PAGE SIX THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY. MAY 8, 1945 Undersea War Grim, Costly; ermans Lose G (By United Prow) Nazi Adm. Karl Doenit.'s U boats opened the battle of the At lantic directly after the invasion of Britain failed to come off. The Island that would not bow to threats or bombs now was to be starved out of the war. From the beginning the under seas war was a grim one, with no quarter given. The newly-won French Atlantic ports Brest, Lorient St. Nazalre gave Donicz an initial advantage by providing Ideal U-boat bases within easy reach of his prey. From these protected ports, the German raid ers slipped through the British blockade almost nightly during J the summer and fall of 1940 to' lurk along allied shipping routes. Far more deadly than the pig boats of World War I, they ex acted a toll surpassing the worst allied fear. The British, unable to find immediate reply, suffered severe and steadily mounting loss es to their vitally needed imported goods. By the end of August, her shipping losses had reached an average of 70,000 tons each week. Then the admiralty stopped pub lishing the figures, forewarning of still worse to come. Surface Raiders Assist Enemy surface raiders also ranged the ocean, attacking mer chant vessels and avoiding action with allied warcraft. They were not always successful in this lat ter: witness the fate of the pocket- battleship Admiral Graf Spee, run to cover by the British cruisers Exeter and AJax and scuttled off Montevideo harbor in December, 1940. But still the assault devel oped month after month, and eacli month added an estimated 10 brand new U-boats to Adm. Doen itz's fleet. In America, a determination took shape to smash the menace and give Britain ail help short of war to make it stick. Passage of ; the lend lease bill in late 1940 and i ttie swapping of 50 overage de 'stroyers for new Atlantic bases i gave concrete evidence oi tms re solve. There was no doubt Amcr I ica actively was taking sides. This American feeling was stiff ened further in May, 1941, with the sinking of the U. S. merchant man Robin Moor. To assure bet ter urotection for our ships. Amer ican troops occupied Greenland the next montn anu iceiana snort' lv afterward. Jn September, the nation was DUt only one step away from ac I tual war wnen rresiueni noose- velt ordered the U. S. navy to shoot on sight any vessel interfer ing with American ships. The or der was prompted by the sinking of the destroyer ureer on iceiana that month. Switch to V. S. Shores But even this threat had little Influence on the Germans. A U boat torpedoed the U. S. destroyer Kearny on Oct. 15 and another sank the destroyer Reuben James two weeks later. Surprisingly, when America finally did enter the war In De- Here's The Ship to Scuttle Hirohito the ship that Mussed Mussolini and Harpooned Hitler! Crewmen of this gallant ship, and their fighting buddies are still on the job, eager to get in the last telling blow. And we're for 'em, every man! We want them to win -QUICKLY and return to a life of freedom. Let's help them, home quicker by working harder, con- , serving more . . . and by buying more War Bonds. Buy a Bond for Victory Today! ' Symons Bros. Jewelers "The House of Beauty" 947 Wall Street Phone 175 V DAY 1 is here. -Hop let us aim at V-DflY 2 Germany has been defeated. Europe is free. All Americans have waited long to be able to say that. Most Americans have worked hard to be able to say it Many Americans have sacrificed much to say it Many Americans have sacrificed all. To these, let us give thanks. But more than that let us promise them that "they have not died in vain". They fought and died not for a peaceful Europe but for a peaceful world. Let us renew our pledge to give all we have to hasten ing the day when we can say: "Japan has been defeated. All the world is free." SHI'S WR Y S6viet Russia Ruins Hitlers ; Empire Dream (By United Vrtm) Soviet Russia had been stag gered by the initial German on slaught in June, 1941. By Novem ber, the nazi tide had swept 1,000 miles to the east. Russia's fore most cities were either encircled or already in German hands. Then, Just as the outside world expected the Soviets to crumble, something happened. Unsuspected Russian reserves of men and arms combined with the bitterest winter in 150 years to upset Hit ler's plans. It had been no mean feat of lo- cember, 1941, the submarine situ ation took a drastic turn for' the worse. U. S. warships were drawn to the Pacific and the U-boats, seeing their chance, switched their attack to this end of the At lantic routes. With growing bold ness and frightening success, they began to attack the allied convoys at their ports of origin. tiy this time, the u-Doat war, started as an offensive tactic, had become more than that for the Germans. The United Nations were organizing now and were marshaling their forces to smash the axis. The Atlantic had become the main artery for a flood of men. and supplies not only for Britain but for her fighting allies there. In Russia, and in the Med iterranean theater. Even the Far Eastern land front was supported via the south Atlantic routes. Thua Hitler's U-boat assault had turned into a desperate de fensive light for survival. He had to win It to stave off Germany's doom. Hunt In 'Wolf-Packs' By the spring of 1942, he seem ed to be doing just that. His un derseas raiders, hunting in "wolf- packs " of from 10 to 15, were dis rupting convoys and sinking freighters without effective oppo sition from the foggy coast of Newfoundland to the Bulge of Brazil. Armed with the latest lethal torpedoes and able to stay out for six weeks without refuel ing, an estimated 400 U-boats cruised the Atlantic lanes. All summer and fall they blasted an average of two' allied merchant vessels every day. Often first word of a sinking would come from a pathetic handful of sur vivors picked up after tossing for weeks on a lifeboat or raft. As a counter-measure, Wash ington dimmed out the U. S. At lantic coast, including New York City, where night lights had sil houetted coastwise shipping, but the move seemed to have little effect. By November, shipping losses were exceeding the com bined replacement capacity of the allies. Then there was a lull for a few months, but by February, 1943, America's lines to the war zones were so nearly severed, she was threatened with losing the war without even opening a fight ing front. In March and April, the situa tion was no better with hints of darker prospects. The allies, It appeared, had no effective answer to the submarine. Then, in May, without fanfare or warning, the break came. The balance swung and then tipped altogether in favor of the allies. Sinkings dropped off sharply and then almost ceased. At the time there was no official explanation. Then the general facts leaked out. What had happened was that the allied commands, particularly the U. S. navy, quietly had developed highly-secret, vastly-i m p r o v e d anti-submarine techniques. Step Up Plane Protection These techniques, It appeared, comprised a number of closely synchronized measures. Tightly knit convoys and dozens of small aircraft carriers were involved, along with the new destroyer escorts, fast enough to catch the subs and heavily enough gunned to destroy them. Radar played a significant role, it was reported, and a r.ewly-developed long-range aerial patrol from both shores and mid ocean stepping stone bases completed the picture. In any event, from Mav to Aug ust, 1943, more than 4.000 allied vessels crossed the Atlantic with a total loss of only one-half of one per cent. The raiders, armed with more and better anti-aircraft guns, made a final brief come back late In August, but from then on their attacks were in creasingly feeble and more often than not fatal for the undcrsoas crait. As Doenltz's first-line crews and commanders were lost, the re mainder of the U-boat fleet seem ed to lose both its boldness and Its skill. By October, 1943, British Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden felt able to announce that the U boat menace was not only held, but whipped for good. The British home fleet, mean while, had won its battle of con stant vigilance to keep the ene my's surface warcraft in port. Its unfailing alertness never permit ted the German battleships to be come a factor In the war. The few who managed to slip out to sea met fates reminiscent of the Graf Spee. The German battle ship Bismarck got out in May, 1941, but was surprised off Green land and sunk off the coast of r ranee after a four-day running battle. Then Scharnhorst was caught and sunk off the North Cape in December, 1943, 22 months after she escaped up the English channel with her sister ship the Gneisenau. gistics for der fuehrer to hurl some 20 panzer divisions into the far-flung fray In June. In Decem ber, with the roads clogging with ice and snow, to move up the in fantry needed for the clinching blow was more than he could swing. And now he faced a re vived and confident foe to boot. The Russians seized the offen sive abruptly early In DecemberJ ineir impact rivaled that of the opening German drive. All along the 2,000-mile front their resurg ent forces met success. From east of Rostov, Marshal S e m y o n Timoshenko's anny slammed back into the Sea of Azov city less than a week after the nazis entered its streets. Hitler Takes Commund On the Crimea, Sevastopol's long-beleaguered garrison mount ed a counter-thrust that re-took Balaklava, where the storied Light Brigade rode Into the jaws of death. Russian parachutists landed behind the Germans' pen insular lines. In the central Ukraine, red col umns encircled ruined Kharkov and swept back to the skeleton city of Dnepropetrovsk on the great Dnepr bend.' Before Moscow, Marshal Sem yon Budenny's armies rolled back the enemy on both flanks, seized Mozhaisk starting point of Hit ler's abortive October drive and probed on toward the Latvian bor der. Even the miles-thick rine of steel about Leningrad was par tially cut by. a Soviet SDearhead pushing deep into the Valdai hills ! below the ancient capital. laciuy admitting the setback, Hitler assumed personal com mand of the German army. Offi cially, Berlin complained of the "fearful cold." It had reason. Everywhere the Russians were making the most of the Germans' Inexperience at, waging war over freezing snow-covered terrain. Russians Sweep Westward Mounting their troops on skis, their artillery on sleighs and painting their tanks white, the Russians outflanked and annihi lated the stranded nazis by the thousands. The rutted snow be came littered, with the battered hulks of abandoned materiel. By March, the' serried front showed soviet pockets thrown about a score of German bases, while the main red armies swept westward to menace the main nazl supply lines from the reich. Towns and rail junctions as far as 150 miles west of the maxi mum nazl penetration were fall ing to the flying red troops. Then, late in April, the offen sive ended as suddenly as it had begun. An ominous lull descended on the battle lines while the earth hardened ' and dried under the warm spring sun. Rumors spread that the armies of the reich were massing once more. Hitler was re ported marshaling his armor for a decisive all-out summer cam paign. The attack lived up to advance billing when it came, late in June. It soon was apparent Hitler was throwing the major part of his forces into his 1942 bid for vic tory. But this time he made no attempt to strike on all fronts si multaneously. This time the ma jor blow was to the south, and the objective was oil. Between the jaws of -a giant pincers drive, the nazis aimed to obtain oil for themselves and to keen Oil fmm Pnssia rina nniuAr. ful force was to strike east, seize me vpiga river city of Stalingrad and block that great river high way -over which four-fifths of Russia's oil flowed north from the Caucasus to soviet armies, factories and farms. Strike for Oil Fields The other was to drive south into the Caucasus itself, the huge fertile isthmus linking middle Europe-with eastern Asia. Its ob jectives were the . Maikop oil fields; 150 miles below Rostov, and '. the 'much, richer Grozny, Batum and Baku fields on the niw side of the 20.000-foot Cau casus mountains. umph of the summer, though striking, had little direct bearing on the main goal. It came on July 2, when Gen. Erich von Mannstein's troops, finally sue (Continued on Page 8) I f V 1 ON THE MOVE ... . From the green fields of France we ere ordered to a new front. Yes, we're going to join our buddies just halfway around the world to put the finishing touches on this global war. We don't think that we have any easy task . . . boys who have met and fought the Japs tell us that they are plenty tough. , But then, this is a job that can't be left half-done and we want to get it over and quickly. And that's where you .folks at home can help us. You keep up the home front and we will do our part. Keep on buying BONDS . . .. keep on . the job everyday . . . you do these things and we will make the landings where the JAPS live! 1 1 This Month, Have You . . BOUGHT WAR BONDS Souh of Postoffice Phone 193 We've Got The PLANS vis ;r: if 1 , A .A- 7 w :im. , A ' -Ml Now Let's Make It Post-War! Let's get it over and get things humming get ready, to build and to buy. To do that then BUY WAR BONDS NOW ST ff PIES oprcai 934 Waliystreet BEND - OREGON