FTrrcrTrnn Tnr IN Weather Forecast Occasional rain west of and snow or rain east of Cascades today and tonight with showers . Thursday. Not so cold today and tonight east of Cascades. - IJmiHi 10). Emm AW AjJ-JI . j. , CENTRAL OREGON -5 DAILY NEWSPAPJER Volume LIU . THE BEND BULLETIN- BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, DEC. 27, 1944 NO. 18 Knn AM M STOP V U Z-tt 4 i a Air Forts' As Aircraft Plant Enemy Says Big Sky Fleet Bombs Capita! Plunge of Warplane To Earth Cheered By Nips, Asserts Radio By Fred Scherff (United Press Staff Correspondent) Washington, Dec. 27 (lP B-29 Superfortresses,. 50 .to 70 strong by axis accounts, resumed their aerial bombardment ol Tokyo in daylight today, presumably again hitting the big Musashino aircraft works In the western suburbs of the capital. The attack, the fifth .in streagth on Tokyo, inaugurated the second month of the mounting B-29 of fensive against Japan from Sai pan bases. Some 1,500 tons of "bombs were unloaded on the Japa nese homeland during the month ended Dec. 24, an average of 50 tons a day; A Japanese communique said 50 of the huge raiders participated in the raid, of which 14, including five probables, were shot down, and 27 damaged. A German Trans ocean dispatch from Tokyo, how ever, estimated the number of bombers at 70. .'. ,.'" , Given Kespite . -i MOKyo naa naa a respite irom large-scale raids since Dec. 3, though lone B-29s have dropped bombs on the city during weather and reconnaissance flights in the interim. A brief war department an nouncement said only that the Su perfortresses bombed "industrial targets in the Tokyo area," but two of the previous four raids were directed against the Musa shino works, among the most im portant in Japan, and other tar gets were chosen only when visi bility was poor. Brig. Gen. Heywood Hansell, Jr., chief of the 21st bomber command at Saipan, acknowledged in a press statement yesterday that results so far at the Musashino plant had been "inconclusive." "In other words," he said, "we destroyed a few buildings in the factory area and possibly inter rupted production inside the I plant, but we did not knock it j out." Jans Make Report The Japanese Domei agency said that B-29s dropped explosive and fire bombs at scattered points in the Tokyo area shortly after noon (Tokyo time) today, but claimed "no effective damage" had been done. "Details of the war results in flicted against the raiders by our air and ground resistance are now being investigated," Domei said. Another Tokyo broadcast said downtown Tokyo cheered and ap plauded when a B-29 broke out of formation amid a cluster of anti aircraft bursts and "hurtled" to ward the ground. Hansen's statement disclosed that the 21st command had drop ped an average of 100,000 pounds 50 tons of bombs a day on the Japanese homeland during the first month of operations from Saipan, Nov. 24 to Dec. 24. New FBI Agent A IN i Ho n Oregon Job Portland. Ore.. Dec. 27 U Joseph E. Thornton today took up his new duties as special agent in charge of the Portland office of the federal bureau of investi gation. Thornton succeeds Clinton W. Stein in a swap of Jobs, with Stein going to the Honolulu of fice which Thornton has headed since 1942. Thornton also had been as signed to wartime FBI work in Honolulu and North Africa, and previously was special agent in charge of offices at Pittsburgh and Springfield, 111., and also worked in the Washington head quarters. He has been an FBI agent since 1934. TWINS ARE BORN . Rnlom Oro . Dec. 27 W1 TwinS, a boy and a girl, were born here yesterday to Mr. ana mrs. mw rence Shaw, at the Salem General hospital. Three minutes later, twins, both girls, were born to Mr. and Mrs. Irwin E. Burk, at the same hospital. Osaka Factory chimneys rise skyward in contrast to the two-story "skyline" of the hundreds of paper-and-wood buildings that maka up most of Osaka, Japan. With about the population of Chicago, Osaka covers some 70 square miles on a mud flat on Osaka Bay, is traversed by hundreds of canals. With Kobe, Amagasaki and other contiguous cities, it forms the most important Industrial and com mercial unit in Japan, . Midwest Routes Covered By Ice (By United Press)' A freezing rain and snow that turned highways .into sheets of ice moved into the midwest today in the wake of the season's worst cbid wave which invaded the east and northeast. vTh-rAnv which 'swept across the central states from northern Texas through Arkansas, Mis souri, Kentucky and Tennessee, turned into snow in the north central states where a fall of two or three inches was anticipated. A fall of one inch was reported at Mason City, la. The federal weather forecaster at Chicago said the storm would extend into northern Illinois, Michigan, Indiana and parts of Ohio today. . Pennsylvania Cold No zero weather was reported in the midwest-today but in the east, several weather stations re ported sub-zero temperatures with Black Moshannon, Pa., reporting a low of 15 degrees below zero. However, the weatherman said, the cold wave was decreasing in intensity as it moved eastward. Sub-zero temperatures were re ported in some parts of Illinois during the night bt the mercury had climed to 10 or 15 degrees above by this morning. Greeks Exhorted To End Civil War Athens, Dec. 27 (IP The second session of a Greek peace confer ence broke up late today with rep resentatives of Premier George Papandreou's government pro fessing indignation at settlement terms proposed by the leftist E.L.A.S. delegates. The conference called by Prime Minister Winston Churchill was resumed today under a partial truce similar to that of vesterdav. uihinh PI. A S armpH fnrpA I broke by firing on warships and naval installations at Piraeus. Exhorted by Churchill to cease their civil war and establish a coalition government, the Greek delegates met for the second ses sion of the conference after an order to cease fire for 45 minutes along certain streets permitted j E.L.A.S. representatives to enter central Athens. Greeks Warned Churchill warned that if the rebels fail to come to terms, Brit ain will feel bound to aid Premier George Papandreou's government in "rescuing Athens from anarchy and the miserable conditions now prevailing." Authorities announced that 10 the semi-truce incident to the con- ference yesterday, E.L.A.S. guns I UmmUJ 7K .iHiMn.nn UnUf hurled two 75-millimeter shells Into Piraeus. One landed near the navy house and the second in the harbor between the house and a warship. MADRAS MAN WOUNDED Madras, Dec. 27 Carl A. Kemp, T'4, son of Mrs. Eliza E. Kemp, Madras, has been wounded In ac tion in the European war theater, the war department announced today. Blast Tokyo; am Fliers' City of Flimsy Buildings Detroit Store Scene of Riot After Pickets Start Parade Merchandise Trampled Following Outbreak; Police Arrest and Identify Two Ring Leaders Detroit, Dec. 27 (VP.) A crowd of alleged Store Workers' union members smashed show cases, overturned counters and trampled merchandise displays at Montgomery Ward and company's Dearborn store today in an outbreak of violence which a labor leader charged was instigated by "imported r strike breakers."--v'- -- Two persons who, Dearborn police said, led an estimated 75 union members into the store and during a 15-minute ram page through its first floor aisles wre arrested on charges of malicious destruction of property. Police identified the arrested ring-leaders as Stanley Bu- New Snow Loader Used on Streets Using the city's new $7,000 snow loader, street - department employes today continued the re moval of snow from Bend's streets, with some prospect that a thaw might complete the task of restoring traffic arteries to a nor mal condition. A sudden rise in temperature this morning led some observers to believe that a thaw would oc cur, although snow or rain were forecast for tonight east of the Cascades, with showers following tomorrow. "Not so cold", was add ed to the forecast. A sudden warm wave from the south was believed responsible for the brisk climb by the mercury around 7:30 a. m., when it jumped from 22 degrees to 31 degrees above zero in 10 minutes. Snow Removed The new snow loader, which made its debut on Wall street yes terday afternoon, was pronounced a success by City Manager C. G. Reiter and Percy Drost, superin tendent of streets. The device moved steadily down the streets, loading truck after truck, which dumped the snow Into the Des chutes river behind the Pacific Power & Light company plant. The state highway department headquarters here announced that major highways leading from and through Central Oregon were in "normal condition." Some ice was reported on The Dalles-California highway south of Bend, but sanding operations were be- )n carrjed on. Aside from some shady sections, dry conditions were reported oT the Santiam highway. Applications for Car Tags Increase Applications for 1945 motor vehicle licenses are coming in earlier this year than last, R. I. Hamby, Deschutes county deputy ..... . . . sheriff in charge of tax collec tions, said today. Last year, up to 5 p. m. on Dec. 26, 260 appli cations had been filed. In the same period this year 337 persons applied. Hamby stated today that, as the office closes at noon on Saturday, persons should apply for licenses as soon as possible. After Jan. 1 persons driving a motor vehicle without a 1945 license will be liable to arrest, it is explained. Target s IB " I ' '; ' ----;:--V;... kowsky. 45, Detroit, and Wil- i - n ' "i i nn ta l nam J. omun, nz, ueuruurn. Police said that neither had been a Ward employe, but that they were members of either the striking union or the United Automobile Workers union (CIO), which has been actively supporting the Ward walkout. Estimate Is Lacking The store management said that no estimate of damage would be available until an inventory is taken. Roy Scoggins, Michigan direc tor for the striking United Retail, Warehouse and Department Store Employes (CIO) union, declared that the disturbance began when company .imported strikebreak ers attempted to interfere with our members who went Into the store for a peaceful domonstra tion." Scoggins said pickets had planned to "parade" through the store in a repetition of tactics which had been used previously to force the company to close the building early during pre-Chrlst-mas shopping days. "But today," Scoggins said, "strike breakers imported by the company tried to stop the pickets and a scuffle resulted." U.S.S. Cooper Lost in Action Washington, Dec. 27 tun The navy today Identified as the 2,200 ton Cooper a destroyer recently announced as lost off Ormoc, Ley to, and also announced the loss of a landing craft, the LSM-20, in the same waters. - Both skippers, Cmdr. Mell A. Peterson of the Cooper, and Lt. John R. Bradley of the LSM-20 survived, but Bradley was wound ed, the navy said. Casualties were not announced. Normal complement of the Coop er Is about 275 men and of the landing craft, 52. Nippons Threaten To Destroy Gity Chungking, Dec. 27 Ui The Japanese have threatened to des troy Shanghai if and when they are forced to vacate, a Chinese military spokesman said today. He said the threat was voiced by the Japanese garrison com mander recently to a mixed Chin ese and Japanese audience at Shanghai. Japanese forces In China ar preparing to strengthen defenses on the China coast as a precau- tlon against Allied landings, the spokesman said. Russian Forces Of Fiery Buda Split Encircled Great Columns of Smoke Billow Over City As Reds Press Conquest; Hungary Capital's Fall Believed Near; Germans Are in Trap . " By Henry Shapiro (United Prsu Staff Correspondent) Moscow, Dec. 27 (UJ? stabbed into the heart of flaming Buda, western half of Budapest, today in an attempt to reach the Danube and split tne encircled enemy garrison. A front dispatch to the government newspaper Izvestia Raid the. Germans were blowing up ammunition dumps and dynamiting and settinsr fire to and private dwellings as they powertui soviet assault. ' Great columns of smoke ' Germans Attack On South Front Rome, Dec. 27 IP The Ger mans have launched a surprise attack in the western sector pf the fifth army front, striking in strength in the Serchlo valley area, 15 miles Inland from the Ligurian coast, headquarters an nounced today. The attack, made in one of the few Italian front areas not blank eted by snow, was aimed at the town of Gallicano, a half mile from the Serchlo river. A com munique said Americans were forced to withdraw from outposts j . . . ... , -jLto prepared positions. J ' T 'rL T r.. -i r , .i artillery fire In the central sector and planes dropped antipersonnel bombs behind fifth army lines below Bologna. Air Arm Active Eighth army troops, supported by artillery, continued to mop up German rear guards eaijt of the Naviglio canal between liagna cavallo and Faenza. With weather turning fair and slightly warmer Allied air opera tions increased. More than 1,000 fighters and fighter bombers flew in close support of ground troops and attacked communications, supply dumps, and rail and road bridges in Italy. OPA Gives List Of Voided Stamps Washington, Dec. 27 (Hi The office of price administration to day warned that use of the in validated food ration stamps by consumers or merchants would constitute a violation of rationing regulations. It urged housewives to destroy all stamps no longer good. The agency also said that the Invalidation of certain food stamps had no effect on red tok ens, which will continue to be honored. Blue tokens, which have not been used since Oct. 1, will be returned to use. Ration stamps no longer good are: Red stamps A8 through Z8 and A5 through P5. Blue stamps A tnrougn zs ana A5 through W5. Sugar stamps 30, 31, 32, 33 and 40, with all home canning cou pons. U. S. Air Force Half of Nazi Armor in Western Front Action By Walter Cronklte (United Press Wsr Correspondent) Ninth Air Force Advanced Headquarters, Dec. 27 mi In four straight days of perfect flying weather, fighter bombers of the ninth U. S. air force were be lieved to have knocked out half of the German armor and trans port that Field Marshal Karl von i sive Von Rundstedt had put down Rundstedt used to sweep back a tall stack of blue chips on the into Belgium 11 days ago. i weather. His weather forecast -The cumulative score of de- was excellent. It called for nearly struction since the weather broke two weeks of overcast skies that Saturday and unleashed the allied i would keep off the dreaded Amer fury stood today at 231 tanks and i lean Thunderbolts, Lightnings and armored vehicles destroyed and j Mustangs. 218 damaged: 2.026 motor trans- In that time ho apparently be- port vehicles destroyed and 503 : damaged. 'An SHAEF dispatch listed totals for 8,923 sorties flown by the ninth air force in four days as 3527 German transport stroyed or damaged and 571 ar mored vehicles, including tanns, destroyer or damaged. The SHAEF dispatch did not estimate that more than half of the vc- Stab to Heart in Attempt to Foe Garrison Russian tanks and infantry railway yards. Dublic buildincs slowly gave ground under the were rising over the apparently rlnnmp-rl T-Tlincrn-iin rrinirol T-7 vestia said. Red army forces were said to have captured a trainload of German officials attempting to flee to the reich The bloody battle Inside Buda. that part of the capital lying on tne west Dank or tne Danube, ap peared to be developing on the Stalingrad pattern. All govern ment buildings arc in Buda. May Bo Difficult German regiments believed to be among the best -in the wrhr macht were entrenching them selves In the ruins of the city's stone houses and the process of cleaning up Buda may be difficult and protracted unless a sudden collapse comes. A soviet breakthrough to the Danube, however, would split the garrison and conceivably hasten its annihilation. Field reports said the Russians : were, stepping -up-tlw- intensity and weight of their attacks in Buda almost hourly. Siege guns were being brought up in a solid ring around the city, ready to pound lt to pieces unless the en emy surrenders. Skies Dominated Red air force planes maintained a constant air umbrella over Bud apest and pilots reported the squares appeared deserted except) ior occasional ucrmans scurrying from building to building. Ger man gun batteries were said to have been mounted in the city's parks. Two soviet spearheads were less than three miles from the Hungarian royal palace on the west bank of the Danube early today and field dispatches said long columns of men and armor were streaming into the city from the north, west and south to bring the seven-week siege to a trium phant close. KBND Goes Back On Mutual Line Radio station KBND returned to the Mutual network at 10:32 a. m. today when arrangements were completed by the Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. for use of a line to the south. KBND, which normally Is connected with the Mutual system by the way of Portland, lost Its network con nection yesterday morning when telephone lines to the north were broken by accumulated ice and frost, result of nearly two weeks of foggy weather. The break in the north lines was In the high Criterion sum mit country, south of Maupln. Crews today were still attempting to establish normal service over the Bend-Portland wires. Believed to Have Knocked Out hides used in invading Belgium were destroyed.) Roads through the 1,500 square miles that Von Rundstedt s offen sive overran wore lined with the burned out hulks of what he had counted on as a mobile reserve that would turn the tide of battle. In his big gamble on the offen lleved he could consolidate his galnB and, with saved up iit-vi'u ill? i-ijuiij iruimfiiimi(7 mn i iwaffe strength, could maintain ; the offensive, I But Saturday both Rundstedt de-land allied meteorologists were surprlscd by a sudden atmos phere shirt that cleared tne SKies. Now, in four days, Von Rund stedt's ground forces have been chewed to ribbons. Behind him Jap Trapper T'vC (Signal Corps Photo from NEA) MoJ.-Gen. Archibald V. Ar nold, above, commands, the tough U. S. 7th Division troops on Leyte Island -in the Philip pines. His division trapped and reduced elements of the Japa nese 26th Division- near Ormoc and continued to sweep inland. Victim of Sub Washington, Dec. 27 (IP) A large Japanese aircraft carrier and 26 other enemy vessels have been sunk by U. S. submarines in their mounting offensive against enemy sea power, secretary of navy James Forresta! announced today, These latest sinkings Included seven enemy combat ships in all This latest haul lralsed to 1090 the total of Japanese ships sunk, probably sunk, and damaged by the V. S. underseas fleet. Forrestal said that the total of U. S. submarines successes in the Pacific covers the sinkings of more than 3,500,000 tons of Japan ese shipping. Currier Bagged Besides the aircraft carrier, the other enemy combat ships sent to the bottom recently were a con verted light cruiser, a destroyer, two destroyer transports, and two escort vessels. The rest of the ships included two large transports, 10 medium cargo vessels, three small cargo ships, a small transport, two medium cargo transports and two medium tankers. Forrestal said that he could not now reveal any details concern ing the Jnp carrier that was sent to the bottom by American tor pedoes but he commented that this was "hitting ut one of the most painful spots on the Japan ese body at the moment." This was the first enemy air craft earlier definitely known to have 'been sunk by our ' sub- mnrlnna Tn nrlfllllMfl tVJL'n Hln listed as probably sunk and two damaged by underseas craft. Quake Recorded In South Pacific Pasadena, Cal., Dec. 27 (111 A "large" earthquake, possibly In the vicinity of New Britain, was recorded at the Callhirnla Insti tute of Technology at 8:38 a. m. today. The shock was centered about 6,400 miles west of Pasadena, sci entists said, but they were unable to determine the direction exar tly. Marauders and heavy bombers have taken out his bridges and smashed frelKht yards and allied fighters have whittled the luft- waffe down to half Its size. Today, despite a still serious situation on the ground In south east Belelum. there was a grow ing spirit of optimism around here and the enthusiasm of the airmen was shared by the ground troops. The hard-boiled colonel of a famous ground force which is traditionally critical of other nrancnes or tne service torn me at his battered farmhouse hcad-i quarters near the front: Those air boys have reany luft-ibeen knocking them dead. They i num.' mi uifvs I air I'-nnr are taking out tanks and guns right in front of our noses. Broth er, they can crumple their hats any way they want to from now on. I'm for them." Fighter bombers continued to plaster every vehicle and every building housing Germans In the spearhead. Americans Jab At South Flank Of Foe Column Germans Probe, Punch . At Western Front But Are Lacking 'Umbrella' By J. Edward Murray (United Press Wsx Correspondent) Paris, Dec. 27 U American forces today jabbed the nazis to a halt four miles east of the Meuse, recapturing the town of. Celles, and front reports said the Amer ican drive Into the southern flank of the German salient was "mak ing excellent headway." No notable changes of position were reported but the Germans were still probing and punching along the north flank of their salient from Stavelot to Marchc, apparently hunting a soft spot where they could renew their northwestward thrusts toward Liege and Namur. The weather was again bright and clear, allowing the American air power to turn out In force, and take a deadly toll of German arm or and transport. Yanks Get Help The first allied airborne army announced that hundreds of tons of supplies, mostly ammunition, have been dropped to the power ful American force; holding out at Bastogne, a Belgian highway cen ter, which has been under German attacks for a week. Paratroopers were landed first in the area to mark out landing zones, then the supplies were rain ed down. No specuihe- report was releas or rtn ftia nmimiDa ff etpnna American relief column which has narrowed the gap that separates them from Bastogne to less than five miles. However, John McDer mott, United Press war corre spondent with the American first army reported that "at least three towns have been taken by the Americans" in this vicinity. In the northern first army area, he re ports, at least one town was re captured from the Germans. Night Battles Fought Two night armored engage ments were fugght in the vicinity of Gelles, which lies lour miles east of the Meuse and due east of Dinant. In one of these battles the Americans knocked out 12 Ger man tanks and two self-propelled guns and at another seven Mark 5's one Mark-4, three halftracks, three armored cars, ten trucks and two anti-tank guns. Evidence of German supply dlf- iii-uuius in inu veues area, tneir point of deepest penetration about ai) miles irom the Belgian fron tier, was uncovered. adoui n uozen tanns and seir propelled guns were found aband oned by the Germans because they had run out of gasoline. Five more, also out of gasoline, were found elsewhere on the front, an Indication that the- American air assaults were biting Into Field Marshal Karl supply lines. von Rundstedts Varied Weather Noted in Oregon (Ky United Tress) All kinds of weather, mostly bad, were experienced In the northwest today. The wind was shipping through the Columbia gorge, to the dis comfort of Portland citizens, and the weather man said lt might rain or snow in the area. Freez ing rain up the Columbia was on the schedule. Temperatures in the 30's were experienced In the valleys and around Portland, with slightly higher readings along tne coast and sub-freezing marks registered In eastern and central Oregon. Most highways were posted by the weather bureau yesterday afternoon along the Washington coast, and small craft warnings from the mouth of the Columbia , river south to Eureka, Cal. Minimum temperatures report- led included Baker 25, Bend 20, Burns 14, Spokane 16, Seattle 38, Eugene 30, Klamath Falls 24, ,Lakeview 15, and Crescent la. Shortage of Cigarets Finally Hits Alaska .. . . Ketchikan. Alaska, Dec. 27 tin The clgaret shortage has hit ration-free Alaska. Stores here today announced they would sell a maximum of two packs a day to a customer. Reason: Too many have been buying too much to send to the United States.