UnlV of Of t J" ; J 1 r7 Save Tires . To keep he wair pfogrm rolling on rubber, drive carefully, recap " in time, maintain a car pool. 7 THE IfflB Mirnr..ir JLLm J II A) A Volume Llll CENTRAL OREGON'S -DAILY NEWSPAPER EOT Weather ' Forecast Scattered clondlneas'and mild la : day. Increasing cloudiness tonight and Wednesday. Cooler Wednes day- t.... . . THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY; MAY 1, 1945 Tankmen Drive East in Austria To Meet Reds German Redoubt May IS l " II ' ce vut in i wo; ike Compliments Seventh ' Paris, May 1 ip The American Third army thrust across the Aus trian border at a new point north of the Danube today in a powerful drive to link up with Russians and cut the southern redoubt in two. Third army tanks cracked Into Austria near Ober 'Kappel, 14 miles east of the border fortress of Passau, 27 miles northwest of Linz and 83 miles from red army forces west of Vienna. To the north, the British Sec ond army broke out of its Elbe river bridgehead and stormed within 22 miles of the Baltic port of Luebeck in a new push de signee: to spilt the northern re doubt and seal off Denmark. Hamburg Flanked The British were flanking Ham. burg on the east and either had or were about to cut the Ham burg-Berlin superhighway, main German east-west- communica tions link In the northern re doubt. Marshal Sir Bernard I Mont gomery's attack coincided with European reports that the Ger mans were about to quit Den mark. I A London Evening Standard dis patch from Stockholm said Ger man troops already were with drawing from Copenhagen. Other Swedish dispatches said the Ger mans were expected to turn back administration of the country to King Christian today. Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch's American Seventh army complet ed the occupation of Munich, cradle of nazidom and capital of Bavaria, last night against sur prisingly light resistance. Army Congratulated - Gen.Qwigjit , S)., ,. KlsenJiQww sent a message of congratulations to the Seventh army on the seiz ure of what he called the "cradle of the nazi beast." . Gen. Jacob . L. Devers, com mander of the Sixth army group, hailed the conquest of Munich as a victory that "may well affect the final stages of the war to a degree second only to (the cap ture of) Berlin." The population of. Munich was so relieved that the war was over for them that they greeted the Seventh army with cheers and garlands of flowers, United Press War Correspondent Eleanor Pack ard reported. Nazi bigwigs long since had fled. A few small fry locked them selves in a cluster of party build ings, but they were surrounded and helpless. Parlor Devastated The famous beer cellar where Adolf Hitler and his nazi hench men plotted the putsch that brought them control of Germany and ultimately most of Europe was in a portion of the city devas tated by allied bombs, Mrs. Pack ard said. There also was no Immediate word on the fate of the Bavarian patriots who revolted against their nazi overlords last weekend and seized temporary control of the Munich radio station. - NO... 125 Count Confers With Himmler London, . May 1 ip Count Koike Bernadotte, Swedish emis sary reputed to be negotiating with nazi leaders for Germany's surrender, confirmed today that he had conferred with Heinrich Himmler 10 days ago.' A Swedish foreign office spok esman insisted, however, that Bernadotte had not brought back any new peace message from Himmler to be transmitted to the Allies through the Stockholm government. Bernadotte partly lifted the se crecy covering his recent activi ties during a press conference late today in the Swedish foreign office in Stockholm. Details Withheld He refused to give details of any of his discussions with Him mler, beyond the fact that they had met 10 days ago in the Baltic port of Luebeck obviously to dis cuss the Allied demand that Ger many surrender unconditionally 'o the United States, Britain and Russia. Bernadntto nnrt ho fnreten of fice spokesman emphasized that o new reply from Himmler naa een transmitted to the Allies through the Swedish government today a statement which did not preclude the possibility of Berna aotte's communicating direct with he Allied embassies in Stockholm. Berlin Says Hifler Dead J'., . fl ,; ( ' ' yA" - - a $ iiii.-llfZlZ Sol Hitler Reported Killed London, May 1 (U.P.) The German radio an nounced tonight that Adolf Hitler had been killed at a command post in the middle of the ruins of his once proud capital of Berlin. Admiral Karl Doenitz. chief of- the German navv. takes over the leadership of the nation, the enemy broadcast said. Apparently the Germans, beaten to their knees by the Russians and the western allies, plan to go on fighting for a while. Doenitz called on the nation to continue resistance. ". . , . , There was a mournful dirge of music on4 the Ham burg radio tonight and then the announcer said : f . Announcer speaks ;. "It is announced that our fuehrer. Adolf Hitler. this afternoon at his command post in the reichschan cellory, fighting till his last breath against bolshevism. fell for Germany." The text of the German radio report as from the fuehrer's headquarters: "It is announced that our fuehrer, Adolf Hitler, this afternoon at his command post in the reichschan cellory, fighting till his last breath against bolshevism, j tell tor Germany. , "On April 30 the fuehrer appointed Admiral of the leet Doenitz his successor. The admiral and succes sor of the fuehrer now speaks to the German people. timer i .aimed "German men, women and soldiers of the wehr- macht: ' ' .M iSittt "Our fuehrer, Adolf Hitler has fallen. "In the deepest sorrow and reverence the German people bow, - . te He recognized the terrible danger of bolshevism at an early date, and dedicated his existence to this struggle. . "The end of this, his struggle, and of his unswerv ing path of life is marked by his heroic death in the capital of the reich." ignt Not over There was no immediate reaction or confirmation from allied capitals, but Doenitz made it clear that the Russians, Americans and British still had some fight ing ahead of them before Germany would quit. He is sued a proclamation saying: "Fighting now is going on to save the German people. We shall have also to fight on against the Anglo-Americans." ' Doenitz described himself as head of the state and commander-in-chief of the wehrmacht. Data Awaited If, as the Germans said, Hitler died fighting at a command post in blazing Berlin, the details of his death probably will come from the Russians. i eruoini c ir -tt V , Allied Forces Invade Borneo Island Troops Strike At Stronghold In Night Hours Tokyo Reports Tierce Combat1 Raging; Naval Units Give Assistance Manila. May 1 (IP) An allied In vasion of Borneo,. Japan s biggest and richest Island conquest In thei rauuic, was unnuunceu oy au tralian government officials In Canberra today. , . . A Canberra dispatch relayed to the United Press In Manila said Australian Treasurer J. B. Chief ley announced the invasion of Borneo to the commonwealth leg islature today. Chief ley said Australian troops participated in the, landing. Indi cating that American invasion forces also were Involved. , There was no immediate con firmation at Gen. Douglas Mac Arthur's headquarters, but an earlier Tokyo broadcast said al lied troops were pouring ashore on the east coast of the immense ly rich oil and rubber-producing island in the Dutch East Indies. Navy Action Reported -The Japanese broadcast said the troops went ashore last night un der cover of a naval bombard ment In the Tarakan area, 175 miles southwest of American bas es at the southern end of the Sulu t arahlpelago. .? s 1 ,w i ne ji araxan area one pnne largest oil centers - in tne Jiast Indies. Tarakan itself, however, is a comparatively small island In the Celebes sea several miles off the east coast of Borneo. Tokyo said the invasion forces landed late at night and were en gaged in "fierce combat" by thei Japanese garrison. Although the) reponea invasion sue was nor given, it presumably was in the wide delta area on the eastern shore opposite Tarakan.- A previous landing! attempt was made at noon yesterday, the broadcast said, but was repulsed. Bomlied Repeatedly Borneo, the world's third largest island covering 392,000 square miles, and particularly Tarakan have been bombed repeatedly since Gen. Douglas MacArthur's American forces swept through tne southern r'nuippines. The Tawi Tawi base at the southern end of the Sulu archi pelago is only 30 miles frqm the northeast corner of Borneo while American-controlled Palawan, in the southwestern Philippines, is but 180 miles from the northwest corner. Borneo, with a population of ap proximately 2,300,000, is . 325 miles east of the Malay peninsula. 550 miles southeast of French In-do-China and Is flanked around the south by Sumatra, Java and Celebes. Its oil. rubber and other natur al resources were vastly exploited by the. Japanese, XJ 'Cij - V -ft I " MUSES iliiialiMiiiiHiiiii BALAMIANGAh !l!lil!!!PliS!tttii1SI miitiWitiiitUiUii Am bona li iHi: m Ui 84 !!! it t uttiitir,;. BRITISH NORTH! Ll4i antHUiual, ' HSANDAKAKi'! mm in "".'"-iiiiir l BI S! i! i iAmbonoW I iiiiiliH(-U!!H''fil!rtUntinlMtnJl" . ' J r i n r i i i i ii in iirr mmt i t t - tsnmntevs&vsMainaia fnw- JSL MSouth China Sec ! lilT-L MM ' I anus "wild animals lodudj ws'tCEssiEM r pontTanak : -- "BlfXS Aftat fW-. ' , 4gmgS W BORNEO mAi, F7 W&L . VM& ' V(DUTCH) JS ' tyKandoTaB ' nt' - ' 290,000 H-ml. Borneo, the world's third largest island, was Invaded last nlght'by the allies, it was announced from Tokyo and Canberra today. First landings were made at Tarakan, on the northeastern coast, r Admiral Horhy Found by Yanks With U. S. Seventh Army in Germany, May 1 ut Admiral Nicholas Horthy, ex regent of Hungary, has been found by American Seventh army troops at Weilheim in southwestern Ger many and has been placed in "protective custody," It was an nounced today. U. S. Troopers Near Naha, Okinawa Capital; Sky Forfs Start Big Fires in Tokyo Arsenal By Frank Trcmaine jUraway, loio., were nrlng shells. last Saturday. (Umtd rrew war t-orresponneni, ,mo anui i irom a niu one mile Guam. May 1 IIP American! north of the city, the dispatch troops swept within two miles ot sain. 110,000 Prisoners Freed From Camp Moosburg, Germany, May 1 UP) The 110,000 prisoners of this great camp won a battle of will and wits from their German captors. By their own firm attitude and self-discipline the prisoners con vinced their captors they would not be bent to their will. . When the 47th tank battalion, commanded by Lt. Col. James W. Lamm, Amory, Miss., entered the camp, Its members were amazed by the Iron discipline and mili tary appearance of all the pris oners. The prisoners cheered. They yelled. They nearly stood on their heads. But when enlisted men talked to officers they saluted, and at all times they carried them selves like soldiers. Much of this was the work of Col. Paul R. Goode, former West Point instructor from Corvallis, Ore., who was captured at Fuid pass in North Africa. , Goode never let his fellow pris oners forget they were soldiers. The 11,000 Americans here work ed just as if they were a division, and their organization was even broken down into regiments and battalions. There were regular inspections of the enlisted men's barracks each Saturday. There were 29,000 prisoners In Mooshurg Itself, and the rest of the 110,000 were spread In smaller camps in the immediate neignnor-hood. Naha, capital of Okinawa, today and brought Its northeastern out post of Shuri under direct tank fire. The two-pronged drive, support ed by an unceasing air-land-sea bombardment was paced by the Confessed Slayer Held in Seattle Seattle, May 1 UB Joe Bill, 33-year-old confessed slayer of five-year-old Irma Irene McGough, to day was transferred from the Tokyo radio meantime renortpd ' city Jail to the county Jnii to pre- that American Superfortresses; vent an attempt at suicide, raided Kyushu, southernmost of Detective Cant. James Law- Elements of the seventh division ! Japan's home islands, for the fifth rence said "he's been wanting to also continued to push down the eastern coast and were reported closing in on Yonabaru airfield, consecutive day today In an at-ido away with himself ever since tempt to neutralize the bases from we put him in jaiL" which the Japanese have been Prosecutor Lloyd Shorett said five miles across the Island from j launching suicide aerial attacks on I Bill would be arraigned Friday on tne Okinawa area. ! first degree murder charges. He The report was not confirmed. I was arrested Saturday after a although the 21st bomber com- week-long search. He admitted he mand announced that the hip! raped and strangled the child Naha. The Japanese still were fighting 27th armv division which overran j bitterly from strong defenses clus Machinato airfield and pushed Into ; tered around the capital. An ar- the strong Japanese defenses on my spokesman estimated that j B-29's started huge fires yesterday ' April 22. leaving her body in a the northern outskirts oi -ana. jmoie man i,uu jdiwnese were in tne Tachikawa army air ar-! charity salvage center warehouse. A front dispaicn oiseios uwi mut-u iiiraiunn unuiduain me senai near iokyo and at llama- Victory News To Be Released By Churchill London, May 1 UP) The home office announced today that when news of the end of hostilities in Europe is made public. It will bo done by Prime Minister Churchill in a radio broadcast. An official announcement said that on the evening of the day the news is broadcast, King George will speak over the radio at 9 p.m. Churches of all denominations will be open for prayer, and church bells will be rung through out the country. At the express wish of the king, the Sunday after the announce ment will be a day of thanksgiv ing and prayer In Britain. Bend Lieutenant FDR Honor Guard Lt. George Chambers, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. George Chambers, Sr., 1G55 West Second street, was a member of the honor guard at the funeral services in Washing ton and at Hyde Park for Presi dent Roosevelt, he has written his parents. The young officer had been called to the special duty from Quantlco, Va., where he is stationed with the marines. At that time George was a staff serg eant, but he received his lieuten ant's rating on April 25. Lt. Chambers was a graduate of 1940 from the Bend high school, and had spent two years at the Oregon State college. Sherman tanks of the 9btn aivi- last u nours. matsu, 60 miles southeast of Na- LAVAL AT BORDER slon. pushing down the center oi , me Japanese also were report- j goya. Zurich, May 1 (IP) Pierre Laval, the Island shelling Shuri, second . ed to have-placed expert riflemen I It was the first Superfortress Marcel Deat and Jean Luchairc, citv of Okinawa, three miles . in strategic spots. One regimental I raid on Hamamatsu. which waRlleadini? collaborationists riurine northeast of Naha. oincer saio ine Japanese snarp- j picked as an alternate target when the nazi occupation of France, ar- ton, Calif The tanks, Irom a piaioon com-1 n o a i e r s snoi nve mencans weatner closed in over Tachikawa I rived at Hoechst on the manded by Lt. Robert B. Lyons, ' through the head with five shots I during the attack. border today. Man Confesses ' He Killed Wife Oregon City, May 1 Ui A life Imprisonment sentence Is to be Imposed tomorrow on Wilmer Carl Brinkhoff, 29, who pleaded guilty to the poisoning of his wife last July. His plea Monday of guilty to second degree murder makes the life Imprisonment mandatory. His confession states that he emptied capsules of a headache remedy and refilled them with strychnine. His wife, Wilma Lcn ora, 27, died several days after taking the powders. Suspected at the time of his wife's death, Brinkhoff went free until arrested last month In Stock- on a forgery charge. Sgt; Detaney, 22, Is War Victim TSgt. Emmett C. DeLaney, 22, son of Mr. and Mrs. Chris De Laney, 1015 Hartford avenue, fiend, died on April 19 of wounds received In action In Germany, his parents have been notified by the war department. ' No details of the action in which Emmett was fatuity injured were contained in the telegram. The young sergeant was serving with a tank battalion, attached to the Ninth army. Emmett was graduated from Rosholt, S. D., high school In 1941, and came to Bend In April, 19-12. Ho was employed by The Shevlln Hlxon Company, in the box fac tory, up until his induction Into the army in January, 1943. Em mett trained at Kudkur, Ala., and at Fort Knox, Ky., and took part in the maneuvers on the Arizona desert in 1943. Aside from his parents, Emmett is survived by two sisters, Ardella DeLaney and Violet Nentl: one brother-in-law, Alfred Nentl, and over the Moscow radio for NBC, World Awaits News of Fall Of Foe Capital Citadel Reported Ready For Collapse; Hitler Believed Still in City London, May 1 (Ui-Dylng Ber lin tottered on the brink of defeat . today and nazi broadcasts said Adolf Hitler was fighting in the midst of his soldiers defending the capital to the end.. . . The Moscow radio said the Rus sians expected the -red army to complete the conquest of Berlin In time for a May day announce ment. Already the soviet banner was flying over the relchstag and other administrative bulldlncs In the heart of the city . . ; A nazi broadcast recorded to night by the Exchange Telegraph said that at midday Hitler was fighting among his soldiers, with bloody struggles whirling through the streets around him. Hitler In Berlin Count Folke Bernadotte, reput- . ed intermediary between the al lies and the nazut, said in Stock holm, according to the Swedish, radio, that he was sure Hitler was In Berlin, but did not know wheth er he was alive or dead. ' Marshal Stalin Issued a speclaL. order of the day announcing that Rokossovsky. had captured the 1.1. 11 1 1 A. . C. a-. I 1 . uiK name nTL ui oirainumii-isv i'- lating the northernmost tip of Germany. - i . Meanwhile, both the Germans and Russians hinted broadly that the end of the Berlin siege was In sight. The Hamburg radio said tonight that ceaseless soviet on slaughts had made the situation ' in the capital "still more acute." The garrison, pressed together in a narrow space, is "throwing in its last ounce of strength to repel heavy attacks and main tain the coherent character of their defensive front," the broad cast said. .Soviets Gain "In spite of their gallant de fense, deep soviet penetrations could not be prevented." Russian and German reports alike indicated an imminent de cision amidst the blood-soaked rubble of Berlin, where the red army was hewing out its greatest symbolic victory of the war. The German highcommand joined the chorus of nazi claims that Adolf Hitler was in Berlin. Its communique said that "In the , heart of Berlin the gallant garri son, gathered closely around the fuehrer, Is defending itself against superior soviet forces." If Hitler were there, he appeared doomed to certain death or capture by the Russians. All Moscow broadcasts and dis patches reflected confident ex pectation that Marshal Stalin would cap Moscow's first glitter ing May day celebration of the wur with an announcement that Berlin had fallen. City's Fall Expected Robert Magldoff, broadcasting two nieces, Franclel and Nannette Nentl, of Bend. Sgt. DeLaney had been over seas for one yeur. A requiem high mass for Sgt. DeLaney will be celebrated at St. Francis Catholic church in Bend said the Russian people expected the announcement of Berlin's fall tonight. Reports lagging well behind the course of the struggle in the heart of Berlin said the Russians had battled onto Unter Den Linden Thursday morning, at 8 o'clock. I against faltering resistance. Drastic Cut in Sugar Rations Faces Americans Rest of Year Swiss Confession followed his return to I Oregon for further Investigation Washington, May 1 IP) Sugar available to ration book holders and home cannors will be about one-third less than the amount alloted last year, It was announc ed today by three government agencies. The new sugar ration is fixed at 15 pounds annually for each In dividual compared to 24 pounds last year. In addition, sugar stamp 36 which becomes valid today must last for four months. It is good for five pounds of sugar. Home canners will receive alto gether only 70 per cent as much sugar this season as they receiv ed last year. Local ration boards will limit the amount of sugar for such purposes to 15 pounds for each individual compared to 20 pounds last year. The maximum amount available to any family will be 120 pounds. In addition, sugar allotments to , sandwich bars and soda fountains for coffee, other beverages and Ice cream are reduced 25 per cent from the November-December al lotment. Sugar allotments for hotels, schools, restaurants and other In stitutional users will be made on July 1. They will be considerably lower than present allowances. According to the agencies which , made the announcement the of fice of war information, office of price administration and war food administration the cut is drastic because "domestic reserves are at rock bottom." The 1945 carry-over at the end of the year Is expected to be only 3.000,000 tons, compared with 4, 100,000 tons for the end of 1944. At the same time world produc tion of sugar Is expected to be 100,000 tons less this year ahtn In 1944.