ill BmLETM Save Your Fats Our boys get sulfa drugs and ammunition hen you save 'used kitchen fats. Weather Forecast Partly cloudy today, tonight and . Tuesday. Slightly cooler. . CENTRAL OREGO NS- DAI LY NEWS PA P E R Volume LIU THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. MONDAY, APRIL 30. 1945 NO. 124 irinniaffw iTDgJ :0lTD iSiTDini ft '' ft ft ft -A' ft ft ; ft ;;f . ft ' ft ft ft '. 'ft . . ' ft ft ft ft ft- ' TWO MORE U. S. ARMIES LINK WITH SOVIETS Ml Totteirii x ki T 11 J...L1 v iuhsi rurim inT i luiii i ivvivum Under Attack As Gap Closes Corridor Now Separates Foe's Two Fronts; Has -Width of Fifty Miles Paris, April 30 (in American First and Ninth army troops linked up with the red army at two new points on the Elbe river below Berlin .today, widening to 50 miles the allied corridor sepa rating Germany's northern and soutnern fronts. Another and more important fusion of the allied western and eastern battle lines appeared im minent in the south, where the nazis' boasted Bavarian redoubt was breaking up under converg ing blows from five and possibly six allied armies. There the American Third and Russian Third .Ukrainian armies were closing up a gap of perhaps 30 miles or less between their vanguards" in the Danube valley northeast of Berchtesgaden. Link With Reds Doughboys of the American Ninth army drove 22 miles east ward along the northeastern bank of the Elbe to Join up with the Russians for the first time in the Wittenberg area, 40 miles southwest of the enemy capital. At the same time, U. S.s First army patrols stabbed up from the southwest to meet the Soviets in the same general area. The First army afready was linked up with the Soviets farther south of Torgau and Riesa. The Junctures gave the Amer icans and Russians a solid cor ridor through the heart of the Reich along a 50-mile stretch on the Elbe between Wittenberg in the north and Riesa in the south. Redoubt Flank Opened South of that wedge, the bulk of Germany's surviving armies were primed for the kill after a tremendous allied victory in northern Italy that Gen. Mark Clark announced had "torn to pieces" 25 nazt divisions and end ed all effective German resistance there. The victory laid the southern flank of the Bavarian redoubt open to invasion by the American Fifth and British Eighth armies, both of which were driving up within 80-odd miles of the Bren ner pass. Simultaneously, the American Seventh drove through the Alpine passes from the north to take the Olympic resort town of Paten kirchen, only 20 miles northwest of Innsbruck, northern exit of the Brenner piss. Other Seventh army troops bat tled savage resistance from a small but fanatical German rear guard in the streets of Munich, birthplace of the nazi party and the fall of that city appeared im minent. Patton on Move Northeast of Munich, Gen. George S. Patton's U. S. Third army burst across the' Isar river at three points on a 60-mile front and streamed southward through the rolling Alpine foothills barely 30 miles from the Inn river valley and Adolf Hitler's birthplace at Braunau. Unconfirmed reports said Third army troops already had linked up with the red army in the Dan ube valley 80-odd miles northeast of Berchtesgaden. The Seventh army driving on the Brenner pass was about 115 miles north of allied troops ad vancing through northern Italy. Resistance Fades German resistance was almost non-existent at most points as the two American armies plunged into nazidom's last redoubt. To gether the Third and Seventh armies swept up almost 124,000 prisoners Saturday and Sunday, eliminating a blow at the bulk of the divisions massed in Bavaria for the dying third reich's last fight. The notorious Dachau concen tration camp seven miles north of Munich the first and blackest of the political death camps es tablished in the early days of the Hitler regime was overrun by ne seventh army yesterday. REDMOND MAN WOUNDED Pfe. Harold E. Perccll. husband f Mrs. Lenore J. Percell, box 412, edmond. has been wounded in action in the European war thea ter, the office of war information reported toijay. More Disputes Slow Peace Conference at Golden Gate Invitations to Argentine, White Russia and Ukraine Cause Dissention; New Action Taken San Francisco, April 30 IIE Bids to the Argentine, White Russia and the Ukraine to attend the United Nations security conference were approved today by the executive committee, it was understood, but dispute over the matter was so bitter that the entire question was referred back to the steering committee. The steering committee was expected to take final action on the matter at a meeting which still was under way at noon PWT. . . However, the steering committee immediately was con- . -fronted by another dispute, Target of Japs Guam, April 30 U Avenging Superfortresses today blasted the Kyushu bases of Japan's suicide planes, one of which crashed into and badly damaged the navy hoS' pltal ship Comfort Saturday night Twenty -nine persons were killed, 33 wounded seriously and one was missing after the enemy plane nit tne helpless and brilliantly-lighted hospital ship south of Okinawa, a communique an nounced. A dispatch from Vice Admiral Richmond Kelley Turner's flag ship off Okinawa said there was no doubt the attack was deliber ate. Some 200 B-29's participated in today's raids on Japan. Though the majority concentrated on the suicide-plane bases on Kyushu for the fifth straight day, some bombed the Tachlktiwrt army ar senal, 24 miles west of Tokyo. 200 Planes Used Despite the consistent Ameri can raids on Kyushu, the Japanese managed to hurl 200 planes against the U. S. forces around Okinawa Saturday night and Sun day, causing some damage to light fleet units. A total of 104 of the Japanese planes were shot down. United Press war correspondent Edward L. Thomas reported from Admiral Turner's flagship that the enemy plane which hit the Comfort made several "runs" over the white hosiptal ship in the moonlight before going into its suicide dive. At the time the Comfort was about 60 miles south of Okinawa, steaming unescorted toward the Marianas with several hundred American troops seriously wound ed in the Okinawa campaign. Sgt. Hugh Bean Hurt in Action SSgt. Hugh A. Bean, son of Mrs. Edgar Bean, 725 West 12th street, was Injured on April 5 on Luzon, according to a letter re ceived today by his mother. Sgt., Bean reported that he is in a hos pital in the Netherlands East Indies, and that the worst part of his injury is a ruptured ear drum. Set. Bean, a graduate of the Bend high school with the class of 1940, is a member of the 25th division. Mussolini Dies Begging for His Life ,.. nnna. I T I i ; . i -i . By James E. Roper (United PreM War Correspondent) Milan, April 30 IP The broken body of Benito Mussolini lay un claimed beside his slain mistress in the Milan morgue today, dis honored in death by the people he led to empire and ruin. The fallen duce dlea Daaiy in the sight of the partisan execu tioners who killed him and his paramour, Clara Petacci, in their hideout on Lake Como last Sat-jble urday. And the people he ruled for two decades paid him their last tri bute bv hanging his remains head down from the rafters of a gaso line station in Milan's Loreto square. i or nours alter ine oouy ui Hu executed dictator was brought to ; Milan with that of his mistress : and 16 other slain fascist leaders, j Mussolini lay in a tinny pile oi dirt in the center of the square. Then the mob tied wire about the; ankles of II Duce and Clara Pe tacci and suspended them upside down from the roof of the gaso line station. Hysterical men and womeniof 16 of his henchmen, executed i brought on by a Russian pro posal that the world labor con gress now in session at Oak-1! land be accredited as the offi cial labor affiliate of the new se curity organization and be invited to send advisory delegates to the meeting. The labor proposal was viewed gingerly by the American dele gates since the American Federa tion of Labor is boycotting the meeting due to participation of soviet trade unionists. -! , Not Unanimous . Action of the executive commit tee on Argentina, White Russia and the Ukraine was not uanl mous, it was understood.' How ever, issuance of invitations to each of the countries was ap proved by a two-thirds vote. Some of the delegates refrained from voting. The Russians, it was said, con tinued to oppose bringing Argen tina In, again raising the Polish question. ! Foreign Commissar V, M. Molo- tOv was said to have advanced ! he argument that if Poland was be ing kept out because her govern ment was not representative why should Argentina be invited with a government which he regarded as equally unrepresentative. The conference was working under pressure in an effort to speed up its work in fear that the military collapse of Germany will cause delegates to start a rush back to their home ' countries in Europe. . Seven Firms Bid On Canal Work Seven bids were opened at the Bend headquarters of the U. S. Bureau of reclamation today, for the construction of approximately five miles of laterals and sub laterals for the North Unit irriga tion project in Jefferson county. Presenting an estimate of $35, 698.50, the United . Construction company of Seattle was lowest bidder. Other bidders were Leonard and Slate, Portland, $41,540; Blickle and Caton, Portland, $46,001: J. M. Conlay, Portland, $47,795; E. B. Bishop, Orland, Calif., $49,720; Henry L. Hamilton, Eugene, $53, 219, and O. J. Montag and sons, Portland, $65,315. The laterals are to be situated near Opal City, and south of Ju niper butte. closed In screaming about thj dangling corpses. When the mob tired of its ghastly sport the bodies were taken down and dumped Into an open truck. They were carted to the city morgue and the pair were placed on a metal slab in the morgue courtyard. Someone tilted the death slab upward so the bodies were visi- to hundreds of persons still mming aoout tne morgue, peer ing over the stone and plaster wall. In contrast to Mussolini's dis figured features, his mistress' face remained youthful and beautiful even In death. Her even, white teeth now splotched with blood. were visible through her parted lips and her dark brown, curly hair still hung in tidy ringlets. uy me nine jviussoiinrs nody reached tne morgue his Jacket had been torn away, revealing his bar- rel chest encased in a short sleeved undershirt. Sharing the morgue with U Duce and Clara were the bodies I 25 German Djvisions in Italy "Torn to Pieoes,r Says Clark In AnnoundnlGreat Victory . i Foe Resistance in North Nearing Collapse; , Venice Captured By British; Rout of Naii Armies Continues; Oraiiani Also Captured Rome, April 30 (UJ?) Allied victory in Italy was an nounced today by Gen. Mark W., Clark in a triumphant proclamation that 25 German! divisions had been "torn to pieces" and no longer could resist effectively the U. S. Fifth and British Eighth armies; : i "The military power of Germany in Italy has practically ceased," Clark said. His statement put the official seal on clearcut evidence that nazi resistance in North Italy was collapsing. ; ; The allied commander in Italy issued his victory announce 12 Tons Clothing Collected in Bend Bend residents contributed more than 12 tons of clothing foe over seas war relief, in a campaign which ended here yesterday with a city-wide pickup.. All sections of the city were canvassed by Boy Scouts, Elks and members of the Lions club, and when the day came to a close there was a pile of garments and footwear the size of a double garage in the basement of Leedy's. Most notable aid given to the campaign was by grade school pu pus, wno in less tnan a week; gathered an estimated six tons of clothing. This fact accounted for the failure of the Scouts and club men to get more than one ton yesterday as they drove around the city, attesting to the thorough ness with which the boys and girls made the rounds. In order to make room In the salvage depot for more garments, 3'4 tons of the salvaged goods were shipped to Portland yester day. 1 Lions Take Rent Clarence Bush, chairman of the Lions sponsored drive, said today that his workers were "taking a much needed rest," and that they would not undertake the sorting and packing of clothing until to morrow night. At that time, Bush said, volunteer workers would be asked. He also said that the com mittee needs more cartons in which to pack and ship garments. Persons having empty cartons were asked to take them to the salvage depot. Winners in the grade school competition for an fee cream, and cake "treat" were announced to day by Loyde S. Blakley, Glenn Gregg, Del Hale and Ray Dahl, who judged the garment-raising contest. In the Kenwood school grade 5, section six won first place. This room Is taught by Miss Helen Peak. Second place in that school was won by grade 3. section 14, which Is taught by Miss lony Biair. Treats Won In Reld school the ice cream and cake was won by grade 4, room 5, (continued on Page 5) Benito .Mussolini like them by Italian patriots after! peoples trial." They shared his final disgrace as thev had the infamy of his life. ment as nis f ilth ana Eighth armies were stampeding through north Italy. The Brit ish captured Venice. Jugoslav ian forces were reported fight ing In the streets of Trieste to ward which the British Eighth army was driving only 58 miles away. The Americans took Ales sandria in northwest Italy and the British took Chiaggl In the north .east on the Adriatic sea. - Reach Piavo Klver . . As New Zealanders of the poly glot Eighth reached the Plave river, 17 miles northeast of Venice, radio Belgrade reported Marshal Tito's forces had entered Trieste. In northwest Italy, American Fifth army forces raced north ward 40 miles from Genoa to cap lure Alessandria,' halfway along thcrhighway from Genoa to Turin. That put them within 78 miles of the French frontier, where French forces had crossed into Italy. The only sign of German resist ance was. at the northern end of Lake Garda, where the nazis were battling to keep open the Brenner pass, au miles to the north. A com munique described the resistance as fairly heavy." ' liout Continues But elsewhere the rout of the beaten nazi armios in north Italy continued. One entire German di vision the 148th infantry divi sion surrendered to the Brazilian troops fighting with the Fifth army. Negotiations continued for the surrender of the Italian Llgurian army of captured Marshal Rodolfo urazianl, and estimated five divi sions numbering perhaps 50,000 troops. In historic, canallaeed Venice the Eighth army joined hands with Italian partisans and com pleted the moppingup of the city. Eighth army units already were 17 miles beyond Venice at points within 70 miles of both the Yugo slav and Austrian borders. Nothing to Worry About, So Nippons Don't Worry (Ily UnlUd Prons) Tokyo radio said today that fires caused by American air raids would contribute to public morale by destroying private property. Destruction of private property relieves Individuals of worry over personal eflecls the Japanese ex plained. Mussolini died badly." said Edouardo, leader of the lO-man firing squad which sent the dicta tor to 'his death. When he was Sentenced to death, the man who had ruined his career through Illusions of empire ironically cried, "Let me save my life, and I will give you an empire." "No, no," were the last words from II Duce, who had said "yes, i yes" so many time to his axis part ner, Adolf Hitler. He cried his "no's" as the men of the firing squad raised their rifles to their shoulders. The execution tdok place at 4:20 p.m. Saturday near the town of Dongo, on Lake Como. Musso lini was killed at the villa where he had been living since their ar rest last Friday night with Clara Petacci, the Roam doctor's daugh ter who wanted to be a movie star. Mussolini, the "Jackal" to the ast, wa.s C2"?M as "cmpted it r uwiiiiniiu ill a wv("i convoy, his bulky frame cloaked in a German military overcoat to i escape detection. International Harmony i j mill-in majggyMi w v It-1 o r. ' pi ' O - (TV Secretary of State Edward Stettlnlus, his arm about the waist ot Secre tary of Foreign Affairs Anthony Eden, chat with smiling CommlMar Molotov during a lull In a plenary session of the San Francisco Cunterenc. Oregon S fate Killed in Weiser Gun Battle Dick O'Brien, Former Bend Resident and for A Number of Years Burns Police Chief, Hurt Weiser, Ida., April 30 (IIP) Two men were killed and three wounded in a gun battle Sunday in a Weiser school base ment as law enforcement officers attempted to capture two rortianu men allegedly caught "Nampa, Idaho. 1 he dead were Sgt. Ted Chambers, Oregon state policeman of Ontario, Ore., formerly of Prairie City in Grant county, and William Ronald Duffey, 22, one of the fugitives. The wounded were Richard N. O'Brien, Ontario state police officer formerly of Bend, Ore., Chief of Police Clarence Saunders of Weiser and the second fugitive, Ken neth Bailey, 26. Deputy Sheriff Al Wanter of Washington county said he, O'Bri en, Saunders and Chambers traced the men to the school and were fired upon as they entered the basement, where the two hid In a coal bin. Killed Instantly Sergeant Chambers was killed Instantly, Officer O'Brien was shot in the shoulder, and Chief Saun ders in the arm. Saunders was then captured by the bandits and used as protection when the fugi tives broke from the cellar. Fierce gunplay continued as the two ran through a nearby field, using Saunders as guard. Rifle fire from officers finally dropped (continued on Page 2) 'I heard Mussolini was arrested and taken to a villa near Dongo," said Edouardo, who commands all the partisan forces south of the Po. "None of us wanted Musso lini to be freed or escape to Switz erland so I sent 10 men with an officer to Dongo. "Mussolini was In the cottage on the hill with Slgnorina Petac ci. When he saw Italian officers coming to him, he thought they had come to free him and he em bniced his sweetheart. "When he understood he was going to be tried he was shocked. But our men gave them both a trial and condemned them death." to i I Then It was that Mussolini, who had dealt death to so many others. offered the empire he didn't hive In exchange for his life. Hut firing squad -men from the 52nd Garibaldi brigade went ahead with the execution, there at the villa on the hill. Mussolini did not wear a blind fold. As the squad raised their rifles, he cried "No, no." A second later he fell from a bullet that entered his left forehead. (NEA T.lwAoloJ Police Cfffic icer stea niir tfiiso ine Saturday in Nazi Enslavement Not Soviets' Aim Moscow, April 30 (IP) The red army has posted notices In Berlin denying that Russia intends either to destroy or enslave the German people, a dispatch to the news paper Pravda said today. "We have not and cannot have such Idiotic aims," the notices were quoted as saying. Pravda said soviet military commandants already have taken over administration of the occu pied districts of Berlin. The commandants poslcd no tices denying "the false asser tions of na.l propaganda that the red army intends to destroy the whole ticrman nation, Pravda said. Orders Given "We request the population to submit to the established regime of order and unfailingly to exe cute all orders of authorities," the notices said. Pravda said thousands of civil ians emerged from underground hideouts and caves in the rubble of the capital to read the notices. Later, they lined up at the com mandants' offices to Inquire how to establish themselves. Japs to Fight On, Asserts Paper Tokyo, April 30 HI1) The Tokyo newspaper, Nippon Sancvo Kelzai. said editorially today that Japan will fight on regardless of chanees In Europe "If it means 10,000,000 (M) lives." "Fuehrer Hitler and other nnzl leaders iipprar determined to make their death stand in Berlin," the editorial said. "Such being the case, we need not wait for the en emy to tell us the worst. We must make every, preparation to meet the future." The Domel news agency broad cast of the editorial was heard by the FCC. Envoy Believed Ready to Yield Nazi Empire Himmler Is Reported ' In Role of Emissary, To Give Up Country London, April 30 (lP A neutral intermediary was reported en route back to Stockholm today with Helnrlch Himmler's reply to ainea demands tnat Germany sur render to Russia as well as to the United States and Britain. Most sources believed that it Himmler actualy has sent a reply, it will bo a decision to surrender , uermany unconditionally to all , three countries. They contended that he would not have made' the surrender offer to the United States and Britain alone in the first place if he had not been convinced of the utter hopelessness of Germany's posi tion. " The Evening News political cor- respondent said Prime Minister Churchill was understood to have returned to London from the country early today. The war cab inet win consider Himmler's re ply as soon as It is received, the aispaicn saia. . Rumors Heard '. Stockholm dispatches said the intermediary, Count Folke Bcrna dotte, director of the Swedish Red Cross, . met Himmler Sunday morning somewhere 5n Denmark. He was expected to leave Copen hagen for Stockholm sometime today, the dispatches said. ' -, With Germany "tottering on the brink of total collapse, rumors of ' developments within the shaken country and her still occupied neignDors came tnicK ana last from continental sources. All unconfirmed and many of them conflicting, they included: 1. Adolf Hitler is mad, dying or already dead. 2. German antl-nazl partisans kidnaped Foreign Minister Joa chim von Rlbbcntrop. , 3. German sailors mutinied at the Baltic port of Rostock and are engaged in fierce fighting with SS troops. Meeting Held 4. A representative of Dr. Ernst Kaltenbrunner, Himmler's deputy ior uavaria ana Austria, is meet ing with Swiss officials at Vaduz, capital of neutral Leichtenstein. The subject of the negotiations was not disclosed, but may in volve the surrender of further portions of Germany or Austria. 5. German army and nazi lead ers In Denmark are ready to ca pitulate and vithdraw their troops. 6. The Quisling government In Norway resigned. London newspapers predicted the end of the European war was only days away. The London Dally Mall said it may end at any hour. Much of the situation was ex pected to be clarified by Church II In commons this week, nerhans Tuesday. He met with his cabinet as usual yesterday. Count Bermadotte presumably gave Himmler, gestapo chief, In terior minister and possibly act ing fuehrer of Germany, the Anglo-American refusal to make a separate peace with Germany at their purported meeting In Den mark Sunday. Offered Hitler A Stockholm dispatch to the London Daily Express said Himm ler's original offer, made last Tuesday, called for the surrender of Hitler dead or alive along with himself and other high nazis to the western allies. BULLETINS Paris, April .10 (IP) American Seventh army forces today cap tured Munich, birth"' re of nazlsm, Germany's It city, and the most formidable out post of the nazis' "national re doubt" in the Alps. London, April 30 IP) The Ex change Teh-graph recorded s Radio Hamburg broadcast to night which said that "at any moment the enemy's flag may fly over Berlin." Washington, April SO IP The United States today re fused to recognize the so-called new Austrian provisional gov. ment set up In soviet-occupied Vienna.