid, Attornej' General George Neuner has ruled. The opinion was for M. T. Hoy, muster fish warden of the stiife fish commission. BULLETIN Paris, April 20 tP Gen. Dwlght D. Eisenhower said to day In an order of the day that the "ragged reiiinanU of Hit ler's armies nf the west now are tottering on the threshhold of defeat." Elsenhower's order of the day was addressed to "every mem ber of the allied expeditionary force" on the conclusion of the battle of the Ruhr, where more than 300,000 German troops were trapped and eliminated as a fighting force. ft . ft Til 1 Students Elect icers Lee Relnhart, football letterman and member of the school's sym posium team, today was elected president of the Bend high school associated students for the year 1945-46, at an election in which students registered in advance, then cast their ballots In "pre cincts." Downtown Bend saw little of the pre-election campaign this season, but high school of ficials say, lt was one of the most outstanding ever conducted here. "Campaign speeches this year were better and generally more serious this year , a school ol ficial said, in lauding the manner the students conducted their cam paign. .Jack Irvine Named Jack Irvine was elected vice- president at today's election, in a race with Don McCauley that was so close a recount was necessary. Jackie Hahn was named secretary and Maureen Lyons, paymaster, with Jackie Chute to serve as treasurer In the coming year. Dale Hall was named yell leader. A student body constitution am endment was also voted on, giv ing the eighth grade representa tion on the student council. The new officers will be Install ed at the last assembly of the school year, on May 21. Bill Plath is head of the student body at present, taking over when Phil Brogan was recently called to ac tive duty with the army air corps. PRINCESS DIES London, April 20 iui A 'corre spondent of the Daily Telegraph reported today that Princess Ma- I falda, 42, daughter of King Victor Emmanuel, of Italy, died at the Infamous prison camp at Buchen wald, Germany, of gangrene re sulting from an arm wound suf fered in a bomb ridd last August. New Off Loyal Party Opposition Liked By President Harry S. Truman By I.yle C. Wilson (controversial matters. That does (Uniicii I'rew stutr corrmnomient) not mean, however, that we're Washington, April 20 tri , going all the way with this man. There seems to be no doubt today I "We'll be with him when he's that President Truman has gotten! right and against him when he's off to a great start with congress. wrong. Issues will come up when Republicans are saying just as we'll meet him head-on. We'll nice things about him as the, do the Job the minority ought to democrats are. One Sen. C. Way-! do." land Brooks, R., III. went so far I That will be strictly all right as to make a prediction of future with Harry S. Truman, late of the relations between the legislative U. S. Senate. He told a group of and executive branches: republican senators who called at "It'g going to be something I the White House with pledges of we haven't seen before, in your j support on Wednesday that he lifetime or mine." believed thoroughly In the two- That, of course, remains to be party system and recognized the seen. No honeymoon ever lasted responsibilities of a "loyal op- torever, ana neuner Mr. Truman ! nor tne republicans in congress are forgetting that It's still a two party system. As Senate republican whip Ken neth S. Wherry, R Neb., put it: "We have done what we ought to do pledge our help with non- Beirloifi) ft Moscow Says Soviet, Yank Forces Meet Battle for Capital Is At Decisive Stage as . Allies Surge to East London, April 20 (in Russian troops storming the last barriers before Berlin broke Into a village seven miles east of the capital today, the nazls reported, and a Moscow dispatch said U. S. Third aurny and soviet patrols probably had met in the Dresden sector. "The battle for Berlin has reach ed the decisive stage," German broadcasters said repeatedly dur ing the day In describing the struggle at the gates of the burn ing and shell-swept city. The left wing of an Intensely concentrated mass of soviet tanks and men charging straight in against Berlin was reported by the Germans to nave pusnea into the streets of Hangelsbcrg, on the Frankfurt highway seven miles short of the city limits. Contact Probable A Moscow dispatch said the out riders of the Russian and Ameri can armies probably had made their first contact around Dresden. Relayed to Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third army front,- a high-ranklnff Source1 denied ; that any such meeting had taken place, "unless," he added jokingly, "some of our troops deserted us." But the nazls were paying most . of their attention to the Berlin front, where their radio commen tators said the Russians had driv en Into the capital's "defense zone proper." The German high command, ac knowledging widespread reverses in the fortifications in front of Berlin, said frankly that "the situation has" deteriorated." Berlin Is Objective Other nazi broadcasts reported soviet tanks and Infantry were moving directly against Berlin be tween Muencheberg and wrlezen. Their center had reached Straus Imrg, nine miles from the capital, and the lower wing was at Han gelsberg, seven miles from Ber lin. Moscow dispatches, following up the first soviet high command confirmation of the showdown of fensive on a broad Berlin front, reported that the Russians had broken across the Spree river and were closing against Dresden. It was in that region that, ac cording to a Moscow dispatch, out riders of Lt. Gen. George S. Pat ton's U. S. Third army and Mar shal Ivan S. Koncv's First Ukrain ian army, probably have met. Kcds Give Reports The first report of a possible Junction of the American and Russian forces came from Mos cow, united Press correspondent Henry Shapiro reported from the soviet capital that Russian forces, after breakin;; through the Spree river defense line, were thrusting on toward a Junction with United States Third army forces advanc ing on Dresden. "In the Dresden sector, motor ized soviet patrols probably al ready have contacted the scouts of Lt. Gen. George S. Pat ton," Sha piro reported. position.' But Mr. Truman's aim will be to seek areas of agreement to avoid situations in which White House and congress get entrench ed on opposite sides of an Issue as sometimes happened t .the Roosevelt administratis Army