W4v of On Bonn Q' ft .V o s-j n O Keep 'Em Smiling P Tou cant beat an army that smilei. Make the smiles possible by buying war bonds. Volume LIU THE BEND BULLETI CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Weather Forecast Partly clcudy today, tonight and Thursday with occasional light rains west of Cascades tonight and Thursday. Cooler west portion. Jap Suicide Plane in DiveToward U.S.Warship fVKA THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY MAY 2, 1945 - 1 j 1 , limmm.m Ml of Telenhoto) This remarkable photo shows the pilot of a Japanese suicide plane seeking to maneuver his explosive-laden craft onto the deck of a D. S. Pacific Fleet warship. V nsuccessf ul, the plane crashed into the sea a lew sec onds after this picture was taken. ...... , Enemy Radio Hints of New Island Landing Manila, May 2 (IP) Tokyo radio reported today that about 5,000 allied troops had landed on Tar- akan island off the east coast of Borneo in what may be the sec ond invasion of that area. The enemy broadcast said the troops landed at Llngkas on Tar akan early Tuesday, about 12 hours after allied forces were said to have invaded Borneo it self. - Gen. Douglas MacArthur did not confirm either of the report ed landings although an official Australian announcement yester day said the Australian troops had taken part in a landing on the east coast of Borneo, world's third largest island. Is Oil Center Tokyo said the troops went ashore on Tarakan, an important oil center, at 6:30 a. m. yesterday after three cruisers and 13 de stroyer had bombarded the island consistently since last Friday. The broadcast claimed the Jap anese forces on the island were "holding secure to their positions, obstructing the enemy's advance." There was no further Japanese comment, however, on the report ed landing on Borneo in the Tar akan area. Allied headquarters here report ed that. only Dutch pilots, flying B-24 Liberator bombers, Joined the neutralization campaign against Borneo's airfields in at tacks Saturday and Sunday. British Invasion Unifs Storm ' Ashore Close to Rangoon -Reports Indicate Japs to Giyo Up Capital -Without Fight; French Battleship Assists - Calcutta, May 2 (TIE) British invasion forces stormed asnore in soutnern Burma only 20 miles south of Rangoon, chjjiuii ui me uccupiea critisn colony; today. The landing clamped a three-way pincers on Rangoon and brought the liberation of Burma and its supply roads to China to the climactic stage. The troops went ashore on both sides on the mouth of the rvangoon river in a aaring ampniDious thrust deep into Japanese-held Mataban gulf. Paratroops paved the way for the landings. They jumped from lnw . f 1 - w ...... w planes yesterday and knocked out defenses covering the in vasion beaches, a special southeast Asia command com munique revealed. Island Bombarded London Banners News on Hitler London, May 2 (IP) .Morning newspapers today generally "gre eted" the reported death of Adolf Hitler and bannered the news in the largest type used since Presl dent Roosevelt's death. The Daily Express, however, went a step further with a three column box headed "obituary." it said: "The Daily Express' rejoices to announce the report of Adolf Hit ler's death. It prints today every line of information regarding the manner of his death. "It wastes-no Inch of space on his career. The evil of his deeds are all too well known. It gives no picture of the world's most hated face. It records that Hitler was born Schikelgruber at Bran- au, Austria, April 20, 1883, and his days upon the earth he sought to conquer were too long." Annual Clean-Up of Premises In Bend Set for May 4 to 15 The period between May 4 and i as a clearing point for calls. Be. May 15 is to be set aside for the cause of a shortage of help and A British naval task force also supported the invasion with heavy air and sea bombardments of Great Nicobar island,' 675 miles southeast of Rangoon, and Port orders issued Blair in the Andaman islands 425 Alexander. NO. ?..! Austria Units. Also Included In Peace Pact I Immobilization of All Ground, Sea and Air V1 Forces of Foe Is Due 4 By Herbert G. Klnp ' (IWUil Prera War Cvrrmuontleni) (Reprcaonttnir Combined U. S. -PreM) 5. Royal Palace at Caserta, Neat Naples, May 2 till The German armies of northern Italy and west ern Austria formally surrenderee? to the allies today, effective at 8 a.m. EWT. 1 The surrender affects betweem 600,000 and 900,000 men command ed by Col. Gen. Helnrich von Viet inghoff and Gen. Karl Wolff, chief of police and security for northern Italy and western Aus tria. Lieut. Gen. W. D. Morgan, of the British army, who negotiated in behalf of Field Marshal sir Harold R. L. G. Alexander, su- Dreme commander in the Mediter ranean theater, said the terms "In effect are complete and unconal tinnnl surrender." The documents. were signea in; til roval Dalace here on faunaay Dy Morgan ana iwo uerniHn ur fleers, one of whom represented von Vietinghoff and the other Wolff. Thp surrender will permit the nlllpn to make an unhindered ad vance to within 10 miles of Adolf Hitler's former country home at Berchtesgaden. It also uncovers the flank of Col. Gen. von Lehr, commanding enemy troops in the Trieste area. The surrender documents were siffnpd in the presence of a group of allied officers which included Russians. Secret negotiations for the surrender have been going on far several days. The terms are the immediate immobilization and disarmament of enemy ground, sea and air forces. The surrender Imposes upon the German commander-in-chiel tne obligation to carry out any further py f ield Marsnai yinreimdleir Dim 126 Falls to Yanks Hamburg Field Marshall Karl Von Rund stedt, the man who battled the Allies from Normandy to the Rhine, has been captured by the Seventh army, in Germany', it was announced today. annual spring beautiflcation of f equipment, hauling service aena, it was announced today Dy the Bend chamber of commerce cleanup committee, headed by Carl E. Erickson, following a con ference of local haulers, commit tee members and city officials. inis period will give Bend resi dents two week-ends In which to and may not be immediately available, but it will be provided as quickly as possible, haulers promise. Haulers also ask home owners not to pile refuse and leaves on top of limbs. From city officials comes a reauest that all alleys be 'cleared of refuge, and that wood miles southeast of the occupied capital. Battleships, Including the French Richelieu, as. well as cruis ers and destroyers participated in the bombardment Monday. Tokyo Droaocasts said tne bombardment continued into a second day yes terday. Two small Japanese, craft sail ing from Rangoon to Moulmein were intercepted and destroyed by the naval forces. ' Japs Leaving City Other British ground troops plunging down from northern Burma cleared Pegu, the last nat ural defense barrier before Ran goon, and pushed to within 28 miles northeast of the capital. An other British column last was re ported 36 miles north of Rangoon. mere were indications that Rangoon, biggest port in Burma, might fall without major battle. Liberated prisoners and allied ci vilians who escaped from Japa nese custody said all Japanese senior officers and certain collab orators left the city some time ago. Von Vletlnghoff's command In cludes all of northern Italy to the Isonzo river and the Austrian provinces of Voralberg, Tyrol, Salzburg and parts of Corinthia and Styria. get their grounds and alleys in shape, the committee pointed out. Because of the shortage of help, gasoline and rubber, property owners and tenants are being asked by the committee to coo erate with haulers this season by burning as much trash as possible, Ipntrini, nnl.. I nnA tmhnmprl debris to be taken to the city At the same time, he stresses that dump. Careful burning, through j the greatest of caution must be the use of small fires at safe dis-i taken with even at . Present lances from h..lMinrrs or trees, i because of the unseasonably dr are being advised. No tires must ; spring weather. be Diled. Fire Chief LeRoy Fox was pres ent for 'the cleanup conierenea. Health Officer Names Aufranc Portland, Ore., May 2 ilP State health officer Dr. Harold M. Erick son announced today the appoint ANNOUNCEMENT MADE Washington, May 2 IP Presi dent Truman today announced the "unconditional surrender of all German forces in Italy. The president said that "the col lapse of military tyranny In Italy, however, is no victory in Italy alone, but a part of. the general triumph we are expectantly await ing on the whole continent of Europe." "Only folly and chaos can now delay the general capitulation of the everywhere defeated German armies," he said. The president Immediately sent messages to Field Marshal Sir Harold Alexander and Gen. Mark Clark, congratulating them for the "complete defeat of the Ger mans in Italy." At the same time he warned Japan to understand the full meaning of these events. Foe Field Marshal Taken By Yanks With Seventh1 Army in Ger- mnnv M:i 9 t ! PI An ImArlran tank crew surprised .teld Mar shal Karl von Rundstedt'-'at h'fs dinner table and oaptured the man who had battled the allies from Normandy to the Rhine, It was announced today. Von Rundstedt, twice command er of the German armies in the west since the allied invasion, was taken at 10 p. m. last night at Bad Tolz, a resort town south of Munich. He was having dinner with his wife and son, Hans Gerd, when a tank commanded by Lt. Joseph Burke (home town unknown) rumbled into the hospital grounds at Bad Tolz. Von Rundstedt, who was taking a health treatmont, was living In a house attached to the hospital. j Ready to Quit Von Rundstedt said he had not expected the Americans until the next morning. He told his captors he last saw Adolf Hitler on March 12th. Pfc. Herman Jobe, Warrens- burg, Ind., who drove von Rund stedt and his family to the prison er of war cage, said, "He seemed ready to surrender." The units which look Von Rund stedt were attached to the 3Cth division's 141st regiment, com manded by Col. Charles Owens. SLIGHTLY OVERDUE Portland, Me., May 2 miMrs. Eunice Dunn testified that the last time she saw her husband was 29 years ago when he left heron a Halifax, N. S., street after promising to "see yau later." She wants a divorce. Kiel Ports Cut Off In New Gains British Second Army Slashes to Baltic in Vicinity of Wismar Paris, May 2 (IP British Sec ond army troops were reported to have slashed to the Baltic at Wismar today, isolating the great ports of Hamburg and Kiel and reaching within some 30 miles of a junction with Russian forces sweeping westward along the coast. . Lightning advances by both British and Russian troops ap peared to have undermined the entire position of the nazis in northern Germany where Admir al Karl Doenjtz, the new self-proclaimed fuehrer, and the German high command were believed holed up. A. United Press dispatch from the Canadian First army front quoted a German prisoner saying Doenitz had ordered the German forces to cease fighting the west ern auieg and "withdraw east ward." .. .v.- j.-.u... Annies On Movtt . The apparent collapse of the uerman pocKet in the north coin cided with the onrush of two V. S. armies wedging deep Into the Ba varian sack and racing over the last 40-mlIe stretch before Berch. tesgaden against only spasmodic resistance. The British Second army thrust a spearhead to the Ba tic in lightning spurt of 30-odd miles, scaling off Denmark and the Schleswle-Holsteln finger of Ger many, a British correspondent re ported. me sixth airborne division sprinted to Wismar In a few hours, the front report said They were 58 miles northeast of Hamburg and about 30 miles from Rostock, In the area of which was the vanguard of the Second White Russian army. Gap Is Closiner Supreme headquarters said air men spotted swarms of motor transports fleeing northwestward to Denmark through the closing gap oeiow Luebeck. To the west, the U. S. Seventh army cracked through the Ger man defenses south of Munich to within 66 miles of Berchtesgaden and drove an armored spearhead less than nine miles from Inns bruck In a bid to seal off the Brenner pass escape road for the broken nazl forces in Italy. Far to the north, British Sec ond army troops are supporting American units closing fast on the Baltic seaport of Luebcck In a drive that carried more than 16 miles beyond their Elbe river bridgehead. Veteran of Co. I o 1.0; '"'.;.'!.' mm . v . "- Stalin Reveals Sgt. Ralph B. Matson, Co. I vet eran of south Pacific battles and son of Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Matson, Bend, has received a medical dis charge after more than four years of service. He was one of five brothers who served In U. S. forces. ' . Great Victory Lions, Elks Call For Volunteers "Workers are urgently needed to sort and pack clothing for United War Relief." That's the plea of the Lions-Elks committee In charge of the drive. At a three-hour work session last night Lions hardly' made a dent in the huge clothing col lection In Lydick's basement. Packing cases are also needed, Burt Stevens, In charge of last night's work, today hoped for at least 20 workers to start at 7:30 p.m. and issued a city-wide call to any who can spare an evening. Women could help In the sorting, he said, and the men could do the heavier packaging. Help Needed Committees In charge pointed out that the clothing Is to be packed and shipped this week but it will not be possible unless more volunteer help Is available. William Naylor, George Slmer- vlllo and son, Delbert Hale, Ed Volgt, O. G. Jacobsen, Frank Log gan and Stevens were those pres ent last night. MAY 1 WARM Bend yesterday experienced It's warmest weather of the year when the mercury mounted to 78 degrees as a May day sun crossed cloudless sky. The warm dav was followed by a mild night, with minimum of 37 degrees recorded before daylight. warm May weather continued In the northwest today, with a maximum of above HO degrees forecast for most points. Hitler Victim of Brain Hemorrhage, U. S. General Eisenhower Is Informed By Envoy IT.1' 1 I iV- w.n7.i ment of Dr. W. H. Aufranc as his LUIlHIICl UillVC, 04IU jmm. ed out that a city-wide cleanup is necessary at present if the fire hazard is to be reduced in the dangerous season just ahead Laval and Party Arrive in Spain Madrid, May 2 W Pierre Laval flew from Switzerland to Barce lona today, and the Spanish eov- 1 Ul Ul. I'l , I ItlS Mt'Il 1 J 1 , , , , .., ...1 . , of the state's venereal, 5""' '. . " ' rnntrnl nrnoram in ; """" " " """ J assistant. Dr. Aufranc, a United States public health officer, has been in charge disease control program once. T aval fn-mn. Vint... .f hv FrirUunn. rwwitlv tnarto lnl ' . . . " ' ul i....r,i. -i.i. government, Marcel Deal, an 1943, and fills the post vacated ; health chief. ' other ardent collaborationist, and ? leit burning alter aarn, n ij stressed. Bend earbaee collectors andi other hauTerTare prom sing full barred when the hazard Increases, cooperation the rommittee. An inspection of local property Bned1ambe?Tcom: by firemen will follow the end of merce office is being designated I the cleanup period. In addition to continuing the Wih- iJ1" . No fire permits will be required VD control program, Dr. Aufranc ; Barcelona aboard a German Junk- rs 88. The party was reported waiting tr. hum at nresent. but it is ex-1 win assume airection oi tne coun niH that all burning will be' ty health units. London, May 2 UP) Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said today that there was some evidence that hemorrhage instead of a hero's j death in battle as the nazis j claimed. The statement by Eisenhower i was the first from any allied of ficial to shed light on the mystery or Hitler s reported death. Eisenhower said the enemy claim that Hitler died fighting the Kusslans In Berlin was In con tradiction of facts" given by Hein- ncn Himmler at a conference with Count Folke Bernadotte of Swe den at Luebeck eight days ago. Himmler and a General Schll lenbrug, who accompanied him to the conference, said Hitler had a brain hemorrhage and might not live 48 hours, Elsenhower said In a statement Issued through su preme headquarters In France. Even though this version of Hitler's death was based on nazl information, It had the merit of Retirement of Pearl Emken. I at V hot ,, TVh.a, " -s I 1""""' " na.a .lne m.pr" "I for 7.0 voarc a Hata u.orj j - " - " i-uiiung 10 tisennower mrougn lor At years a btate Board ol , mrt. wn m, iMc nn (mm m J d. 3... . Health employe in various capaci- drld on what should K do ,7,. f:J rvt? ties, also was announced. them. . .L"u. ' "T' , uii.c it, uic CTjiiuiiiui vt:j siuji if mil I '''' ' '.'J Grand Admiral Karl Doenlta in the melodramtlc account broad cast by the Hamburg radio yesterday. Himmler admitted that Ger many was finished, Elsenhower said In the official confirmation of the Luebeck conference. Elsenhower said the radio state ment by Admiral Karl Doenitz, an nouncing Hitler's death and pro claiming himself as his successor, represented an attempt to drive a wedge between the Russians and Anglo-American. The attempt was doomed to failure, he said, be cause "nothing can change the agreed operations of the allied armies." Doenitz was reported already to have ousted Joachim von Rib- lientrop as foreign minister In what may be the first move to ward trying to save Germany from furthering battering. Radio Hamburg said Doenllz had appointed Count L u d w I g .-tcnwpnn von KrosigK, S8-year-old nephew of the late Kaiser Wll helm, to the foreign ministership. The move, coming only 24 hours after the same station announced that Adolf Hitler had been killed at his "command post In Berlin" yesterday, broke up the all nazl front In the top German ministries. As Guns Boom Siege Described as One Of History's Bloodiest; , -General Gives Up Arms ' London, May 2 (UP) The red army captured Berlin today.- I ' . Marshal Stalin announced the capture of Berlin, the red army's greatest victory of the war, in a triumphant order of the day broadcast from Mos cow. Berlin fell to the Russians after 12 days of siege. Two Russian armies smashed into the city from the east and south and slugged through its historic streets in what nazis -and Soviets alike described as one of the bloodiest struggles in history. " ... The. fall of Berlin meant that the Russian siege forces had overrun Adolf Hitler's reichschaneelleryr'wief e ;ther ' nazis said he died in, battle yesterday.5 . ' :ri ' Evidence Expected The first reports from Mos cow did not indicate what the Soviets found at the reichs- chancellory, but it appeared probable that their discovery must have included evidence positive or negative of the accuracy of the nazi report that Hitler died in battle. Stalin's order he has is sued more than 300 during the war was addressed to all the forces of the red army and the navy. Remnants of the Berlin gar rison headed by General Wes- ling laid down their arms and surrendered at 3 p.m., Stalin said. Stalin, calling Berlin the center of German imperialism and nest of German aggres sion, said it was captured by the First White Russian army of Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov and the First Ukranian army of Marshal Ivan S. Konev. 70,000 Captured More than 70,000 prisoners were taken in the battle of Berlin, Stalin's order revealed. The fall of Berlin came as the pockets of nazi resistance in north Germany along the Baltic and in south Germany around the Bavarian Alps were reported collapsing. Al lied armies were racing at will through the last enemy posi tions. Some high military authori ties, including Lt. Gen. Kurt Dittmar, former spokesman for the German high com mand, believed that nnzi re sistance could not last long after the full of Berlin. Noose. Tightened Perhaps as clearly as any other battle of the war, the progress in the fight for Ber lin was revealed by both sides. Although details were skimpy, the tightening of the soviet noose of strangulation was made evident day by day in both Russian and German re ports. Only a few minutes before Marshal Stalin anounced the capture of the city, the Ger man radio said the siege was nearly over. ENVOY ARRIVES Washington, May 2 ilPu-The new Argentine ambassador to the United States, Oscar Ibarra Gar cia, arrived here today.