hi. o v See story columns 6 and 7. Clothing Pickup x Bundle your discarded clothing and tie up shoes you do not need and leave them on your porch Sun day for a -city-wide pickup at 2 p. m. Help war-stricken Europeans! EEOTifBULLEirM Weather Forecast Mostly cloudy today, tonight and Saturday with occasional light rains in the western and north ern part. Slightly cooler. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER rT(5S mm THE Volume Llll . x ' ' ft V- ft ; -ft ' THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1945 NO. 122 . -ft ft' ft ! ft 'ft im IHIoaE 6 BE?Hnim Yank Soldiers In Quick Move Reach Border Break-Through Carries Third Troopers to Point 25 Miles From Munich Paris, April 27 IP American armies invaded Austria today and smashed into the western fringe 01 tne Bavarian redoubt in a gen eral break-through that carried witnm Ito miles of Munich, birth place of the dying nazi regime. Wheeling suddenly away from the direct roads to Berchtesgaden, the U. S. Third army's 11th arm ored division sent a flying tank column racing nine miles east ward to cross unopposed into Austrian soil near Schwarzen berg, two miles south of the Austro-German-Czechoslovak bor der triangle. . Ninth Country. I It was the ninth European coun rtry entered by American armies in World War II. The tide of American military power already had rolled over Italy, France, Bel gium, Luxembourg, Holland, Czechoslovakia, Germany, and the tiny principality of Monaco. The Third army alone had fought over all but Italy, Monaco, and Holland since its activation last summer. There the Americans were 86 miles north-northeast of Berchtes gaden, 35 miles northwest of Linz, the third city of Austria, and only 85 miles from a juncture with Russian, troops pounding in on Hitler's mountain hideaway from the east. ' ' Column Closes In A second armored column was closing fast on the Austrian fron tier a few miles farther south, en tering Gegenbach, a mile west of the border and 34 miles from Linz. There was no immediate word y force moving down on the border , city of Passau, 67 miles due north of Berchtesgaden. Almost 150 miles to the south west, the American Seventh army broke loose on a terrific armored sweep that all but enveloped the fortress city of Augsburg and roll ed on within 25 miles of Munich. The Seventh army's plunging tanks swamped the stubborn nazi defenses in the rugged triangle between the Iller and Danube riv ers and piled up gains of as much as 18 miles in a matter of hours. Still farther west, the French First army ground steadily east ward along the lake-studded German-Swiss frontier, caving in the western flank of the Bavarian re doubt at a rapid pace. The border city of Konstanz was reported in French hands. Where World Peace Is Being Sought San Frflhcisco's Civic Center, showing two principal meeting places of the United Nations Con- ference the War Memorial Veterans Building, seating 1100, and the War Memorial Opera House, 3250. Both were completed in 1932. The domed building is City Hall; tower beyond is the Fed eral Building. Civic Center includes other government, educational, and assembly buildings. Bend Plavs Host f To High Schools Jap Resistance Cracks On Southern Okinawa Guam, April 27 (U.E) Japanese resistance began to crack on southern Okinawa today and Tokyo reported a new Ameri can landing on the northwest coast of the strategic island. ' American troops assaulting the southern defense shielding Naha, capital of Okinawa, captured bitterly-contested Saw tooth ridge, highest point on the island, and wedged-deeply into the enemy line less than a mile from the inland town of Shuri, Radio Tokyo said the Americans were landing men and materials from barges in the vicinity of Minatagawa on the Motobu peninsula, which juts out of northwest Okinawa. The landing put. American units in the rear of Japanese pockets still holding out on the peninsula and should speed the opening of the Unten harbor navy base to American ships. ' Capture of bloody Sawtooth ridge was regarded as the turning point of the Okinawa campaign. From here out, it is a downhill battle with the Americans looking down the enemy's throat. ' , Two of the last three airfields on the island were almost within the Americans' grasp. Maj. Gen. John R. Hodge, commander of the 24th army corps, told a United Press front reporter that numerous Japa nese troops were deserting to the American lines. "Soldiers don't do this until they begin to crack," Hodge said. "I think the Jap is pretty well disorganized and in my opinion the time for a possible counter-offensive has passed." Some 400 miles to the northeast, a fleet ot 150 B-29 Super fortresses today hit seven Japanese suicide-plane bases oil Kyushu, southernmost of the enemy's home islands, for the second time in 24 hours. Russians, Yanks Meet By Chance With the United States First Army in Germany, April 27 U'i The' first juncture between the American and Russian forces ac tually took place Wednesday and by accident! A 20 -man American patrol, which failed to receive orders to halt its advance, walked into the Russian lines. The formal Junc ture at Torgau did not take place until ine next day. The surprise meet Ine occurred at the little town of Riesa on the Elbe river. A radio message had been sent to the little American task force, ordering it to halt after it reached five miles beyond the Mulde river. But the Ameri cans never got the message. On and on they went, mile after mile, until they were 23 miles beyond the point where their orders had told them, to halt. There they met the Russians. Peace Envoys Face Deadlock At Conference 'Thing Is in a Mess,' Representative Says; Soviets Get Demands Washington, Aprl 27 (IP) Soviet Russia, victorious In Its first two major demands on the United Nations security confer ence, agreed today to a compro mise on its third whereby Sec retary of State Edward K. Sli'Wlnlus, Jr., gets the confer ence's two most Important jobs. FRUIT IS STOLEN' S. Pike, residing at 142 Jeffer son place, reported to Bend no-1 Itv lice today that someone had en-Masting peace. iiritu ins casement tnrougn a" manhole and made off with a ; quantity of fruit. Officers found1 some burned matches, and several I DroKen jars or jelly, and suspected children of the theft. By I.yle C. Wilson ' (United Prena Staff Curreitpomlent) San Francisco, April 27 (Hi The steering committee of the United Nations . world security conference was summoned to meet 'today In an. effort to. break a deadlock forced by Russian dele gates on the question of confer ence chairmanships. The Russians were conceded to have won already two major de mands for three votes in the assembly of the world organlza tion to be created here, and for the right of a major power to Veto military action against it self. Thing Is "Mess" But there was no general will ingness to accept Russian objec tions to making Secretary of State Edward R. Stottinlus, Jr., permanent conference chairman An American delegate sadly told the United Press that "the whole chairmanship thing is In a mess." In Washington, President Tru man in announcing the junction of American and Russian armies in Germany reaffirmed his faith- In the ability of the Big Three powers to work together to main tain peace. "Nations which can plan and fight together shoulder to shoul der in the face of such obstacles as distance and of language and of communications as we have overcome," he said, "can live to gether and can work together in the common labor of the organi zation of the world for peace." Speed Asked Disclosure of the junction 75 miles south of Berlin focussed at tention on British efforts to speed up the conference and wind it up in four weeks. The British want to (leave details to a future con ference and close this one down before the European war ends. The chairmanship deadlock, however, was delaying a start on the conference's real job draft ing the charter of a world sccur- organization to maintain a Historic Juncture Splits Nazi Lands Paris, April 27 (U.P) American and Russian armies have joined forces on the Elbe river below Berlin in a historic juncture that cut Germany into three broken fragments and sealed the doom of Hitler's nazi regime. Vanguards of the two armies merged their eastern and western fronts yesterday at the river town of Torgau, 75 miles south of the German capital, at the crossroads of the long and bloody trails from Stalingrad and the beaches of Normandy. London, April 27 UP Russian siege forces captured Potsdam and Spandau today, unhinging the western defenses of Berlin, and the nazi radio said the capital's plight was "still more critical" after soviet troops reached the heart of the city. Bend's first district music fes ilval and the annual Central Ore gon track meet brought to this city today probably the greatest i numoer of high school students ever to assemble in this upper Deschutes river town. More than 400 students are taking part In he music competition festival, and scores of young people were here from Crook and Deschutes counties for the track meet, that started at 1:30 p. m. "end high school students, Allied Armies Smoke Out Nazi Ringleaders; Mussolini's Capture Report Not Confirmed (By United Pr;) Allied armies, herding the rem nants of nazi fighting forces into a dead end corridor of Germany for the kill, were smoking enemy ringleaders from their hideaways today. . According 10 various r-urupean tary commentator of radio Berlin was reported in allied hands. A BBC broadcast today reported his capture by allied armies in the west. 3. Benito Mussolini and Roberto Farinacci, Italy and mand of a division. 5. Gestapo Chief Heinrlch Himmlcr. The Ixmdon Evening News reported that Hlmmler was dead. Reports are current In I nn. The former duce of don, the Evening News said, that lie former secretary of Himmler met his end In an un reports the following headliners the fascist party were playing : known manner. M5 hosts to the hundreds of visiting i had been captured or were being , hounds and hares In today's dis- Meanwhile, radio Hamburg in lne nunareas OI Visiting 1 " ,...Cj .,, , nlthniiirh , natrhnQ Rartin Rnmo ronoatnrtl,, sUtod Ih.it l,lolr Itui 7-j u"ng people, were enjoying a half-day recess this afternoon. ne of the first large visiting RrOUOS tn erpiua Iibm i-n o frnm Klamath Falls, and earlv this aft ernoon the visitors were inspect- "K tne local school and visiting iuaents and staff members- driven toward capture, although : patches. Radio Rome repeatedly sisted that Adolf Hitler was lead allied confirmation of these re-j broadcast a Swiss agpney report i ing the defense of Berlin in a ports was lacking: that Mussolini was In allied hands! "martyr's" last stand. 1 Relchmarshal Hermann Goer- nt Pallanza on Lake Mncclore.l And British dispatches said Ru ing Radio Moscow said the "eagle: The Italian government did not I dolph Hess, an early fugitive from of thp luftwaffe" had escaped confirm or rienv the report. ! nazis circles, reportedly had gone from Berlin by plane with a S20,-j 4. Lt. Gen. Emil Remer. Ac- insane in captivity. 000 000 (Ml nest egg. Earlier, ra-i cording to a British broadcast.; Marshal Erwin Rommel's wi- rw:Z ------ M tratnhuro saw Goorine nao mis loyai nonenman oi inner corn-i now told her U. S. Kcvi.mh nrmv fesual &h his command of Ger-imltted suicide April 20 after his, captors that the "desert fox died al tonight .k. .i mm manv's beaten air force oecause division oroKe Dciore nussian.in tea a broken man." A heart Detitirm ...in L irvi , T. :( hl.arf trouble 1 pressure on tne eastern front. Sn(Wn!1held vitmnth i 2 Lt Gen Kift Dlttmar. The Remer was credited with foiling Falk orcrTnii wm spokesman of the German high; the tomb plot against Hitler last be feature? P command and widely-quoted mili- I July and was rewarded with com- Russian in bed a attack finished him, she said, as he apparently was recovering irom snrapnei wounds Inflicted by an allied fighter pilot. Son Admits He Killed Father Baker, Ore., April 27 tf State police today announced that Al bert Forrest Bowman, 28, of North Powder, confessed he killed his father, Albert K. Bowman, prominent sheepman, and tossed the body In a well. The confession was made after all-night questioning by state po lice and Baker county authorities. The younger man was arrested after the body was found Monday by workmen at the Half creek ranch. .Father and son had been quar reling, workmen said. The 58-year-old victim's legglns were found In his home Sunday night and It was known he seldom dressed for work without them Nolghbors Joined In the search Monday and the body was found partly sub merged and hanging across a crossbar In the well. The son admitted he beat his father to death with a rock after a fight Sunday on the isolated ranch between Baker and La Grande. The juncture split the reich into three crumbling islands of resistance centering around the North sea ports, -Berlin and the Bavarian redoubt in the mountains of southern Germany and Austria. .' New Linkup Looms Still another American-Russian linkup appeared immi nent in the Bavarian foothills bordering Hitler s Berchtes gaden retreat, where Gen. George S. Pattori's Third armstf s tablished radio contact with a red army force apparently only 30 to 40 miles away., , .; ;. M i . - . w: ". ' J ""- Doughboys of the U. S. First army's GO'th infantry '.5m- sion pushed out from the Mulde river, 80 miles from the Elbe, to join up with the 173rd Russian guards regiment in Torgau, on the west bank of the Elbe. As they went forward, hundreds of war-wearied German prisoners lined the roadsides to watch the parade of Ameri can power that foretold the death of nazidom and the final destruction of Germany's military might. News Released The electrifying news of the juncture on the Elbe was announced simultaneosuly in Washington, London and Mos cow. Leaders of the Big Three hailed the event as the decisive triumph of the European war. "This is not the hour of hnal victory but the hour draws near . . . President Truman declared in a brief White House statement. "The last faint, desperate hope of Hitler and his gangster government has been extinguished." Patrols from the two armies met for the first lime on the Elbe Wednesday evening at 8:40 p.m. (11 :40 a.m. PWT) but the first junction in force was not affected until 8 p.m. (11 a.m. PWT) yesterday when the 69th and the soviet guards regi ment joined hands in Torgau. Resistance Collapses Major-Gen. E. F. Reinhardt, commander of the 69th, led his division into the battered river town where almost two centuries ago another Russian army joined its Austrian allies to fight Frederick the Great of Prussia, their common enemy in the Seven Years' war. German resistance appeared to have collapsed completely in the juncture area. The dusty roads west of Torgau were reported choked with thousands of beaten nazi soldiers and German civilians, all fleeing for the Mulde river in a panicky rush to enter the American lines and escape the avenging! red army. The remnants of Germany s northern armies were going down in the smoke and flame of encircled Berlin and in the wrecked North sea ports of Hamburg and Bremen, taking with them the nazi dynasty that Hitler boasted would endure for a thousand years. Force Trapped Another large nazi force was trapped hopelessly in central Germany and Czechoslovakia, pinned between the merged American and Russian lines in the north and the rampaging American Third army into Austria in the south. The size of the central German pocket was uncertain, but the cornered enemy forces there were showing little signs of fight and there appeared little likelihood that they would con- inue the battle after the fall of Berlin. Invaders Press Blazing Siege Of Foe Capital Hitler's Forces Move To Central Park for Final Death Struggle London. April 27 fUf Moscow Germans were pulling back lnto the Tlergarten in the heart of eh '" circled Berlin for a death stand : , irom an siaes. - ; The First White Russian and First Ukrainian armies held three-. quarters of Berlin as their blazing siege of the nazi capital neared the end of its first week. Moscow said the battered, deci mated German garrison once estimated at 500,000 and purport-1 edly under the personal command '' of Adolf Hitler had withdrawn everywhere behind the circular rt i In ; n ftnalnnr ilia lnnAMfv v ' Artillery Massed German artillery and troops " were massing In the Tlergarten, Berlin's famous central park west of Unter Den Linden, under a hall of Soviet shells that reduced famous buildings within the re doubt area to heaps of smoking ruooie, Moscow said. - German reports relayed by the ' Hamburg radio said Soviet van guards had penetrated the inner city as far as Grosser Stern, which runs through the Tlergar- ten. Another spearhead was said to have reached at least tempor arily the Potsdamer Platz, geo-; graphical center of the capital. Both Potsdamer Platz and Gros ser Stern were less than a half mile from Bendlerstrasse, where Hitler was said to be directing the defense of Berlin from an under ground citadel. Nazis Shift Troops Another Hamburg broadcast said "fresh German forces under . leading German generals" were marching toward Berlin to relieve the capital, but gave no hint as to (Continued on Page 3) Thundering Salvo of Moscow Victory Guns Reveal Junction London, April 27 IP Marshal I "In the name of the Soviet gov Stalin announced the Russian-1 ernment, I address you, command- I em ana men oi tne red army, and of the armies of our allies. The American junction tonight to the accompaniment of a thundering salvo by Moscow's victory guns. The Russiun radio broadcast a terse order of the day by Stalin proclaiming the junction at Tor gau and noting that it cut Ger many In two parts. Stalin ordered a salute of 24 salvos by 324 guns In honor of Marshal Ivan S. Konov"s First Ukrainian army and "our allied Anglo-American troops." The United Press listening post reported that after the order was read, the guns in Moscow were heard plainly. The text of a statement to Rus sian and allied troops by Marshal Stalin, broadcast by recording from London over CBS: victorious armies of the allied powers, waging the war of libera tion in Europe, have routed the German troops and linked up on the territory of Germany. "Our task and our duty are to complete the destruction of the enemy, to force him to lay down his arms and surrender uncondi tionally. The red army will fulfill to the end this task and this duty to our people and to all freedom loving peoples. "I greet the valorous troops of our allies who are now standing on the territory of Germany, shoulder to shoulder with the Soviet troops, and who are full of determination to carry out their duty to the end." German Collapse Signs Are Seen Washington, April 27 un The sudden folding of nazi defenses from northern Germany clear down to Italy was seen by mili tary observers here today as a sign of possible approaching Ger man collapse. (The German high command Implied yesterday that the battle of Berlin might end the European war. It said in its daily commu nique that the struggle was "of decisive importance for the future of the reich and for the existence of Europe.") Allied armies yesterday seized the northern German ports of Bremen and Stettin, fought into Regenshurg in southern Germany and Brno in Czechoslovakia. The U. S. Third and Seventh armies in the south were pouring across sev eral bridges over the upper reach es of the Danulie while other forc es seized Veron In northern Italy. Nazis f.oso Heart This rapid disintegration of the entile German front was seen as marking a new low in enemy mo rale and the will to fight. Observers believe the sudden slackening of German resistance may be attributed to the surround ing of Berlin and occupation of a large part of the nazi capital, the Imminent or actual union of west ern allied and Russian forces and the rout of German forces in Italy. The only show of German strength appeared at Hamburg in the north and Passau in the south, suggesting that the nazis still may have power to make a stand in Denmark and a small part of Ger many near the Kiel canal, and In the redoubt In the southern mountains.