B1JLJLE rrn Crush the Japs War bonds made it possible for Weather Forecast Partly cloudy today, tonight and Sunday; scattered showers In mountains; not much change In temperature. Americans to crush Germany. Now Duy oonas to crush Japan. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON. SATURDAY. MAY 26, 1945 NO." 147 BEND iFTT J M II 11 i Volume 1111 . In n o n a ft 1 Nlnitsooims - . a.: : -! : Blasted Capital Is Under Siege Nearly 10.000 Yanks Listed Dead, Missing In Grim Isle Battle Guam, May 26 dpi u. S. ma rines captured a sixth of Nana, shell-shattered capital of Oki nawa, in a 500-yard advance to- A front dispatch said the Japa nese appeared to be abandoning tne city lor a final stand to the death in the fortified inland city of Shuri. , Considerable enemy troop movements out of Naha east and northeast toward Shuri have been sighted, United Press War Correspondent Edward Thomas reported from Okinawa. Elements of the Sixth marine division jumped off from the south bank of the Asato river in northern Naha yesterday for the climactic assault on the capital. At last reports, they were 800 yards from both Naha harbor and the mouth of the Asato. Tanks on Move Reinforcements of men, sup plies and a considerable number of tanks were pouring across four Asato bridges toward the Of Okinawa 3 1UUJ- J A heart Ff The of Naha, Thomas said. The Japanese pounded the ad- 4,vuicing' .marines wun :i:f3-muu- meter artillery lire irom tne south shore of Naha harbor, per haps to cover their own with drawal to Shuri. The rubble heaped streets of Naha were mined. Heavy rains and deep mud stalled the first marine, 77th in fantry and 96th Infantry divisions in their frontal attacks on the in land fortress of Shuri, central anchor of the Okinawa line. The Seventh army division ad vancing south along the east coast below Yonabaru also was slowed by mud and rain. Casualties High 1 A Pacific fleet communique disclosed that Americans were being killed or wounded at the ite of more than 800 a day on Okinawa and in supporting fleet operations during the five days ended Thursday. Casualties for the first 54 days . .1 ul Lilt; uaiiiuaii'n nan rpacnwi .m.- -116 by that date, an increase of 1.4,590 for the period ended May 18. A breakdown showed 9,602 1 killpri ni- miccintr ntlH 95 51d i wounded. With their main defense line on the ground shattered and their fleet too weak to challenge American naval forces, the Japa nese stepped up their efforts to strike back from their. A big force of enemy suicide planes attacked the American fleet off Okinawa and installa tions ashore Thursday night and Friday. They damaged 11 light American naval units, one of them heavily, but lost 111 planes to American guns and aircraft in the effort. GENERAL OPENS QUARTERS Jr i aniuuri-on-ivi a l n, uermany, May 26 (IB Gen. Dwlght D. Eis enhower opened his new head quarters here today. jreTerans MaKe ror Memorial Day Services Plans have ben completed for, Following the program at the 1 observance of Memorial Day In nnnri it . .j u., Bend it was reported today by I Joy walker, chairman of a com-;tne mittee of the Deschutes County Veterans' council, which is spon soring the event. ihe observance opens with a general assemblv in the high: school gymnasium at 10 a. m. to j the departed warriors, which the public is invited, as At the cemetery services, In well as all veterans of world wars vocation will be by Rev. Watson 1 and 2, and Gold Star mothers, of the Nazarene church, and the A special section of the gymnasi-! benediction will be by Elder L. H. um will be set aside for service ! Boswell, of the Missionary Bap men stationed at Camp Abbot. 'tist church. Tho veterans were asked to at-! Further evidence of Bend's tnnH tn tmtfn-m !tinmaDH trt ItQ HpnartpH snrvinA A Company B, Bend's unit of the i I'rpgon state niard. will act as.aownmwn honor euard durimr the cere-l monies at the gymnasium. I efforts of the veterans' council On the program at the school 'and auxiliaries of the four vet will be an address by Rev. Rob-'erans' organizations, all down ert Mcllvenna. numbers by the: (own business houses will display Bend Gleemen, and a solo by j flags on staff s placed In holes on Seaman 2c Izzo of Camp Abbot. 'the curbs. Jap Balloon Attacks Revealed (NBA Ttlephoto) Announcement by V. S. War and Navy departments that Japan has been sporadically attacking western United States with bomb-laden paper balloons lent fresh Interest to this photo released some months ago. It shows officials examining balloon bearing Japanese inscriptions which was found in western TJ. 8. Left to right: MaJ. J. F. Bolglano, Army Air Corps balloon expert; Capt W. 8. Standard, Army Intelligence officer; W. Q. Banister, FBI agent; and Ens. 9. M. Jackson, Navy intelligence. N$wCut in U. S.Army Looms; Reds' Entry Into War Hinted However, Committee Stresses Allies Facing Hard Fight in Pacific; Budget to Be Reduced Washington, May 26 (U.E) Members of congress told the United Press today there sharp reduction in the size of The revelation was made meeting of the house subcommittee on war department ap propriations with Chief of Staff Gen. George C. Marshall. Committee members said in size of the army was based on the chance that Russia would enter the war against Japan. In that event, they said,, the United States would need less men in the Pacific, All insisted, however, that Marshall did not discuss with the committee the possibility of Russia's entry into the war against the Japanese. Russia is now militarily at peace with ail nations. Hard War Ahead Committee members also indi cated that the remainder of the Pacific war would be a longer, more gruelling struggle than many expect and that army costs would not be reduced greatly next year. They said Marshall did not sub mit the war department budget for the 1945-46 fiscal year, but that it might be from 10 to 20 per cent under the current year's $49,000,000,000. This countered speculation that the new army budget might be as much as one-third below cur rent spending. Transportation r e q uiremelits and increasing production of bombs mean that army spend ing will go on at a heavy rate, committee members said. Arrangements e""""", .tjhiuihku mi.-iuuii- ai service ui eaun veterans or- anization here, will held at pjiot Butte cemeterv. led bv Rev. G. R. V. Bolster. Presi dents of the auxiliaries will as sist in the service. Members of each veterans' organization will place wreaths on the graves of men will be the appearance on streets of scores of: American flags. Through the n oralis psum Revea irp was a possibility of another the army reasonably soon. following an all-day secret the possibility of a reduction Hangman's Body Secretly Buried London, May 26 (Ul The body of Helnrich Himmler, the nazi hangman who cheated justice by committing suicide, was buried secretly in a nameless grave in Germany at dusk Friday, a Lon don Dally Mail dispatch said t day. A small party of British sol diers carried the blanket-swathed body to the grave on the edge of Lueneberg Heath, Just outside the British headquarters town in which he swallowed poison while being questioned Wednesday night. Last Kites Held An army chaplain said last rites as the body was lowered into the grave, the Daily Mail said. The grave Immediately was filled in. A few hours before the burial, the Daily Mail said, a Second army pathologist examined the body and took a death mask and ear mask. Dentists took down de tails of his teeth as further evi dence In the event of any future question of his identity. Snow Still Deep On McKenzie Pass balem, Ore.. Mav 26 (ll'iIt mnv be some time before the McKon. zie pass Is opened to traffir Ktat'l5 to Julv Si Mr rh,,num ...: j highway engineer R. H. Baldockjtake my place," he said. uiuiL-diea loaay. Highway inspectors have re-ito ported that the snow is packed to a depth of three feet several mnes east of the summit, and that the snowpack Increases In depth near the summit. It has been snowing heavily over the pass for the past several weeks, tsaioocK said. No report has been received; from the west slope of the pass, Baldock reported, although a sur-i vey is ut-iiig mane ny men : equipped with snowshoes. i: 1 fl EnMl'Chnna I ARMY PLANE CRASHES Washington, May 26 (IPi A two- englned army plane crashed and ; burned near Sllvpr Snrin, mh burned near Silver Spring, Md..of trial to preparethe defend north of Washington today, kill- The date of he trial has taaS inu nit norttrtne nhnanl '"n otm bei 0 r i Roll Shells) r- Nips Down Isle Hills As Allies Strike) Japs Also Use Spears'--In Bloody Battle on. . ' tar&kan, Off Borneo . Manila, May 26 (IP) Savage fighting raged today on Tarakan island off Borneo as trapped Jap anese troops counterattackedwith spears and rolled artillery shells down hills on the heads of allied soldiers. The Japanese, compressed in the central hills of the island, were fighting their most primitive and desperate sort of battle against Australian and Dutch troops. The conquest of Tarakan was virtually complete, with all the island's major installations in allied hands. But the'mopping-up of the remaining Japanese troops was turning into one of the dirti est jobs faced yet. Japs Use Spears In the counterattacks, one Jap anese force charged allied lines brandishing spears like the war riors of centuries ago. In another action, small soldiers struggled to lift heavy .75 millimeter shells, then dropped them like giant gre nades down steep hills on allied troops below. A communique from Gen. Douglas MacArthur's headnuar- ters reported naval units and (' nl '.. . 4k. i. . . Y. -m weic uiruwu iiuo ine er fort to wipe the last Japanese from the island. Tokyo yesterday reported a new allied attack un der cover of a naval and shore bombardment. " In the Philippines native troops took the lead in fiehtlne to lib erate their homeland by scoring notable gains on the east coast of Luzon. Guerillas, now fighting as the Philippine army, took Infanta, 44 miles east of Manila, and near by Misua. The entire Dinahlcan peninsula was in their hands.. Land on Peninsula The Filipino forces earlier had made an amphibious landing on the peninsula, which is on Polillo strait, 10 miles across from the neighboring island of Polillo. The native troops joined with the American First cavalrv divl- sion to pursue the Japanese to ward the uneplored hills in the northwest. In northern Luzon the 32nd di vision broke through a strong Japanaese pocket on the Villa Verde trail and crashed within three miles of Santa Fe. ine itta division moping up in the Ipo dam sector northeast of Manila reported it was still kill ing Japanese at the average of ree Parley Dates Are Hinted ixmaon. May 26 (Uiprime Minister Churchill said today that the next Big Three meeting may be held sometime between June "", JU,y o. at the height of Britain a neneral nliviinn , palgn. In an election speech delivered at suburban Loughtor), Churchill gave the strongest official inti mation mat a meeting with President Truman and Pmmior Stalin is Imminent, and that he might have to leave Britain for the conference. Hints of Absence "If I have to be away from this constituencv during tho 17 days of the election period (June -jt may be I shall have to go some conference of what they I call the 'Big Three.' I Not Guilty Plea' Made By Indian iviciwinnvuie. Ore., May 26 (IB- Phillln John Wnr'Lr. ia i i (Grand Ronde Indian pleaded In nocent when arraigned in circuit coun on cnarges of second iWroe muiucr ui rienry mair. , . . ,J , t n. . n Blir died May 13 from a blow on the head. Warrpn'a nttnvnn., r , ing, requested a three weekVXl ,v i-i " "ree ,reeKS delay June lam. M Named By 'U,J , , , INKA Telephnto) Named by President Truman to take new posts In cabinet shake up ar (left to right). Federal Judge Lewis B BcheHenback, Spokane. Wash., to become Secretary of Labor: Rep. Clinton P. Anderson (D., N. M.) to b Secretary of Agriculture; and Tom O. Clark, Dallas, Tex., to be Attorney Otoeral. Truman Seeking Hoover's Advice , Washington, May 26 (IB The White House announced today that President Truman had In. vited Former President Herbert Hoover to the White House for a conference Monday i on the Jodd situation in Europe.'--v White House Press Secretary Charles G. Ross said Hoover had accepted the invitation. Koss said the president felt "that Mr. Hoover had informa tion which would he valuable to him. Hoover was chairman of a commission for relief in Belgium from 1915 to 1919 and during two years of this time from 1917 to the middle of 1919 he was food administrator for this country. Headed Council Following the last war, he served as head of the American relief administration and the European relief council. Hoover Is now in New York City. It is believed the Monday con ference will be the first time Hoover had been in the White House since he left it in 1933 at the time of the first inauguara tion of the late President Roose velt, who defeated him for re election in 1932. Man Pulls Lever, Firemen Answer Spokane, Wash., May 26 Ui Four alarms rang through the Spokane fire department yester day and three companies clanged to the scene. There they found a puzzled, middle-aged man still desperately pulling the lever in the alarm box In a futile effort to mail a letter.. FIRE DAMAGES DAVENPORT Fire, presumably started by a lighted clcaret. last night almost destroyed a davenport and caused considerable smoke damage to the room at 1662 West Fifth street, city firemen reported today. The dwelling is the home of Glen W. Thompson. Plane Production Facing Cutback, But Japs Promised Heavy Tonnage of Bombs This Year Washington, May 26 (tPi Army plane production took a sharp, planned nosedive today but it was not good news for Japan. A well-informed congressman said the land of the rising sun would be plastered during the coming 12 months with more than ! double the weight of bombs the I allies dumped on Europe In the last year of the war there. The congressman. Chairman J. Buell Snyder. D.. Pa., of the house sub-committee on war department I appropriations, told renorters aft- ipr an aI1-day closed meeting with i chlpf of staH Gen George C. j ''";" YOlt C "You can say that In the com-1 ing year more than two and a half ! times as many tons of bombs will i be dropped on Japan as the allies dropped in Europe last year." Snyder did not elaborate. However the army's announce ment of plans for a 45 per cent slash, in its plane output during Dim ea irly Truman to ToUe Ca6;'ne Posts as;; V - S tate Superintendent Speaker At Bend Graduation Exercises 1 13 Seniors Receive Diplomas as Climax of Commencement Program; Class Is Presented One hundred and thirteen of whom are in the armed at commencement exercises nam, state superintendent of Lthe commencement address. v anu as ne spoKe to ine uenu 1945 thunder crashed outside, and flashes of lightning illumi nated the high windows of the big gymnasium. Putnam paid tribute to the in tne armea forces, ana re- minded the audience that, with their high school career at an end, many -of the other boys and girls will soon be taking up their assignments, to assist their nation in the grim days ahead. He touched on grand acts of world history, then added: "For the most of us, the grand act is the sum total of a human life nobly lived. Graduates March in Promptly at 8 p. m., the gratia ates, in gowns of blue and with yellow tassels dangling from their mortar boards, filed into the packed hall to the processional, "War March of Priests," played by the high school band. The seniors took their seats on a specially prepared stage, which extended out over the regular stage, to face the large audience. The band, directed by C. Dale Robblns, was stationed in the room over the main entrance. Following the Invocation by Rev. Robert Mcllvenna, the girls choir of 20 voices, directed by Robblns, was presented in two numbers, "The Swallow" and "Iris." William Lane, valedictorian of the class of 1945, and Beverley Wennerstrom, salutatorian, were presented by R. E. Jewell, Bend high school principal, who also announced the awards, which were presented at the assembly Monday. Honor students were i introduced Class Presented Presentation of the class of 1945 was made by Howard W. George, city superintendent of (Continued on Page 6) the next 18 months also made It clear that the giant B-29 Super fortresses would carry much of the burden of the reduction of Japanese armed might. The army said that while many plane types will be cut back and even eliminated production of B-29's would Increase for several months. The still shadowy B-32 "Doml- nator sunerbomber. which had been exDected to take its Dlace alongside the B-29, apparently is destined to fade entirely out of the picture. Its production will he cut back sharply and ended at the Big sister of the B-24 Liberator enn or ine year. bomber, the "Domlnator" has never been re: ported In action. Its sudden curtailment seemed to in dicate that after some degree of production It had unexpectedly proved unfit or uneconomical for use in tne Japanese war. There have been other, even Dim Destroyed Bend hicrh school students. 11 forces, received their diplomas here last night, with Rex Put public instruction, delivering "Tha Grand Act" was his tonie. nign scnooi war-time class or 11 graduates who are already Deschutes Men Get Service Call A number of men who had been processed for physical cxamlna tlons for Induction and were about to depart for Portland yes terday, were reclassified and withdrawn from the list, It was announced today at the Deschutes county selective service board, Removal of tho men from the list came as a result of new fed eral regulations, which permitted the reclassification of men over 30 years of age who are engaged! in essential Industry. Tne men, who were reclassified to the 2-A status, are: Harold Smith Darling, Clell Clayton McCrea, Lcland Carl Erickson, Donald Howard Hart ley, William Rolan Hatch, George Edward Williamson, Chris Nlcho las Renno, Marlon Delbert Spen cer, Bruce Perry Gilbert Earl T. Huberd, Lloyd Ralph Downs and Theodore T. Vllhauer. Others who were sent to Port land for examinations, and new board transfers, follow: Ordered to report for pre In duction physicals in Portland May 25: Vernon A. Forbes, Nor man H. Ovens, Leslie Daniels, Ralph V. Wilson, Edward Glaab, John William Pickles, Frank Ed ward Webster, Norman Carl Hewitt, Henry Helmholtz, Mervin F. Klrby, Albei t Gordon Craig, (Continued on Page 5' bigger superbombors reported In various stages of development. To aate, nowever, there has been no official Indication that any of them were far enough along to oe usea in this war. The army's announced cutback will eliminate a total of 17,000 planes from production previous ly planned for the next 18 months. By weight, there will he a 30 per cent cut In the last half of this year from production in the first half. Another 10 per cent will be lopped off during the first half of 1946 and an additional five per cent during the remaining portion of next year. This 45 per cent total produc tion, which will affect three fight- er planes, three bombers and : three cargo planes, will touch vir tually every city In the nation manufacturing planes. The army gave no indication of how many employes would be thrown out of work by the cut- back. ky5 Rre Damages Enemy Reveals Entire Capital Must Be ; Rebuilt, Premier Says; Japanese Are Very Mad Washington, May 26 IIP) Nineteen Superfortresses were : lost in yesterday's great fire .. raid on Tokyo, the 20th air force announced today. This was the largest number of B-2Vh ever lost on a single mission. Twelve were lost in tho earlier Tokyo raid this week. Guam. May 26 (IB Premier Kantaro Suzuki announced to night that huge fires touched oft by American Superfortresses, damaged Tokyo so extensively that the entire city will have to be , rebuilt. Japan also reported Em peror HtrohitoV palace virtually was destroyed. : "Our beautltui capital must De completely replanned from a bare start," Premier Suzuki told his nation In a radio broadcast Satur day night (Japan time), "There is no present hope for mere restora tion." Earlier Japanese broadcasts said flames started by 4,000 tons , of Incendiary bombs and whipped by 70-mile-an hour gales had r'laid waste" to most of the remainder . of Tokyo. .-, i. On Large Scale Suzuki said the Saturday B-29 raid was "comparatively on a , large scale," and "it must be ad-' mltted that considerable damage was caused by the numerous fires fanned by strong winds." "We must now make a positive drive with our very all for a strug- -gle for victory." The capital, once the world's third largest city, was literally "scorched to the ground," one broadcast said. Virtually the en tire central business section, in cluding many government minis tries, was said to have been lev elled by the flames. A Japanese announcement said Hlrohlto and his empress were safe, along with the Empress Dowager, his mother, whose near by Omiya palace also burned to the ground. Meeting Called . Premier Baron Kantaro Suzuki called an extraordinary meeting , of his cabinet while, inhabitants of the capital still were fighting , the fires kindled by boo B-zas with 4,000 tons of incendiaries . just after midnight. ' Suzuki Issued a statement re garding the burning of the Im perial palaces, radio Tokyo said, and the cabinet ministers pledged to work for the "renovation of the administration." Vice ministers also were called Into session later and deliberated (Continued on Page 5) County Expense Estimates Made Deschutes county's budget com mittee, in another late meeting in the courthouse last night, vir tually completed its expense es timates for the 1945-46 fiscal year, forecasting a tax reduction of ap proximately three mills, but hold ing post-war construction allow ances to $17,500. No reduction had been expected in the earlier meetings of the com mittee, it having been Intended t0 fun(1 lne savlng resulting from ..., navment of the $44,090 payment county school tax for post-war building. Later examination of the new statute providing for the , payment indicated, however, that the amount must be budgeted and levy made for It, with the saving ' appearing later for direct benefit of the taxpayers when it is used by the assessor to adjust the levy. Memorial Budgeted On the assumption that this in terpretation of the law would stand, the committee decided to make use of the full six per cent levy increase permitted by law. $8,994.22, and to reduce the con' templatcd $35,000 county hospital appropriation to $5,000. An ap propriation of $12,500 for a vet erans memorial, already promi sed, would stand. The money for the memorial (Continued on Page 5) t . , Royal Palace