i4&aaiiij tftu of Or flhrwt .3 THE fienc Cleanup This Is spring cleanup' week in Weather Forecast Mostly clear today, tonight and Sunday but with occasional tog night and mottling. Little tem perature change. Bend. Are you doing your bit to S?.-.- beautify the city? CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume Llll THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, MAY 5, 1945 NO. 129 QUIT sir ft.'. -A'- AIR FLEETS STRIKE JAPAN 3 TIMES IN ONE DAY SIRMAHS m SOUTH . EU ROPE " w . r w ,Tr -sr. . "vr i.' k .. . - w . -t? ,w . -ft A 3 Nips Repulsed In Bloody Fight On Okinawa Enemy Makes Attempt To Land Behind Lines Of Americans on Isle Guam, May 5 on Some 300 U. S. Superforts today smashed back at the Japanese homeland in a triple attack against bases of enemy suicide planes and ships which sunk five American light surface units in the costliest air and sea battle of the Okinawa campaign. The American ships were sunk and several others damaged in a futile but bloody attack yesterday by Jap' ships and planes shortly after some 600 Japanese troops attempted four amphibious land ings on Okinawa behind U. S. lines. The suicide attacks cost the enemy more than 54 planes, 15 suicide boats and the bodies of more than 300 soldiers strewn along the beaches and in the wat ers off the east and west coasts. Set New Mark For the first time in Superfort history the B-29s hit Japan proper three times im one day, with a total of 17 airfields on Kyushu under attack. f f .The latest strike was, carried 2Vou) late' "tills afternoon 'against cniran idusuki ana Kanoya air fields on Kyushu by some 50-B-29s. Earlier between 150 and 200 of the big bombers attacked the Hiro aircraft plant, five miles east of the great Kure naval base on southern Honshu. From 25 to 50 Superforts in an early-morning raid hit Oita and .Tachiarai air fields on Kyushu. Superfort crews on all missions bombed visually from medium altitudes. Ships Gave Aid A dispatch from United Press correspondent Edward L. Thomas aboard Adm. Richmond K. Tur ner's flagship said amphibious tanks and shore defenses joined with guns of the U. S. fleet and patrol craft to cut down the Jap anese as they waded onto the! Okinawa beaches in their land-l ing attempts. l he Japanese made 14 separate attacks with some 70 planes on our fleet between 7:45 a. m. and 9:15 a. m. yesterday, with some of the aircraft diving from as high as 25,000 feet. Fifty-four of the attackers were destroyed 12 by ships' guns, 30 by combat air patrol and 12 in suicide chases. The insane fury of the Japan ese attack was such that two suicide boats inexplicably rammed Keise island, Thomas said. The boats slammed head-on into rocks and blew harmlessly. Taps Make Claims (Radio Tokyo in broadcasts re corded by United Press in Sari Francisco claimed the suicide units Friday sank one large and one small aircraft carrier, two battleships, two cruisers and a destroyer with five damaged.) Meanwhile, on the southern Okinawa land front, marines were comparing the fighting with the costly battle for bloody nose ridge on Peleliu. Marine pilots said the Jap antiaircraft fire in rear areas was increasing rather than decreasing. Gunman at Vale Held as Killer Vale, Ore., May 5 IP Indict ment of Kenneth Bailey, 26, on charges of first degree murder In the gun battle killing of Sgt. Ted Chambers of the Oregon state po lice was returned here late yester day. Chambers was killed and two other officers were wounded in a gun battle last Sunday at Weiser, Idaho. Bailey was wounded and his partner, Ronald Duffy, 22, as killed while attempting to escape across a field after the shooting. ( Bailey, who reportedly began jL.his crime career at the age of 13, "as wanted by Idaho state police fir disarming two officers at ampa, the day before the gun battle, when caught stealing gasoline. Quiet Again Reigns in Berlin; Barricades Being Removed Writer Describes Devastation,; Civilians Suffer Greatly; Nazi Troopers Register ' By Roman Karmen ' , . WRITTEN FOR UNITED PRESS (Copyright by United Preu. 19) - Berlin.'May 5 (U.E) The torn down today. Quiet reigns in the city. molishing the barricades which are present literally at every step. At many, intersections there are dug-in tanks and guns that are silent forever. Berliners, reassured, that irom cellars and moving their belongings back from the base ments to upper floors. Law and order prevail. Only now that the whole city is Need for Lumber In War Stressed By John W. Dunlap (United Preu Burt Corredpondent) Portland, Ore., May 5 up Ci vilian controls on lumber will be eased gradually in the next few months but the industry still faces a major production problem in Pacific war demands, national WPB lumber administrator J Philip Boyd said today. "Now that the war in Eurorje is ending, government will pro- viae me lumDer industry witn all the tools It needs, including equip ment, tires and manpower," Boyd said. "More than any other In dustries, lumber and textiles must work even harder in the shift of armies Into the Pacific, and I can say tnat both will be the 'fair haired boys'." . iV. , , . Eater to Assist Boyd said the lumber industry was eager to carry on the war ana stui assist in prompt recon version to permit civilian con struction. He added that an order ly lifting of civilian controls while keeping strict supervision over war demands would make it eas ier to resume competitive peace time production when the war ends. Boyd said military leaders es timated that 75 per cent of the European war equipment can be crated and redeployed to the Pa cific in the next six months. "The lumber industry faces in creased demands from the army and -navy, a relatively small cut back in the military program, ex tremely heavy demand for domes tic production, legitimate demand for reconversion, the desire of everybody to build a house or re model, and emergency demands for foreign uses adding up a load which will require increased production," Boyd said. REPORT CAPITAL SHEIXED Stockholm, May 5 IP Copen hagen reports, said German war ships began a 25-minute shelling of the Oesterbro quarter of the Danish capital at 10 a. m. today, killing at least 10 persons. JAPS SLOWED DOWN Chungking, May 5 IP Fiercely resisting Chinese troops have slowed down a Japanese drive near Laochokow in northwestern Hupeh province, a communique said today. Wehrmacht 's s J25& 4 - g Mfim ! mm m gf r-2si v i yjcrsir. r.-r tie . f ift C n f 'l 9 I' This is the fate of the man who spent 43 years building up the best army In the world," was the ruelul com ment of Field Marshal Gerd von Rundstcdt (foreground, with cane) when, as pictured above, he was captured by American troops In bis Bavarian retreat. With him are his son, Lt. flans O. von Rundstedt (center) and a medical attendant. barricades of Berlin are being The people themselves are de the war is over, -fire crawling occupied have I been able to traverse it from one end to an other to see the terrific scale of the devastation caused by bombings. Entire streets are obliterated. Many Civilians Killed Berliners told me that the ci vilians suffered enormous casu alties. In many cases hundreds of inhabitants were killed by one bomb. Col. Gen. Berzarin, military com mandant and chief of. the soviet garrison, has ordered the popu lation to stay put to preserve or der. The nazi party and all sub sidiary organizations have been disbanded and their activity out lawed. Within 72 hours of the publica tion of the order, all members of the wehrmacht, the SS and the SA remaining in Berlin must regis ter. Executives of all enterprises of the party, the gestapo, the po lice, security battalions, prisons, and all other state organizations must personally appear at region al commandants' offices. Elk Lake Region Under Deep Snow The Elk lake region is still und er a deep blanket of well-packed snow, about three , feet on the level, and the mountain lake, far- famed for its trout, is still covered by ice, Myron H. Symohs, operat or of the resort at the popular Century drive recreation area, re ported today on his return from a ski trip into the high country. He was accompanied by Norman Venable. They left here Wednes day, drove a mile beyond Des chutes bridge, crossed the snow field on skies and returned to Bend today. Summer homes and cabins at Elk lake came through the winter without any damage, Symons re ported, and for the first time in many years, the telephone into the lodge was in working order. There are few trees on the road. Opening Date May ,13 I Elk lake will open for fishing on May 12, but Symons is not yet making any prediction about the accessibility of the lake for motorists on that date. He will make his forecast when he makes another trip into the lake, in the next few days. The lodge will be open when the first angler arrives, ne promises. Ex-Commander in ' e x 3 -a r j i y m-ir Big Naval Guns Nar Blast Tarakan; Airmen Assist Australian Troopers in Drive for City's Heart; Two Transports Bagged Manila, May 4 (IP) Allied bomb ers and warships blasted a path today for Australian troops driv ing toward the heart of Tarakan city on Tarakan island off the east coast of Borneo. Japanese gun emplacements. ammunition dumps and numerous buildings were destroyed by the dual bombardment as the Aus tralians swept through the west ern part of the city. The military barracks and the important water supply Installa tions in western Tarakan were captured by the Australian troops, who were meeting desperate Japa nese opposition from mortar and machine-gun fire. Drive Hampered Front reports said the Austral- Ian drive on the island's airfield, northeast of the Llngkas beachhead,-was being hampered by an extensive system of electrically controlled land mines. The troops, however, secured all high ground around the edge of the airfield.- About 50 Liberator bombers again pounded Borneo's airfields lirneuti-auzation -attacks aimed uljhe total of amounts AetuaHy ha preventing interference with the proved for expenditure In the cur- unloading operations at the Tara kan beachhead. American P-T boats also ranged through the sea lanes between Borneo and Celebes sinking two Japanese transports of 3,000 tons leach, six freighters, seven river boats, two tugs and a number of 'small craft. Neurs Climax The Mindanao campaign was rapidly clearing Davao city ! against resistance described as not very heavy. Other American troops also pushed east and north of Davao, with one column reaching Santa Ana, Just above the city, and c second at'Mintal, two miles from Libby airfield. In the Interior, nearly 50 miles past nf navan. elemnnts nf thn!P"ai as an auoeu icaiure oi me 31st division advanced another 14! miies northward and captured the road junction of Klbawe, 35 miles above Kabakan. Area Cleared Filipino guerilla forces mean time cleared the Japanese from entire Surigao province at the northeastern tip of Mindanao, opening a number ttf good har bors for allied shipping. The prov ince is just across Surigao strait from American held Leyte is land. In northern Luzon, the 33rd di vision completed mopping up of the Baguio area and seized the villages of Antamok and Itogon. six miles east of the city, and Acops more than five miles to the north. Allied Hands tNEA Pmlin.T.Unhnln) In Norway to Surrender ' By Jack Fleischer ! (United Pmm War Conwondent) . ' ' : ' : Outside Munich, May 5 (U.P.) The tired, bewildered remnants of the Ger man First and 19th armies estimated at between 200,000 and 400,000 men sur rendered unconditionally today to Gen. Jacob L. Devers. ' Lt. Gen. Hermann Foertsch, commander of the First German armyheaded the delegation of 14 German officers who nee-ntiaterl th aurrenrW tinnn t.h au thority and order of Marshal Albert KesselrTng. - jjevers, commander or. tne sixth army group the U. S. Seventh and French First and six other American officers accepted the surrender, effective at noon tomorrow. . .. The second mass German surrender in two days collapsed resistance to the American and British forces on the continent except for Norway, Czechoslo County Budget Given Review ' Deschutes county's budget com mittee, meeting at the courthouse for its preview session on 1945 1946 estimates, last night set down all appropriation requests and found at the end that these would make up a general fund total of $116,746.84 as against $117,389.64. allowed lor the c u r re n t year In general the trend was upward. Reductions of $4,700 In the budget for relief, and of $2,226 in the clerk's budget (reflecting the fact that there Is insufficient Increase to make up the $2,831.50 spent this year for a photostat macnine) kont the total of reouests below rent year, The budget makers found that the county Is already well-fi nanced on Its post-war program with $150,000 on hand In the post war road fund and an approxl mate $15,000 in excess receipts expected to be added to the fund in the coming fiscal year. There was likelihood that the levy In ei fect this year would not be con tinued. Receipts, as has been the case for years, would be much greater than the general road budget, set up for the coming fiscal year at $49,900. Hospital Considered Cash on hand from the general fund, it was Indicated, might per mit introduction of an Item of $40,000 to $50,000 for a county hos- county's activities for post-war days. No action had been taken on this at last night's session nor on suggestions from the veterans council that the county partici pate in the cost of a memorial building, construction of which is being promoted for peace time. All members of the county court Judge C. L. Allen and Commis sioners E. E. Varco and A. E. Stevens -r- were present at the meeting in the circuit court room. Appointed members are A. J. Glassow, who was elected chair man; M. A. Lynch, who was named secretary, and John Hohn stein. Glassow could not be pres ent for the opening meeting. Truck Burns Up, Films Are Lost Portland, Ore., May S Uli A fire in an Oregon film service truck en route to Amity Ore., re- suited in. the loss of $4,000 worth of motion picture film and thou sands of newspapers being taken south for distribution. The newspaper loss was the sec ond recently for the Oregon Journal, which lost a load of news papers on the Waplnitla cutoff when a punctured truck tire was ignited by friction, causing a blaze which destroyed the papers and an accompanying shipment of whiskey. Release of Ration Books Requested Bend merchants today were warned by Harold Carllle, chair man of the local war price and ration board, not to accept cou pons from ration books issued to men now in the armed forces. Carlile said that ration books held j oy men entering tne service must; oe turned into tne ooara, ana mat it is a direct violation of OPA rules to use such books. A serviceman returning on fur lough may receive "furlough points" at the ration board, Carlile j said. I i Sources Say Armies vakia, ana some coastal pock - ets. Germans in Czechoslovakia, eastern Austria and the Dres den - Chemnitz area of, Ger many still were fighting the Russians. In the last two major is lands of German resistance, Czechoslovak sources in Lon don reported that a patriot up rising had liberated Prasrue. and a nazi source said the com mander of occupation forces in Norway had decided to sur render, with an announcement of capitulation expected at any time. Surrender Announced Supreme headquarters In Paris announced tne unconditional sur render of the German armv grouD 'C the First and 19th armies to Devers. commander of the U. S. Sixth army group. It obliterated nazi resistance from the Czecho. Slovak border area north of Llnz southwestward to the Swiss fron tier. The first announcement at SHAEF said the surrender em braced the entire front southwest- ward from the Chemnitz area of Germany, including that before the U. S. Third army now fight ing in Czechoslovakia. Supreme headquarters first an nounced that German troops In Austria and Czechoslovakia tne First, Seventh and 19th armies had surrendered. Then SHAEF corrected the an nouncement to eliminate the Sev enth German army the one In Czechoslovakia from the list of those surrendertng. Details (lven United Press war correspond ent Jack Fleischer reported that the surrender of the First and 19th German armies was nego tiated at a U. S. Sixth army group post outside Munich. A del egation of 14 German officers sur rendered on the authority and! order of Marshal Albert Kessel- ring, who took command of the western front from the now-captured Marshal Karl von Rund stedt. Devers and six other American generals accepted the surrender. It was effective at noon tomor row but it was announced by ra dio that hostilities were to cease immediately Lt. Gen. Hermann Foertsch, commander of the German First army, headed the delegation rep resenting tne broken, bewildered fragments of the enemy army Th ' ,llrlnil.. ,, n i ,., ' ' c . commanded by Ui Cm FrMrich wilhelm cnunz. Kcftfu-lring Sought The surrender provided that If Kesselring or any ot his head quarters staff were found within the area, they would become pris oners. On the U. S. Third army front, the Germans' 11th Panzer division surrendered en masse to the 90th American division. The capitula lion put 12,000 German soldiers, ! a delegate to the United Nations 1,000 vehicles and about 20 tanks conference, told the United Press In American hands. that a just-concluded survey of Gen. Dwlght D. Eisenhower said ' war damage, showed that reha In a statement Issued at SHAEF .Mutation would require 20.000.- that today "has been a steady con tlnuation of German demoraliza tion and disintegration" on the western front. Ho said confusion was so rife In the ranks of the surrendering enemy group that Foertsch could j not give any accurate estimate of the German strength, but believed the group Included between 200, ow and 400,000 men. GERMAN ARMY QUITS Paris, May 5 HW The German 24th army surrendered to the French First army, the French war ministry announced tonight. ' Body of Hitler Believed Hidden London, May 5 dpi Adolf Hit ler's body has been hidden so well that lt never will be found, nazi propagandist Hans Firtsche told his Russian captors today. Radio Moscow said Firtsche, deputy German propaganda min ister taken prisoner in Berlin, as serted that the fuehrer's corpse had been concealed in an "undis- coverable blace." Neither Hitler's body nor that of Propaganda Minister Paul Jo seph Goebbels has been found In Berlin, Moscow- said. Red army troops who attempted to search the ruined Relchschancellery In -Berllrcwerp;; beaten back by jag-, ing iircs. , Frlrh Captured But two other prize nazis have fallen into the American hands: Dr. Wilhelm Frick, German minister without portfolio, relchs protector of Bohemia and Mora via and Helnrlch Himmler's pre decessor as interior minister. Max Amann, deputy to Himm- ler, chief of the nazi party pub lishing department and publisher of Meiq Kampf. Frlck, bo, probably the highest nnzl party and German govern ment oniciai yet imprisonca Dy the allies, was captured Wednes day at his Bavarian country estate by pure luck, a dispatch from the 0th army group revealed; Union Chief Here For Conference With the arrival In Bend today of Vernon Chase, president of the Klamath district council of the International Woodworkers of America (CIO), further confer ences were slaled today In an ef fort to settle the disagreement which caused the shutdown of The Shevlln-Hlxon Company mill and logging operations. Chase, it was reported, was slated to meet with the U. S conciliator who has been in Bend two days. Both the mill management and local headquarters reported that there was no change in the situa tion brought about when the dry chain crew at the plant ceased working at 3:30 p.m. last Wednes day. France Asks for Germans to Repair Damages San Francisco, May 5 Kit France asked todny for the serv ices of 1,000,000 Italian and German worKers as part of the reparations In kind for the deva station wrought by the axis ar mies. Rene Pleven, French minister of j finance and national economy and 000,000 (B) work hours. That, he said, is equivalent to 2,000,000 men working four full years. lie noted that under the Geneva convention, Italian and German prisoners must bo liberated within a specified time after th? cessa- tion of hostilities. Therefore, he said, the prisoners can not be held long enough to furnish 20,000,000, 000 work hours. The French government be lieves, however, that It can re cruit a large number of prisoners of war who would consent to re build war damage at current French wages. To these men, Pic- Poles' Arrest Angers All ies; Reds Blamed Big Three Discussions In San Francisco End; . 1 6 Leaders Being Held i , '. . , , ;- f San Francisco, May 5 (IP) Big - Three .Polish discussions blew up today with the "grave" revelation i that soviet authorities have ar- rested 16 Polish democratic lead ers on a charge of "diverslonist activities against the red army." The revelation of the arrests and their accompanying grave ef- :. feet upon the Big Three polish . discussions was made in parallel statements by Secretary of State ; Edward R. Stettlnius, Jr., and s , Foreign Secretary Anihony Eden. : The secretaries revealed they1, had been Informed of the arrests , by Foreign Commissar V. M. Molotov. The revelation torpedoed the , : Polish " discussions here which were formally suspended by the , uritlsn and Americans until ivioio-: . tov provides them with further Information on the Incident. , May Affect Parley ; It also was feared that lt would have serious repercussions upon the work of the whole united Na tions conference. The Anglo-Americans had been , trying vainly for weeks to pry an '' answer out ot Moscow as to what i : had happened to the Polish lead-' 1 ers who had gone from Interior , Poland to .confer wltU.-soviet-au. ,. thoritles in Moscow. " . The sudden development came after the Big Three had reached a wide area of agreement on amend- ments to be submitted to the Dumbarton Oaks charter. However, the Polish develop ment, coming on the eve of Molo- tov's departure from the confer- . ence was expected to affect grave ly the attitude and opinion of delegates to the conference, par ticularly those which already have Indicated suspicion and dis trust of Russia's postwar security . objectives. Molotov Silent No explanation was offered by Molotov for the arrests other than the so-called "diverslonist" or "di versionary' 'activities. Nor did the ' foreign commissar give any ex planation of why there had been (he prolonged delay and silence on the matter. Stettlnius' statement noted that persistent Inquiries for a month had been made of the soviet re garding the Polish leaders. "Mr. Molotov has now officially informed Mr. Eden and myself," he said, "that these leaders were arrested on the charge of 'diver- , slonist activities against the red army.' "We told Mr. Molotov of our great concern on learning after , such a long delay of this disturb ing development which has a di rect bearing on the working out of the Polish problem. I. IM Sought "The Crimea agreement on Po land provided for consultations with representatives of the War (Continued on Page 3) One Million ven said, France will offer pay ment in German marks, using for that purpose a gigantic holding of billions of marks which the French government was obliged to absorb from Alsace and Lor raine when those provinces re turned to t ranee a lew months ago. He said it also was possible to recruit Germans or Italians under contract for work in French mines as well as in rebuilding war de struction. Before the war, France imported Polish miners for the coal mines of northern France un der a contract with the Polish gov ernment. Pleven predicted n serious coal famine all over Europe before the end of this year. One of the first obligations of the victorious Unit ed Nations, he declared, is to force a resumption of coal production as rapidly as possible. The French minister said Ger man coal production was now 90 per cent below normal. French mine output is 40 per cent below normal, the British down 25 per cent and Belgian and Dutch down , 50 to 60 per cent.