3 B BUM toy That Bond Keep lending at home and end "'. dying on battlefields. Buy an eitra $100 war bond today. Weather Forecast Kaln today, tonight and Sunday, heavy thin evening west portion, gales on coast today. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER BEN lime LIU pis Prepare ) Surrender brwayMen erman Plane Carries Pfficials to Scotland . for Talks With Allies ndon, May 12 (IB Allied and (man army, naval and air of jrs conferred in Scotland today ft he evacuation and surrender 800,000 German troops, dozens German warships and on other fipment in Norway, the German delegation, total I 20 or more officers, arrived southeast Scotland from Nor- last night aboard three Junk f 52 transports, the first Ger in aircraft to land in Britain jce the end of the war. fhe German officers brought fh them details of military dis jitions, defenses and supplies I Information about Allied war soners in Norway. Ordered To Leave dispatch from Oslo said all rmans, both troops and civil!- had been ordered to leave Jo today. British paratroops a Swedish-trained ' Norwegian pcemen were patrolling the teets of Oslo. All Germany's remaining war jps were believed anchored in frway fjords. In addition to Risers, destroyers and torpedo 1st, there were believed to be arge number of submarines. : Dther u-boats were surrender ; at sea to allied warships and mes. At least 13 had signaled ir surrender by last night, and my already had put into British its. Marshal Named The German tadio at Flensburg, lee of the Doenitz government, ported that Marshal Ernst ish had been appointed "Su erne commander in the north" preserve order and discipline d assure supplies for both Ger m troops and civilians In north st Germany.. fAIU Id c k bi (Hn( Allied occupation authorities 1 consented to the appointment. ' broadcast said. i Czechoslovakia, diehard nazis 1)0 t Bh at first ignored the German l command's order to surrend- I to the Red army now were pitulating by the tens of thous- ds. . Circle Tightened They had been squeezed into ch a narrow sector they no inger, had room to maneuver. Siey had no choice but death or trrender. Some 262,600 have Ipltulated to the First, Third and fourth Russian Ukrainian armies I the past three days. J Red army troops tightening the jieirclement lined up with imerican forces at new points kst of Chemnitz in Silesia, east Pilsen in Czechoslovakia and Bittheast of Linz of Austria. Klamath Falls etsCemeterv Klamath Falls, Ore., May 12 IP army choice of Klamath Falls as i national cemetery site was ex jjained today my Mayor Ed Os tf ndorf as being due to Klamath Aunty's accessibility to northern California counties. I Ostendorf received information Worn Rep. Lowell Stockman, R., Ore., in which the congressman f closed a letter from Maj. Gen. L. Corbin, acting quartermas : Jr general. The setter stated that lortland and Klamath Falls were 'fiosen for the Oregon sites of na jjon cemeteries, and that the lat- r city was selected because an il her cemetery besides the larger tie at Portland was needed in the fate. l Legislation setting up the ceme nes has not been passed, Stock man noted, but final recommenda tions were made by the war de P triment. Allied Invasion alted Bv German Surrender London, May 12 Pv-An cted to prove bloodier than the ndings in north Africa and indy was averted only by the : i s of the German capitulation, he London Evening News said I'day. News correspondent Donald Could reported that the Allied iefs of staff had been planning ! "cretely for the Norway invasion! r 18 months and were prepared . strike when word of the nazi irrender came. I "It was an operation which Jed more concern than any; her to Alliod mmmanders. fori It would have been more costly in ! ives than either the Invasion of forth Africa or France," Gould aid. He said the Norwegian landing 1 730 JapsAttached to Berlin Offices Seized By Americans v Roundup Also Nets Three More Ministers of Hitler's Government; Dr. Funk Is Captured Seventh Armjr Headquarters, May 12 (UP) Three more ministers in Adolf Hitler's government and 130 Japanese diplomatic personnel, including Gen. Hiroshi Oshima, were in Seventh army custody today. Between 150 and 200 top nazi government officials were rounded up by Seventh army patrols scouring Austrian and Bavarian villages. In the latest batch were : Dr. Walther Funk, minister of economies and president of the reichsbank; Dr. Hans Heinrich Lammers, chief of Hit ler's reichschancellery, minister without portfolio and SS general, and Dr. Wilhelm Ohnersorge, post minister. In addition to Oshima, Japanese caught in the Seventh Succeeds Mooov (NEA TtUohotoi Alexander A. Groniyko, soviet am bassador to Washington, who be comes head of the Russian delega tion to the UNGIO replacing For eign Commissar V. M. Molotov, who has returned to Moscow. W&Bond Drive Office to Open Campaign headquarters for the Seventh war bond drive will be opened Monday In the J. C. Pen ney store, when the fund-raising campaign officially gets under way in Deschutes county, it was announced today by A. L. O. Schueler, war finance chairman. The headquarters will be headed by Mrs. Ralph Hensley, assisted by Stella Pearl Runge. Throughout the drive members of different women's organiza tions in the city will assist in staffing the headquarters, accord ing to Schueler. For the conven ience of bond buyers unable to visit' headquarters, a telephone will be installed, the number of which will be advertised later. Also assisting at headquarters will be Lome Carter, chairman of the merchant's committee in charge of business firm solicita tion. Throughoout the campaign, which ends on July 7, placards, buttons, posters, literature and other advertising matter for the Seventh war loan may be obtained at headquarters, it was stated. Patch Confident WarNearing End Seventh Army Headquarters, May 12 (IB Lt. Gen. Alexander M. Patch believes the war against Japan will be over in less than a year. Patch made the prediction in answer to a question at a fare well conference with war corre spondents but added "my predic tions usually are wrong." He disclosed, however, that in a pool made up March 25 on the war end in Europe, he had pre dicted May 9. of Norway I I - ; 3 Ug&fc BKS klnmii- flian thncp assembled for th , vious amphibious land- Nor-jjngS, anj the biggest air support in military history. The British first airborne di vision, which suffered such heavy casualties at Arnhem, was slated to drop on the enemy around Oslo and Narvik and he sea-borne attack was to have been led by the British 52nd mountain division, Gould said. The mountain troops, he added, were trained in the Scottish High- lands and especially seasoned for combat under arctic conditions, Lt. Gen. Sir Andrew Thorne, a 59-year-old British grenadier guardsman and chief of the Scot- tish command, was said to have been namea commanaer oi me invasion forces. THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, MAY 12, 1945 army net were the ambassa- dor's wife, Lt. Gen. Mitsuhiko Komatsu, military attache to the Berlin embassy; Maj. Gen. Osamu Otani and Yoshicada Michima of the foreign of fice: Medeo Koiima. naval aU tache, and four newspaper men. Fled From Berlin The Japanese party included embassy staff members and per sonnel from Berlin, France, Italy and the consulate-general at Vien na. They had moved to southern Germany from Berlin at the sug gestion of the Hitler government. Reichsmarshal Hermann Goer ing, the Seventh army's prize catch to date, told allied news men at a second press conference yesterday that Hitler personally was responsible for atrocities committed at concentration camps at Buchenwald, Dauchau and else where. He said Heinrich Himmler's SS was in charge of the camps and "carried out orders directly from the fuehrer." Great Northern Officials Visit Twelve officials' of the Great Northern Railway, Including the president of the line and three di rectors, were Bend visitors today while en route on a coast inspec tion trip from St. Paul, Minn., and return by way ' of California. While here the oficials conferred with department heads of The Shevlln-Hixon Company and Brooks-Scanlori Lumber Company Inc. A spokesman for the group said that the railway officials were on a general tour of inspection, and also were interviewing shippers en route and studying the possible after-the-war volume of business. Late in the day the party entrain ed in the four-car special assigned for use of the directors of the line; with Klamath Falls as the next stop. In the party of Great Northern officials, who were accompanied by E. H. Showalter, superintend ent of the S. P. & S. railway sys tem, were: Officials Listed F. J. Gavin, president, St. Paul; C. O. Jenks,, vice-president, St. Paul; Thomas Balmer, vice-president, Seattle; I. E. Manlon, gen eral manager, Seattle; T. F. Dix on, vice-president and general manager, Seattle; F. L. Paetzold, secretary-treasurer, St. Paul; A. W. Witherspoon, director, and president of Old National Bank, Spokane; J. Steward Baker, direc tor, and chairman of the Bank of Manhattan County, New York; F. Peavey Hcf felfinger, director, and vice president of the company bearing his name in Minneapolis; J. A. Jerrow, superintendent, with headquarters in Klamath Falls; H. I. Wayne, general agent, Klam ath Falls, and P. J. Lesmeister, traveling freight and passenger agent, Klamath Falls. Gus Lempke Dies In Portland Hotel Suddenly stricken while in Port land visiting his son who was on a three-day furlough from the army, Gus Lempke, long time a Bend resident and proprietor of the North Junction service station north of the city, died yesterday shortly after noon in a Portland hotel, It was learned here today. Details of the sudden death were lacking, and funeral arrange ments have not yet been set pend- funeral home. Mr. and Mrs. Lempke had gone to Portland for a brief visit with their son, Jim, whose short time off duty did not permit him to come to Bend. WINS NEW BATING Aboard a destroyer in the Pa cific, May 12 Alien B. Pyatt, 20, of Bend, Ore., has been ad vanced In rating to seaman, first class, USNR. Allen entered the naval service in November, 1943, and has been a member of the crew of this fighting ship for the past three months. PRINXE OLAF RETURNS London, May 12 U Crown Prince Olaf has returned to Nor way from Britain aboard a British cruiser, lt was disclosed today. Nip Defenders; On Mindanao Again Surprise Landing Made By Yanks; Garrison Is T Target of New Attack Manila, May 12 IP The. last Japanese defenders of Mindanao island were ripped Into hopeless, small pockets today after a new assault landing In the north. -.-" 'Fortieth division troops -who waded ashore on the beaches of Macajalar bay drove four-miles Inland without opposition to with in 47 airline miles of 31st division troops advancing from the south to bisect tne island. - . - Gen. Douglas MacArthur at nounced: . ' . ' ' 'V "Throughout Mindanao the en emy's garrisons are now divided and isolated from eacn otner ana from all outside sources.' ' ' laps Surprised " '. The new landing, the 'third American troops have made on Mindanao, caught the Japanese defenders of Bukidnon province by surprise as they were trying to battle off the 31st division driving northward along highway No. 3. The 31st had reached the village of Maramag. The 40ths' landing troops also had reached a junction of high way No. 3 at Alae, after their four-mile gain Inland, It also was disclosed that Fili pino guerilla forces had stormed' ashore two weeks ago on Butuan bay after a P-T boat bombardment of Japanese defenses. The guerillas now were battling enemy garrisons in the Agusan valley, to the east of the new American landing. They previ ously had cleared Surgao province still farther east. In the southeast the ,24th di vision continued to make progress along the coast at Davao city and crossed the Talmo river, but they reported strong Japanese resis tance. :, Librarians Here For Conference More than 30 county librarians and others Interested in library work from 15 different Oregon and Washington cities, gathered in Bend today for a county library "workshop" conferena : w h 1 c h lasted throughout the day. The sessions were presided over by Miss Eleanor Stephens, state li brarian from Salem. The morning session, attended by 28, was held in the parish hall of the Trinity Episcopal church, beginning at 10 a.m. This gather ing lasted until noon, and was featured by discussion on ad ministration, technical problems, bookmobiles, the keeping of rec ords, the relationship between schools and the libraries, and post war plans. The morning session was fol lowed by a one-o'clock luncheon at the Pine Tavern. Film Is Shown Discussions were resumed at 2 p.m. in the high school librarv. The afternoon session was high lighted by the showing of a col ored film showing county library worx in lexas. 'me afternoon meeting was to be followed at 4:30 p.m. by an informal tea in the Deschutes county library. Visitors came from Baker, As toria, Eugene. Corvallis. Klam. ath Falls, Ontario, Oregon City, weaiora, neamona, Portland, Pendleton, La Grande, The Dalles, Salem and Olympia, Wash. Divided Soviet Russia Proposes Plan For International Trusteeship San Francisco. Mav 19 till CAflia rtt Vn ...,. U I . II a r.. i i 7 wnicn would give each of the big ! 1 t7"iwu mi.- uuira amies, powers a permanent seat on the!Brl,a'n and France are certain to trusteeship commission and a veto hold trusteeships, It would mean over designation of any territory ! that Russia and China also would as a strategic area, it was learned be guaranteed permanent trustee '"day. ship council seats. The Russian plan has not yet, Wheras the American plan al been made public by the Interna- lows the holder of the trusteeship tional secretariat of the United ; to designate strategic areas, with Nations conference. It has been ; approval of the security council, designated a "restricted" docu-j the Russian plan would place the ment by the soviet delegation. i power of designating strategic But it was learned that the so-1 areas In security council. Such viet proposal conflicts sharply in action would require the unanl some respects with the American! mous vote of the permanent mem and British plans which, after ' bers of the security council, more than a week of study, are! The Russian plan also states as slowly being merged. the main objective of the trustee- The American plan calls for a ship system the achievement of trusteeship council on which each Independence for people in all of the trusteeship-holding coun-' colonial and mandated areas, tries plus an equal number of! Another late trusteeship devel nations not holding trusteeships : opment was the demand by Aus would be represented. The Rus ltralla that all colonial areas In sian plan adds another provision , southeast Asia and the southwest by which all of the permanent i Pacific held by nations unable to members of the world security i defend them be placed under the council would have permanent To Assist in Ruling Germany A Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has been named to head America's part of a stem military government for defeated Germany, It has been announced from Europe. Above is a new portrait of the man Lwho ruled as supreme allied commander in the defeat of nazi Ger many. Goering Indicted on at Least Eight Counts as War Criminal Roly-Poly Reichmarshal, in Custody of 7th i . Army, Reported Faced by 'Air-Tight' Case London, May 12 (U.E A war crimes commission said .ta been. indicted on t least nave an air-tignt case. "I would like to prosecute him myself," a commission member said in revealing that the evidence already compiled uguuiKi, uuenng a war criminal iuiea several voiumes All but one of the counts' hirninst the rolv-nolv reichs. marshal, now in custody of the Eastern Storm's Damage Is Heavy Boston, May 12 nil More than $1,000,000 crop and property dam age was caused by New England's worst May snowstorm In history, officials estimated today. The storm raged across north ern New England for 18 hours be fore blowing out to sea off the Maine coast last night. Trees and poles were knocked down, power and communication lines toppled, scores or communities were Isolat cd and at Sunapee Harbor, N. H., the snow reached a depth of 18 inches. Orchardists in Maine's Wln-throp-Monmouth area reported the Macintosh apple crop was hard-hit. In Vermont it was estimated that 50 per cent of the apple and peach crop was ruined. CANDY SHORTAGE FACKD Washington, May 12 (111 America's sweet tooth was threat ened today as makers of candy, cake. Ice cream and soft drinks were warned they face a 20 to 25 per cent cut in sugar allow nnces for the last half of the year. uii tuc ii uniucniiiiJ tu uiu.il ! trusteeship system. fSlnnnl Coral choto from I7EA) tnember of the United Nations today that Hermann Goerinor eight separate, counts and "We U. S. Seventh army in Bavaria, 'arise trom h i s alleged re sponsibility as a minister of the reieh for the criminal pol ides laid down by the German government. The remaining I n d Ic t m en t charges Goering with specific re sponsibility for the forced labor and slavery programs In Ger many, which violated the articles of the Hague convention. Assigned DiiIIch Adolf Hitler named Goering commissioner for the four-year economic plan under which the relch enslaved civilians or occu pied territories and forced them to work on German defenses and in German war plants, without pay and frequently in conditions that caused wholesale death and disease. Documents outlining and Im plementing the four-year plan are in the hands of war crimes commission. Indicted with Goer ing are three men who assisted him In administering the pro gram. They are Propaganda Min ister Joseph Goebbels, "plenipo tentiary for the total war effort," R. Walther Darre, one time min ister of agriculture, and Fritz Sauckel, manpower director. Goering and Darre are under arrest and awaiting trial. Goeb bels was reported In Berlin, and United Press correspondent Jo seph Grlgg reported from the Ger man capital this week that the Russians had found a body Identi fied with reasonable certainty as that of Goebbels. Sauckel has not yet been accounted for. Nelson Resigns As Truman Aide Washington, May 12 III1) Presi dent Truman today accepted the resignation of Donald Nelson as his personal representative to for eign governments. He appointed Edwin A. Locke, Jr., Nelson's as sistant, as his successor. Nelson, former Chicago mail or der firm executive, submitted his resignation as special presidential representative on April 16. He had served as special representative for President Roosevelt on eco nomic missions to Russia, Eng land, China and Australia. The resignation, effective May 15, was accepted today after Nel son made a verbal request to be released from his duties. STORM FLAGS FLY Portland, May 12 itP The IT. S. weather bureau today hoisted southeast storm warnings at 2 a.m. PWT from Tottoosh to cape Mendocino, and small craft warn ings south to point Reyes. U. S. Marines of 6th Division Storm Haha Outskirts; Yanks Make Gains in Bloody Struggle Capital of Island Now Only Smoking Ruins; Whole. Hillsides Reported Blaiing Like so . Many Fiery Haystacks; Cruisers Give Help . . By Merriam Smith , (United Trmtt Wr Corpondnt) Guam, May 12 (Via Navy Radio) (UJ?) American ma rines and soldiers, attackinir alontr a five-mile battle line across southern Okinawa, advanced slowly through the for midable outer defenses of Naha, Yonabaru and bhun today in the firecest, bloodiest fighting of this six-weeks-old cam paign, i Inching forward behind flame-throwing tanks, marines or the sixth division stormed the outskirts of Naha, Okinawa's ruined capital. They fought hand-to-hand combat with bit terly resisting Japanese. Both marines and soldiers encountered heavy Japanese mortar and sniper fire as they ; T moved forward in a general III A i 1 offensive ' designed to crush the island's last 45,000 defend ers. Front dispatches told of hill sides blazing like "burning hay stacks" in the path of flame throwing tanks. Behind the trail making tanks came foot-slogging Infantrymen who tangled with Japanese In Individual battles of extermination. Japs Fight Back The Japanese were fighting back, rat-like, from their pillboxes and caves. They used grenades, autoamtic weapons and man- home flamethrowers In an at tempt to stem the American of fensive which started at 7 a.m. Friday. The fighting was restricted largely to numerous local action The leathernecks and soldiers battled up well-defended slopes in the face oi neavy tire to capture manv ridges and hills protecting the approaches to the enemy's Naha-Shurl-Yonabaru defense line. , . i - (Tokvo radio' recorded byUnlt- ed Press. San Francisco, said American navy strength off Okln awa included four battleships, 11 cruisers, three carriers, 35 de stroyers, 75 transports and nu merous smaller vessels.) The first marine division seized the Inland village of DakeshL northeast of Naha. The 77th army division deeper Inland won high ground overlooking Shurl, second largest town on Okinawa, in a costly advance, of several hundred yards, On the east coast, the 96th di vision fought closer to conical hill, key Japanese defense post Hon shielding the port of Yona baru. ' 200 Yard Gain Mude The sixth marine division chalked up the day's biggest gain yesterday with an advance to within 200 yards on the west coast. Striking south from the Asa river estuary, the marines fought 800 yards uphill. Naha Itself was a smoking ru in, flattened by concentrated na val and air bombardment. Its streets appeared deserted, though its last known population was more than 00,000. The 10th army s general offen sive was launched at 7 a.m. yes terday after a terrific naval, air and artillery bombardment. .laps Killed The previous night, Japanese troops attempted large-scale In filtration of the American lines. All who penetrated the lines were killed. A communique an nounced that an additional 612 Japanese bodies had been counted, boosting the total numoer or Japa nese killed In the Okinawa cam paign to 39,469. No new rigures were announc ed for American ground casual ties, but Admiral Chester W. Nlmltz reported an additional 1,302 naval casualties for the past week. Mo. Vidkun Quisling, Norway Betrayer, Believed Deranged Oxo, May 12 UPi A police phy- slcian said today that Maj. Vid kun Quisling, ousted puppet pre mier of Norway, was mentally deranged, but not sufficiently so to escape trial for his life for treason. The doctor, who examined Quis ling in Jail yesterday. withheld full details of his findings for the court which will try him on charges of hlRh treason, assisting the enemy and ordering the un lawful execution of Norwegian citizens. Quisling was believed suffering from megalomania. Ever since his arrest, he has complained con stantly of Insufficient considera tion of his high rank and his "services" to Norway. He still considers himself the "leader" and "president" of Norway. t A post mortem on an arm found at Reichcommlssloner Josef NO. 135 veierans uunine Plans for Memorial Day ob servance In Bend were nearly completed at a meeting last night of a committee representing the four veterans' organizations in the city, held in the chamber of commerce offices. With the ex ception of selecting speakers, all arrangements have been com pleted, according to Joy Walker, general chairman. , Observance will begin with memorial services in the high school gymnasium at 10 a.m., at which time Company B, of the Oregon state guard will act as a guard of honor. This organiza tion also will act as the guard of honor at the graveside services scheduled for 11:15 a.m. at the cemetery flagpole. Speakers will address the t h r o n g s at both places, '. , , All veterans of world War No". 2 are asked to attend the services, and to be in uniform. Likewise service men stationed In the vi cinity are Invited to the memorial events. Gold star mothers are also urged to attend. Sponsored By Veterans Besides the honor gun salute by a firing squad at the. ceme tery, members of the different veterans' groups here will place floral wreaths on the graves. Memorial day services are be ing sponsored by the Veterans of Koreinn Wars, the Disabled Amer ican Legion and the United Span ish American Veterans. Himmler Said To Be in Custody (Hy Unltal rreaul CBS correspondent Charles Col- iingwood said In a broadcast from Paris today that Gestapo Chief Heinrich Himmler "Is now report ed to be in our hands." In the broadcast, recorded by FCC, Collingwood said Himmler is "understood to nave oeen ncm under arrest in the Flensburg area by Admiral Karl Doenitz who "Is now believed to have turned him over to British forces in that area." Nippons to Call Special Session' London, May 12 (IPi The Aus tralian radio, quoting a Tokyo broadcast, said today that mem bers of Japan's lower house will call for an extraordinary session of the Jupanese diet to discuss the situation created by Ger many's surrender. The Australian account was In tercepted by BBC monitors in London. Terboven's residence at Skaugum tended to confirm that Terboven had committed suicide. He was reported to have blown himself to bits witn dynamite. The arm was said to have marks of an old fracture which Terboven suffered in an airplane accident several years ago. Three other close affiliates of Quisling also were reported to have committed suicide. German gestapo chief Fehlis ended his life at Prosgrunn, south west of Oslo, by taking poison and then shooting himself. Quisling's minister of Justice Rlsnacs, in surrendering to the Norwegian home front, reported that the chief of the Norwegian SS security police, Hendrik Rog stad, and Quisling's police minis ter, Jonas Lie, committed suicide at the Skaugum estate.