the. mm bulle Buy Thai Bond Keep lending at home and end dying on battlefields. Buy an extra $100 war bond today. Volume LIU Uei it GERMAN RESISTANCE Patton's Men Rapidly Close In on Citadel German Redoubt Shakes In South as 4 Armies Advance to Sanctuary . Paris, April 26 UP Allied armies bending back both wings of Germany's western front captured the wrecked North sea port of Bremen today and drove within 8'4 miles of the Austro-German-Czechoslovak border triangle. Paris, April 26 IP The British second army cleared virtually all of the wrecked North sea port of Bremen today and In the south American Third army troops clos ed swiftly on the Bavarian fort ress of Passau, 67 miles from Berchtesgaden. , German resistance In Bremen collapsed suddenly this afternoon after more than a week of savage, close-In fighting and three days of concentrated aerial bombard- ment that reduced the reich's sec ond port to rubble Front dispatches said a few die hard nazis, including the Bremen commander, Gen. Becker, still were holding out in the ruined port area along the Weser river late today. Capture Seems Near . . '" " But tough Scottish riflemen and armored troop carriers were rac ing through the streets to finish them off and complete the cap ture of the city seemed imminent. (A BBC broadcast recored by FCC monitors in New York said Bremen had been captured.) United Press war correspondent Richard D. McMillan reported that Becker had refused a final sur render ultimatum and fled with a few nazi troops to a hideout in the Bremen port area. Thousands of German civilians swarmed up from cellar doug outs, however, to greet the incom ing British. The second and greatest nazi redoubt already was shaking in the south under the blows of four American, French and Russian ar mies closing in from the north, northwest, west and east on. Hit ler's Berchtesgaden retreat. Patton In Lead Gen. George S. Patton's U. S. Third army was far out in front of the four-cornered drive, mov ing southward along the Bohemi an plateau on Passau, only 98 miles from a juncture with red army troops advancing from the east. Delayed front dispatches, lag Ping 12 hours and more behind Patton's racing tanks, said the Americans- were only 11 miles from Passau last night and roll ing unchecked through disorgan ized German-opposition. There was every possibility that the Third army would cross the Danube into Austrian soli near Passau within a matter of hours, if it had not already done so, to close the northern arm of the. Soviet-American pincers on the in- j ner defenses of nazidom's Bavari-1 an redoubt. " I Scenes Remintscenf of 1918 Enacted as Nazis Surrender By W. R. Hlgginbotham (United Praia Staff Corrmpondent) London, April 26 (IP) The Ger man army was disintegrating to day amid scenes reminiscent of 1918. Even as in the last days of world war I, fully-armed German sol diers were surrendering in groups as large as 1,000. Supreme headquarters announc ed that allied forces in the west took 43,405 prisoners on Tuesday alone. The bag of prisoners grew most rapidly in the narrow corridor between the American and Rus sian armies on either side of Ber lin. In Berlin Itself, the encircled garrison was fighting fantasti callywith the guns of the gesta po and SS at its back, but west of the city all who could were march ing into the American lines to escape the soviet war machine. The traffic was so heavy that American First and Ninth army I .. .... '. . . t , eve ot the Security Conference, they gaze out toward 8an ftancisco's great and graceful Golden Gate Bridge gateway, perhaps, to world peace forever, If success crowns the efforts of the conferees, the soldier's sacrifice o,nl nnt hovo hun In vain unrt th HtH hov will never have to march off In Annthnr war. Marshal Petain Heads for Home Paris, April 26 mi Marshal Henri Philippe Petain started for France today to face trial as a traitor to his country. Swiss dispatches reported the aged marshal and his party left the Swiss mountain town of Weesen at 9 a. m. for the frontier town of Vallorbes, where his ex tradition will take place at 8:30 o'clock tonight. Petain's secretary said he would be arrested by French authorities at the border. The secretary also said that Dr. Walter Stucki, former Swiss min ister to Vichy, would be Petain's first defense witness. Stucki ar rived at Weesen yesterday empty handed, and left with a big port folio of documents. Petain's entourage entered France yesterday, but he remain ed in Switzerland for orders from the French government. The 89-year-old "hero of Ver dun" was penniless. The Swiss federal council was paying his bills at the old Hotel Mariahalden in the town of Weesen, overlook ing the dark waters of the Wallen sea. The minister of justice said the marshal would be put at the dis posal of the high court of justice as soon as he arrives in France. His trial for treason was sched uled for May 17. patrols which headed cast in an effort to link up with the Rus sians were forced to give up the task and return to their own lines. Russian - fearing civilians also were clogging the roads west of Berlin, hauling a few precious be longings in carts and baby car riages. It was like France in the dark days of 1940. Only German soldiers or sus pected war criminals were per mitted to enter the American lines and surrender, however. Other ci vilians were turned back and told to go to their homes. A BBC broadcast said a former lord mayor of Berlin was cap tured by' the American second di vision as he attempted to flee south between the American and Russian lines. Lt. Gen. Heinrich K. Kirchheim, captured by an American tank unit near Magdeburg, voluntarily sought to Increase the bag of his countrymen with a broadcast over the Luxembourg radio. CENTRAL OREGON'S THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON. THURSDAY, APRIL 26. 1945 At Golden Gateway to World Peace (fee Wfi ui i i j 1.4- Yanks Smash Japs' First Big Line of Defense on Okinawa Over 21,000 Nippons Killed on Small Island Near Mainland; American Dead Placed at 889 Guam, April 26 (U.E) Front reports said today that U. S. army troops had smashed the first major Japanese defense line on southern Okinawa. All key terrain on which the line was anchored was cap tured by the Americans as they pushed more than half a mile throutrh the strono- .TannnPHo r?nfnuoa tn lacs than tlivoo and a half miles from Naha, ine developing UKinawa campaign brought a force of 200 V-2 Attacks End, Churchill Reveals London, April 26 U? Prime Minister Winston Churchill told commons today that German' V-2 attacks on England ended March 27 and revealed that the giant rockets killed 2,754 persons and injured 6,523. ' Churchill said London bore the blunt of the attacks, which began last Sept. 8 and ended when Brit ish soldiers over-ran the launch ing sties. Asked whether he now was able to make a statement on the V-2 bomb raids, Churchill said: Yes, sir, they have ceased. Data Released The attacks reached their high est point during February. Ap proximately 1,200 bombs fell on England during the entire cam paign. The worst V-2 raid killed 167 persons in November when a rock et scored a direct hit on a depart ment store during the lunch hour rush in tfie New Cross section of London. ' In another attack 133 persons were killed when a rocket hit an apartment building. . Another major rocket incident was in London's Farringdon mar ket in March when the stalls were crowded with shoppers and 115 were killed. Bloodhounds were used 1o trace trapped persons. Horse Fly Causes Collision of Cars Portland, April 26 HP) Maybe horses went out of style with the advent of the automobile. But horse flies are still with us. Cyru Tie told police he was try ing to swat a horse fly, lost con trol of his car. and wrecked an other automobile, injuring a woman passenger. He (Tie not the fly) was cited for driving on the wrong side of the street. L&oir IK FA TV.nl..,,. I v i . . . .i inn. i u .i capital of the island. to ztu fauperiortresses rang ing over Japan again today in new neutralization raids on airfields in Kyushu and Shi koku, two of the enemy home islands. While the Japanese staggered under the weight of the. American land, naval and aerial blows, Ad miral Chester W. Nimitz an nounced that 21,269 enemy troops were killed on Okinawa and the surrounding islands up to yester day. Garrison Hard Hit Most of the Japanese were killed on Okinawa and it was esti mated the enemy had lost one third of its original garrison in the bloody fighting on the island, 325 miles from Japan. Only 399 Japanese were taken prisoner. American casualties in the cam paign as of April 22, were: army: 889 dead, 4879 wounded and 289 missing; marines, 257 dead, 1,103 wounded and seven missing. i I All Meats, Except Mutton, To Require OP A Red Points Washington, April 26 (IP) Price chief Chester Bowles today brought 99 'k per cent of all meat under rationing in order to spread more evenly civilian supplies ex pected to drop another six mil lion pounds in May. Beginning Sunday and continu ing until the start of the next ration period June 2, all meats except mutton will require red points, including cull and utility grades of veal and lamb and ail grades of less popular cuts of veal and lamb such as breasts, shanks, necks and flanks. Other changes in the meat and fat rationing program for May will lie Increases of one to two points per pound for most cuts! of lamb and veal and one po'n'i tor most Beet steaks; decreases of one to two points on beef roasts and other cuts of beef; in creases of four points for mar garine; and two points for grade one cheese. Butter and hamburger remain! DAILY NEWSPAPER IN BREMEN Tension Marks Of Conference . Showdown on Soviets' Bid for Three Votes Is Expected Late Today San Francisco, April 26 un united Nations delegates assem bled today for their first working session with prospects of a quick showdown on Russia's request for three votes at the conference, the question of Argentine participa tion and, possibly, some new move on the deadlocked Polish issue. . Russia, It appeared, may sub mit to the initial meeting of the conference steering committee her request that the Ukraine and White Russian republics be grant ed seats in the conference. Whether Foreign Commissar V. M. Molotov will also submit for a third time a demand that the War saw provisional Polish regime be represented was not yet known. However, it appeared that there i' had been no actual developments on the Polish matter since the Big NThree discussions were suspended In Washington because ot the lm minent opening of the San Fran Cisco gathering. Showdown Delayed Some quarters said the Polish issue would not be brought to a f.''jlrVk J t; , . ' TOU""" ft? MolotOV, W. AVerell Ham await e Harriman, U. S. ambassador to Moscow, and Sir Archibald Clark Kerr, British ambassador to Moscow. These three comprise the commission set up at Yalta to deal with Po land and there has Been no change In their authority to handle the issue. The possibility of quick and amicable settlement oi tne kus- sian three vote question and the Argentine representation issue emerged sharply. Molotov made a surprise ges ture which raised diplomatic hopes that these hurdles to con ference agreement might be clear ed more easily than expected. He tendered a banquet last night to some 30 persons, includ ing the foreign ministers of Mex ico, Chile, China, Australia, France, Yugoslavia and Czecho slovakia. Toasts Offered Innumerable toasts in vodka were drunk In the Russian fash Ion. It was learned that Molotov was frankly told by the Latin American diplomats of their de sire to see Argentina Invited to San Francisco. Molotov on his part reiterated the statement made by Marshal Stalin to President Roosevelt at Yalta that Russia desired the Ukraine and White Russia to be represented as a tribute to the suffering they have endured at the hands of the Germans. So far as was known no com mitments were made on cither side. But the prospect emerged that the Latin Americans might support the three vote request if Russia agreed to let in Argentina. The Molotov dinner, It was un derstood, was held in a most cor dial atmosphere. (Continued on Page 3) unchanged at 24 and 6 points per pound. So do ration values of lard, shortening, cooking and salad oils. The expanded program for May puts meat rationing back where it was a year ago before most meats were made point free. The only meat that remains unratloned is some five million pounds of mutton. Bowles said the adjustments were necessary to distribute the available meat supply as evenly as possible "during the period of very short civilian supply." He estimated civilians would have six million pounds less meat In May than they did in April, but said there should he Improved distribution of what there is as a result of OPA's newly-announced meat control program. The plan calls for expenditures of $34,000,000 to insure meat pro ducers against loss, increase the amount of federally-Inspected meat available for civilians and stamp out the black market. Initial Session Patriots Break Qerman Qrip in Northern Italy Rome, April 6 (U.E) A general uprising of Italian pa triots was reported unofficially today to have broken the German grip on north Italy and liberated Milan, Genoa, Turin, Verona and scores of other towns. Allied military authorities, whose armies wer Hwppnino- deep into northern Italy on the heels of routed German forces, withheld immediate confirmation of reports from the north of the rebellion against the nazis and fascists. But accounts of the uprisings were supported by every iiiiiiiniiiii Miuiiniiiiiii i iiiiiiumiiiiimiiiuiiiiiev.'ence that the patriots had BULLETINS , (By United Proi) A Swiss telegraph agency dis patch reported by the FCC to day that according to reports from reliable sources Benito Mussolini was captured by Ital ian patriots In I'allanza on the west shore of lake Maggiore. London, April 20 IIP) The Brussels radio said tonight that American and Russian troops had Joined forces on a i'l'i- mite front. With U. S. Seventh army, Germany, April 20 UP) The wife of Marshal Erwin Rommel said today that the one-time desert fox of the Afrkia Korps died at home in bed on Oct. 14 from a shrapnel wound In France on July 17. The British radio said late to day that Rome reported the Al lies were landing at Rapallo In the gulf of Genoa. . Already Collected With an estimated eight tons of usable clothing already on hand, and salvage committee workers striving to get' at least another 9,000 pounds before next Monday, arrangements were completed to day for a city-wide pickup next Sunday, It was announced. Ap proximately 25 Elks and Lions last night worked In the salvage uepui in iiitr uttaciiiL-iu ui icuj o sorting and packing tne cioming, in order to make way for the ex Dected laree "haul" on Sunday. Boy Scouts, who will aid in the plcKup on sunuay, ana wno nave been aiding In the sorting and re ceiving of clothing and footwear at the depot, were strongly prais ed today for their efforts by Clar ence Bush, Lion drive chairman, and Ray Dahl, in cnarge oi puo llclty. to canvass tjuy Beginning at p. m. Sunday, Scouts, assisted by Lions and Elks, will canvass tne city garner ing up bundles and removing them to the depot. Residents were asked to place their packages or bundles on their front porches, with shoes being tied together. The Scouts will remove them from there. Meantime the contest among grade school pupils for a prize of ice cream and cake was growing hoi. with the smaller children car rying great quantities of clothing to their class rooms. The room In each of the Reld, Allen, Kenwood and St. Francis schools having the largest amount of clothing will be "treated" by the Lions and Elks. A committee is scheduled to visit the schools on Monday and decide the winning class- London Reports Goering Fadeout London, April 26 ui The Hamburg radio reported tonight that Relchmarshal Hermann Goer ing had been relieved of the com mand of the German air force. The nazi radio said Goering was suffering from acute heart dis ease, asked to be relieved of the Luftwaffe command, and Adolf Hitler granted his request. Goering, the No. 2 nazi whom Adolf Hitler once designated as his eventual successor, was the first of the party hierarchy to fade out of the picture in the hour of Germany's supreme crisis, so far as enemy reports had revealed. BRITISH DOL'BT STORIES London, April 26 lU-The Daily Telegraph said tonight that no definite evidence had reached London that Adolf Hitler was In Berlin, and suggested the nazis might be trying to cover up his escape from Germany. eir Dim Bernini COLLAPSES seized and were operating the radios in Milan and Genoa n . (supplementary reports cir culated freely in the Swiss border areas. Swiss Relav Renorts Swiss advices quoted an Italian press dispatch as hinting that Benito Mussolini was trying to make a deal with the patriots In an effort to save his life. He was reported to have been set up as a nazi figurehead In north Italy after he was "rescued" by the Germans when his fascist regime cracked up. This morning," the dispatch was quoted, "Mussolini sent a man bearing a flag of truce to the head of the Milan socialist party and offered to permit partisans to take over power on condition that the Germans and new fas cists be allowed to leave without hindrance." . Resistance Collapses German resistance in northern Italy appeared to have collapsed, Fifth army forces were within 75 miles southeast of Milan and less than 45 miles from Genoa last night. Today a headquarters spokesman said: I "Things are moving, so fast' we just don t know where they are." Rome morning newspapers, in big headlines, proclaimed the liberation of Genoa and said the Germans had abandoned Milan. A dispatch from Chiasso, on the Swiss-Italian border, also reported that tne nazis and their Italian fascist underlings had handed over the city to patriots. Music Festival Plans Completed More than 400 young musicians from Klamath Falls, Prinevllle, Redmond and Bend tomorrow will join In a festival here that Is to feature bands, choirs, orchestras, ensembles and soloists, with an evening program to be presented in the high school gymnasium at 7:30 o'clock. Numbers arranged for this program, open to the public, were announced today by j C. Ualc Kobhlns, in general charge of arrangements. A total of 417 high school mu sicians have been registered for the music competition festival, to start tomorrow afternoon with a program of ensemble and solo events at the Trinity Episcopal parlh hall, from 2:30 to 5 p. m. A Klamath Falls orchestra of 36 pieces will be featured. fudges Coming Three national Judges, whose names are not being announced in advance, will arrive in Bend tomorrow, to Judge the various contests. The program for the evening competition, In the higit school gymnasium auditorium, follows: 7:30: Overture to "The Beauti ful Galnthea", von Snuppe. Alleg- (Continued on Page S) German Sources Insist Hitler Is Directing Forces in Berlin London. April 26 (IP Nazi sources said today that Adolf Hit ler and Col. Gen. Heinz Gurterlan, chief of staff of the German army, personally were directing the defense of Berlin from an un derground hideout Inside the on c'rcled capital. The German-controlled Scanda navlan Telegraph bureau said Gu derian was organizing the death stand under Hitler's personal su pervision. It attributed its infor mation to German papers in Nor way. Though the German radio for several days has been reporting Hitler In Berlin, the STB dispatch was the first to say that Guderian also had remained in the capital and with the fuehrer was facing almost certain death or capture at the hands of the red army. Hitler daily receives command ers of the various Berlin front sectors In his underground bunk Weather Forecast , Scattered clouds today and to night. Friday, mostly cloudy with occasional light showers. Little change in temperature. NO. 121 ft Nazi Chieftain May Be Held In City's Ruins Stettin Falls to Reds In New Gains; Soviets Say Junction Is Close London, April 26 (ID Russian storm troops today captured Stet tin, Germany's biggest Baltic port, and 80 miles to the southwest they burst Into the heart of Ber lin within 400 yards ot where Adolf Hitler was reported direct ing the defense ot the gutted capi tal. ... If Hitler was In Berlin as the nazis have insisted for four days time was running short for him. Berlin was surrounded by Red army troops and rescue by land was all but Impossible. The Ber lin garrison was being pressed into a tight pocket in the center of the citv. " " - ' ; Airdrome seized Moscow dlsDatches said Rus sian troops had overrun the Tern- pelhof airdrome ana capiurea a number of planes with warmed-up motors, apparently preventing a last-minute escape flight by nazi leaders. The Hamburg radio reported the fighting in the Potsdamer Platz area and in the middle ot nai'ltn'o Tioronrtpn. , Faltering nazi radio reports In sisted that Adolf Hitler himself nri n nrize lot -of his henchmen were in Berlin, and ft ' Moscow dispatch said that if Hitler is there, "the Russians will have him dead or alive." Called "Mopup" The Russian army organ Red Star referred to the battle of Ber- ltH ..n a "linn lit! 1 ' Qnubt ft nil t nil an a jfivp " - - --- - - ...... dispatches said there no longer was any continuous front line In the ruins of the German capital. Russian spearheads were goug Ini? into the heart of the city, and wild fighting swirled deep behind the nazi barricades. Moscow roDorted that the Tern- plehof airdrome had been virtual ly overrun, blocking the last haz ardous escape hatch from the city. Soviet dispatches said the struggle swiftly approached its climax and Red army assault for ces were driving into the heart of the city from east, west, north and south. Some 500,000 German troops are reported trapped in the doomed city. New First Army Some 70 miles south of Berlin, Moscow said, other Soviet forces struck west across the Elbe river practically to within sight ot American First army troops along the Mulde river. Official accounts put the Russians 17 miles from the First army as of yesterday. The battle of wrecked Berlin roared on into its sixth day in what Soviet front dispatches des cribed as a "jungle of stone" above ground and in the dark, treacherous caverns of the city's subway system below. Canal Crossed Four more city districts were cleared yesterday and both the Spree river and Teltow canal crossed despite ferocious counter attacks by the fanatic enemy gar rison. Thirty-seven districts nearly two thirds of the city now were In Soviet hands. er, STB said. He listens to reports, gives orders and decorates "those distinguishing themselves," it add ed. Another report said that Hit ler's underground quarters were beneath the high command build ing on Bemllerstrasse, which al ready was under Soviet artillery fire. The Stockholm newspaper Tid ningen said Hitler, Propaganda Minister Paul Joseph Goebbels and Reichsmarshal Herman Goer ing all were In Berlin as late as yesterday, preparing for a stand to the end in their underground citadel with several thousand elite soldiers. The north German radio trump eted: "In Berlin, the destiny of the peoples of Europe is at stake. In Berlin, this war will be decided. For this reason, the fuehrer is in Berlin."