Unlv of Or fUiMry 3 N " . Society Notices The deadline for society news on days of publication, Tuesday, Thurs day and Saturdays, is 10 a. m. Volume Llll R taw elle eace First Session Will Be Brief; Shadow Seen By Lyle C. Wilson (United Press Buff Correspondent) War Memorial Opera House, San Francisco, April 25 HPi Rep resentatives of 46 nations united in war against the axis meet here in plenary session at 4:30 p. m. PWT today, determined to make the post-war world safe for peace loving peoples. The objective is the same at which the world shot after in 1918 and missed. The delegates gathered here on the shore of the Pacific do not in tend that the world shall miss again. They meet this time with war still raging. Foreign Minister Anthony Eden of Great Britain arrived by plane early today, completing the list of prominent personages present for the important conference. Day Is Clear A beautiful, sunny California day furnished a favorable augury for the opening of the conference and greeted the hundreds of dele gates as they awoke on this fate ful day which may mark the open ing of a new chapter in world his tory a chapter of international peace. The hundreds of delegates, ex perts and aides are as mixed a group as ever Is likely to gather. Almost all the world's languages are spoken here today. There are men from the desert, men and women from great cities, spokes men of poor nations and spokes men of the rich. But they have much in common. They know that men of anti-axis armed forces are being killed or wounded as they sit down together and talk today. To Be Brief They call this the United Na tions Conference on International Organization. The first session will be brief. It takes place under the shadow of a stubborn Big Three dispute over the status of the Russian-sponsored provision al government of Poland. Secretary of State Edward R. Stettlnius Jr., chief of the Amer ican delegation, will open today's session and Introduce President Truman who will broadcast a 10 minute opening address from Washington. Local officials win deliver messages of welcome. Stettlnius will speak again and the opening session will end. It is 23 years since the United States was host to a great inter IContlnued on Page 51 Wl'i ,111' IssJWXa. J.t&ta Lssssssssssasssssss-T?: .4 f 11 IsLsssssl if IflilV- -flillr ' ,.....,,..;, f M -m n r mtnr- lit; Truman Churchill Stalin - , Chiang ; P TME BENB it aates M AS W Surprise Meeting Held By Big tour Delegates, Olltlnnk War Memorial Opera House San Francisco, April 25 MJ J VUllvViV (U.E) The "Big Pour" sponsoring powers convened a surprise meeting among themselves today a few hours before the United Nations conference for international organization was to begin its task of safeguarding world peace. The first plenary session meets at 4 :30 p.m., PWT, in a spirit of determination to prevent another world war. The delegates will be addressed in today's brief session by Presi dent Truman, speaking from Washington. In the Fairmount hotel office of Secretary of State Ed Fire Destroys Prineville Plant Prineville, Ore., April 25 IP Central Oregonians today were licking their chops at the thought of thousands of pounds of fresh meat burned to more than a crisp In a fire that destroyed the plant of the Prineville Packing Co. The plant only one serving Crook, Jefferson and Deschutes counties burned while two fire trucks from Prineville dashed back and fourth over the two miles to Prineville for water, which was not available in the dry irrigation ditches near by. Only water with which to 'fight the fire was that in the fire trucks' tank, which had to be replenished during the relays to Prineville hydrants. Iliuiiiltlillllllliuillllllillilillllliilliliiiitiniiitiiiiilllllilltiilillilllllliimilllll BULLETINS London, April 23 IP The royal air force wrecked Adolf Hitler's country house near Berchtesgaden today with a di rect hit by a six-ton earthquake bomb. It seemed certain that nobody in the house could have sur vived, but there was no assur ance that Hitler was there. The German radio has insisted for three days that he Is leading the defense of Berlin. (Br United Press) A Mutunl network broadcast from Stockholm said today that Swedish newspapermen In Ber lin expected the city to fall to the red army within 48 hours. FIHE HITS QUARTERS Lisbon, April 25 U"i A fire of undetermined origin swept the German legation quarters here today. CENTRAL OREGON'S THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 25, 1945 to id ward K. Stettlnius, Jr., the "Big Four" conferees met for 90 minutes. The others were F o r e i g n Minister Anthony Eden, of Great Britain, For eign Commissar V. M. Molo tov, of the Soviet Union, and Foreign Minister T. V. Soong, of China. Molotov Leaves Molotov was the first to leave. He departed while state depart ment press attaches were trying to arrange a group picture of the "Big Four." The photographers were barred. , None of the conferees would discuss their meeting other than to say that it was "to complete ar rangements for the conference" convening a few hours later in the War Memorial opera house. Soong replied "assume nothing," to an inquiry whether it might be assumed that the conferees had discussed the Polish question. FBI agents mingled with the 100 reporters and photographers outside the conference suite. So viet Union police sat outside the hotel in a large black limousine. Ruling on Punch Boards Pending Municipal court action in the cases of William Baer and Earl Wood, proprietors of men's reerea- tion centers on tsona street, who; Berchtesgaden with six-ton earth were accused of operating punch quake bombs today, t boards without a license, was held in abeyance today pending the out come of a conference this after noon between District Attorney A. J. Moore and City Manager C. G. Reiter. Both Baer and Wood plead ed not guilty to the charges, and contested the legality of a city ordinance calling for the licens ing. District Attorney Moore said that a 1939 decision of the at- torney general hold that the punch boards are a lottery, and are! therefore Illegal. He pointed out ! that the city, therefore, would be An official announcement said guilty of entering into a con-1 Hitler's house, SS elite guard bar spiracy with the board operators: racks on the grounds, and his by granting them licenses. n n u ft l) jjpp0n jfofjjo Very Gloomy (My United Tress) American troops broke through Japanese defenses on southern Okinawa today to seize an im portant hill feature north of Naha, the capital, while marines oceu pied three more nearby islands. Radio Tokyo meanwhile ad mittdd "nothing seoms possible now to stop extermination of the Japanese nation. The broadcast disclosed that American Superfortresses had de stroyed 770,000 homes, making 3,130,000 homeless at Tokyo, Osa ka, Kobe, and Nagoya. Crewmen of Superfortresses which bombed the huge Itachi air craft plant, 14 miles west of To kyo, yesterday reported they "blew the factory all to hell. Fighters Downed During the attack the Amori cans shot down 13 Japanese fight ers and probably destroyed 13 others. Four Superfortresses were missing. The breakthrough on southern Okinawa ended a six-day dead lock. A terrific naval bombard ment blasted a path for the Sev enth army troops who battled across hilly terrain to reach the new position west of Ishin vil lage. (Continued on Page 6) Hitler's London, April 25 HP) British Lancaster heavy bombers escort ed by American fighter pianos, attacked Adolf Hitler's Bavarian i rplrpat hirh in thr Alns npar The air ministry announced the first air attack of the war on Hitler's house In the Berchtes gaden area. Big forces of American heavy bombers ranged over the nazis' "national redoubt" In the Alps to day before the British heavies swept In to strike heavily at Hit ler's house. American Mustang pilots es corting the Lancasters over the Hitler hideout said the nazis Talk threw up an intense barrage ofjed out, however, that such a anti-aircraft fire. mountain refuge of Kehlstein, BUL: DAILY NEWSPAPER j: Berlin 1 Twr ft ft j ft pi i rv i laing Tank Columns Defeat Nazis Americans Are Heading For Gateway to Retreat In Bavarian Mountains Paris, April 25 (111 Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's American Third army raced for the Austrian border and the Salzach valley gate to Berchtesgaden today, stampeding thousands of crack nazi troops 80 -odd miles from Adolf Hitler's Bavarian death roost. Field dispatches said the Ger mans were breaking Into a con fused and disorderly rout before the Third army drive, falling oacK 30 miles and more a day over the last approaches to the Bavarian redoubt. Patton's men officially were re ported 30 miles from the Austrian border, 52 miles from the en trance to the Salzach valley and fewer than 90 miles due north of Berchtesgaden late last night. Opposition Is Light But his rough-riding tanks col umns were meeting little or no opposition all along their 100-mile front, and the speed of their ad vance indicated they might be 30 miles closer to their goal before nirhtfall. Patton's vanguards were fewer tiin 120 miles from' ret! . army 'forces pounding' along,. the'' southJ banK tor tne Damme aoout nu miles northeast of Berchtesgaden More than 19,000 hand-picked nazi elite guards were captured by the Third army yesterday and thousands more were being over run ana surrounaea Dy me Miner- jeans' forward tank columns. ; At the center of their line, Pat ton's men were storming the Danublan fortress of Regensburg, while their western wing rammed down within 52 miles of Munich, capital of Bavaria -and the birth place of nazism. On Patton's southwestern flank, Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's American Seventh army poured a flood of men and armor through seven bridgeheads across the Dan ube, with their vanguards oarciy 40 miles northwest of Munich. French First army forces far ther to the southwest were rolling eastward along the German-Swiss frontier around the shores oi Lake Constance and were rapidly clearing out thousands of trapped Germans in three pocKets Deiiina their lines. Far to the north, the American First and Ninth armies deployed along the Elbe and Mulde rivers west and southwest of Berlin, awaiting an imminent juncture with the red army. GETS MEAT WITH GUN Bellevile. III.. April 25 Ul'i Clarence Wessel, proprietor of a hutcher shoo, comolained to nonce a woman entered his store, flashed a gun and demanded a four-pound roast. When ho handed her the meat,, he said, she threw $2 and a handful of red points on the counter and fled. FIRE DESTROYS MILL Eugene, Ore., April 25 un Fire destroyed the Austra Lumber company sawmill, in the south west corner of Lane county, Mon day night. Only the loading plat form, ramps and carrier were saved. tiougn ti Bavarian Home five miles from the house, were attacked. Separate forces of Lancasters carried out the attacks between 9 and 10 a. m. today (3 and 4 a. m. EWTl. Two of the Lancasters are missing. The first announcement gave no hint of the effectiveness of the attack. Significantly, however, It said the bombers attacked spe cific targets, and the practice heretofore has been to identify such pinpointed objectives when the attack is successful. Whether Hitler was in his mountain hideout was uncertain. The nazi radio says he is in Ber lin personally directing the de fense of the city. Observers point claim mieht be nronaganda de signed to help the morale of the Berlin garrison. First reports did not specify the size of the British squadrons British Chief Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden of Great Britain arrived in San Francisco by plane early to day, to represent his government in the historic Bay city conference. RSWSltSSaSSWSSISBBMBBtMRaBBBflBESSSBISBBS . War Scribe Flies Over Berlin, Finds Nazi Capital in Flames Lowell Thomas Views Bombardment By Reds, And Sees Answering Flashes of Hitler's Guns By Lowell Thomas (NBO Wor Oorrmpotulintl - V, -. (Distributed by United Press) . - Paris, April 25 (U.P) Berlin is In flames from one end to the other. Dense clouds of smoke hide most of the city. 1 flew to Berlin" yesterday pilot of the b7th reconnaissance group of the Ninth air force. I saw the city In flames, saw the bombardmpnt going on between the Russians and nazis. and then I raced back across hall of Kurope to Paris last night. My flight came about this way : For two days I had been with the ground troops near the advancing Russians with uenerai terry Allen and his 104th division Timberwolves, on the Mulde river, with the Russians only 18 miles away, and the Germans in between. All along the front, the one thought had been: When do we join up with the Russians? An allied pilot with the Timberwolves brought word that the Russians. some miles to the north, were driv ing west nt ton speed. It looked as thouih the Second armored di vision of the Ninth army would he the first to make It. Looks Over Front So I decided to trv to find a fighter pilot who would like to take a look all up and down the front. When I was back with the 67th reconnaissance group they had in vited me to do this. So there I flew in a light artillery plane i and in no time two fast Mustangs were on the line. Here are some of the things we saw: Berlin in flames, but not en tirely. Potsdam and the southern side of the city seemed compara tively undamaged. The rest was in flames, from one end to the other. An artillery duel was going on, heavy guns on both sides going all out dense clouds of smoke blow ing over Berlin, concealing much of it. OAR LOCKS STOLEN Theft of the oar locks from his boat while It was In the rear yard at his home, today was reported to Bend police by Rev. Robert Mcllvenna, 816 Riverside drive. The minister said that the looks were apparently removed within the last two nights. which attacked the Berchtesgaden area. More than 250 Liberators of the U. S. Eighth air force bombed rail targets at Traunsteln, 25 miles northwest of Berchtes gaden, at Salzburg, 15 miles to he north; at Hallein, 10 miles northwest, and at Bad Relchcnall, ID miles northwest. The concentration of allied air power on the Berchtesgaden area coincided with a sweep by Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third army against the "national re doubt." The U. S. 15th air force In Italy joined the attack on nazi strong points in southeastern Europe. They bombed the main rail sta tion and ran yards at Linz, tne biggest transport center left to the nazis In Austria. It is only 65 miles from the Russian lines. Along with the attacks on the Berchtesgaden area, hundreds of ' tm cn irclGtnri&thii& ft Heads Soviets Foreign Commissar V. M. Mol- tov of the Soviet union has arrived In San Francisco for the United Nations conference that opened this afternoon, with 46 nations represented.. lri a plane with a tirnck air.iorce - Hitler Injured, Sweden Hears Stockholm, April 25 (IB Wholly unconfirmed press re ports said today that Adolf Hitler had been injured severely in a "serious accident" in Berlin. No detnils of the supposed ac cident were available, but the German radio, announced tarlier this week that Hitler was remain ing In the "muin defense line" In Berlin. The nazicontrollcd Scandina vian telegraph bureau said Hitler was directing the defense of Ber lin from a subterranean fortress under the high command building on Benderstrasso, already under soviet artillery fire. It was at his headquarters else where In Germany last July 20 that Hitler nurrowly escaped as sassination in a military coup. A bomb exploded only a few feet away from him and he was burnexl and bruised. An associate was killed and a dozen others wounded. 11 Million Nazis Killed, Captured (lly Unlti-,1 Pres.) A Moscow broadcast reported by the FCC said today that 1 1,000, 000 Germans have been killed or captured on the eastern front. Of the total, 2,000,000 casual ties were Inflicted since Jan. 1. Bombed Flying Fortresses and Liberators bombed the Skoda arms works at Pllsen, probably the last major source of weapons for the nazis. Just before the big bombers struck, supreme allied headquar ters broadcast a warning over the Luxembourg radio to slave work ers to leave their benches imme diately and remain away until afternoon. The Skoda works, only a little more than 40 miles ahead of American Third army spear heads, were the pride of pre-war Czechoslovakia. With the loss of arsenals in the Ruhr and Silesia, Germany must depend almost en tirely on Skoda for weapons for her final stand. Altogether 550 American heavy bombers and 500 Mustang fight ers were out over Germany and Czechoslovakia today. An airfield at Pllsen and railway targets In Germany also were hit. I , - J"- """ f .; -! Weather Forecast Partly cloudy today, tonight anil , ThudRday, few scattered light showers along; coast today. Not much change In temperature. NO. 120 ft Soviets Seize Half of City; Climax Nears Two Russian Armies Join Forces. for All 'Out Blow at Capital ' London, April 25 r Two Red armies completed the encircle ment of Berlin today. Snapping a trap on its fanatical nazi defend ers and dooming them to surrend er or stand and die without hope of reinforcement. Marshal Stalin, in an order of the day sealing the fate of Berlin, announced that the armies of Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov and Marshal Ivan S. Konev had linked up northwest of Potsdam, thus closing the gap between the prongs of the giant pincers around Berlin. The encirclement of Berlin camo as the two seige armies slugged through the streets In the heart of the city in what reports des cribed as perhaps the most, violent and spectacular lighting of the entire war. Fall Is Expected Swedish correspondents in Ber lin forecast the fall of the city within two days, and Moscow, reporting panic and chaos in the German capital, said the climax of the struggle was near. ' Stalin announced that the con- i verging advances, ot the Zhukov and Konev armies hooking around -the capital on the north and south had cut all the roads west out of the city and fused the barrier around ibinto a complete ring. In the final push to complete the encirclement, Konev's first Ukrainian army captured Ketzln, 22 miles west of the Potsdamer Platz in the heart of the city. Zhukov's . first White Russian army seized Mauen, 23 miles due west of the center of Berlin; Rohrbeck, 14 west-northwest of . Potsdamer Platz; and Elstal, six miles west of Spandau. All Roads Cut "Troops of the first While Rus sian front cut all the roads lead ing out of Berlin to the west and today linked up northwest of Potsdam with troops of the Uk rainian army, thus completing the, encirclement of Berlin," Stalin's order said. It was addressed Jointly to Zhukov and Konev. Mentioned hi the order was Gen. Ivan Y. Petrov, former command er of the fourth Ukrainian army in the Polish-Czechoslovak border area, who recently was relieved by Gen. Andrei Yercmenko. Pet rov now is chief of staff to Konev. Stalin ordered a salute of 20 salvos by 224 guns in tribute to the troops who encircled Berlin, Gateway to Pass Neared By Allies Rome, April 25 IP Allied armies struck north from the Po river In northern Italy today to within 30 miles of Verona, gate way to the Brenner pass. Swiftly expanding their bridge heads across the Po, Gen. Mark W. Clark's forces Joined the race to trap remnants of Adolf Hitler's armies in his national redoubt in the Bavarian Alps. Both the Fifth and Eighth ; armies were advancing north of the Po toward the Brenner pass, backdoor to the redoubt, against weakening German resistance, al lied force headquarters reported. The Eighth army at Bogoforte was less than 30 miles of Verona and held a 50-mile front along the Po from there to Ferrara. Near Brenner Pass 1 French First army and Amer-' lean Seventh army units were only 90 miles from the northern entrance to the Brenner pass at innsorucK, wnue Third army troops were driving In from the north. Headquarters revealed that the Fifth army's Tenth Mountain di vision spearheaded the push across the Po, establishing the first bridgehead Monday morn ing, April 23, after a 55-milc drive in two days. With their last natural barrier south of the Alps smashed, the Germans were in a confused state. Front reports said nazi di visions were broken, and their battalions were operating mora and more on their own.