BULLETM Todays News Follow world history in the making from day to day in the columns of .The Bulletin. Also read the local news items, some small, some large. Weather Forecast Cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Rain beginning this afternoon west portion. Wednesday, light rain except rain or snow east por tion. Cooler Wednesday afternoon. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Vol THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, JAN. 9, 1945 ume Lll! NO. 29 THE mm Jittery Tokyo Says Big Task Force Spotted Second Striking Unit Of 150 Ships Reported In Lingayen Gulf Area I Pearl Harbor, Jan. 9 UPi Tokyo broadcasts today reported a sec- Jond great American task force , has arrived in "the Lingayen gulf ijcomoat zone' ana was maneuver ing for a landing, while hundreds pf American aircraft both car-Vier-based and giant B-29 Super 'forts raked Japanese installa tions on a 1,500-mile arc from Formosa to Tokyo, i The Japanese broadcasts esti , inated the second American strik ing force at 150 ships, apparently jmost ly transports. " The jittery Japanese broadcasts gave a confused picture of the situation on the coasts of Luzon with fleets of American warships and transports steaming back and forth, shelling the shore and ap parently feinting at landings at numDer 01 points. . Shift Operations The first invasion armada, ac- Wording to enemy reports, shifted 'operations to the Manila area to day. Later Tokyo broadcasts said Shelling of the coast by the first force was slackening but that the liuge new task force had appeared jn Lingayen gulf. I The Japanese accounts said the Americans were only awaiting the zero hour before commenc ing landing operations, i- There was no comment from American official sources on the Japanese reports of fleets off Luzon. ;j However, official announcement was made of fresh aerial blows Tanging over Japanese strong points in a wide Pacific arc. Tokyo Bombed Twenty-first bomber command .headquarters at Guam announced :that a "substantial" force of Su- : perforts hit Tokyo, striking at In dustrial targets in their second Ifrnajor assault of the year on the nain Jap island of Honshu. 1 At about the same time 20th bomber command Superforts at tacked military installations at ,F o r m o s a and carrier aircraft from Admiral J. S. McCain's Third fleet fast carrier force smashed 8t Japanese shipping and installa tions in and around Formosa, Jshigaka,, Miyako and Okinawa. i The Japanese Dome! agency "said 450 American carrier planes teamed with China-based B-29's Jn an assault today on Formosa, presumably the second in as many days and the fourth in a week for -the carrier forces. Domci said 11 to 15 planes were shot down and "eight others damaged. f Fleet Goes North Official American sources an '.flounced that carriers of the Third fleet turned north from Luzon .following a two-day strike Satur . (Continued on Page 6) pritish Columbia In Grip of Strike 1 Vancouver, B. C, Jan. 9 Ui British Columbia's leading war industries faltered today under the impact of a wage strike of street railway workers and bus operators in three of the prov ince's biggest cities. ' Picket lines swung into posi tion in Vancouver after the last of the street cars rolled into the barns a few minutes after 4 a.m., leaving many of an estimated 80,000 war workers stranded in Vancouver, Victoria, and New Westminster. ) Officials announced that emer gency measures were being taken Immediately to avert shutdowns Jn vital aircraft plants and ship yards, ordering issuance of extra gasoline to car owners under agreement to drive workers to their jobs in war plants, hospi tals, public utilities and other es sential services. J Offer Rejected J Meantime, street car workers and bus operators had firmly re jected a last minute street rail way company offer of a five and a half cent hourly increase and a plea for a 48 hour stay In the call ing of the strike. Bus drivers and street car oper ators, estimated at 3,000 were mong the first to feel the effect pf the strike, having to walk home .from the barns after n.irklnp Jheir vehicles. Throughout the I f.uee anected cities, bakeries and dairies made their own emer gency arrangements to pick up Jhelr staffs, although delivery JToblems still were unsolved, ft Fearing a shortage of telephone w'peraiors aue to the transporta tion shutdown, the British Colum bia TeleDhone comnnnv annonlpH ' ,' 'he public to keep telephone I rails to a minimum. I Sfate Legislature Opens With Snell Asking for OLC Study Organization of Two Houses Is Completed; First Bill Is Introduced and Gets Approval By Eric W. Allen, Jr. fUnited PrtM Staff CorreiDondMit.) Salem, Ore., Jan. 9 (U.E) Oregon's 1945 legislature today rolled up its sleeves and settled down to business with action believed in the offing on Gov. Earl Snell's urgent request for a full-dress investigation of the state liquor control commis sion. Organization of the two houses amd preliminaries were completed at the initial meetings yesterday, climaxed by the governor's message to a joint session. In a last minute addition to Ms speech, Snell said he Officer Leaves A v. 3 After visiting here with his Dar- ents, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Murphy, Lt. Bill I. Murphy, who recently received nis wings, has returned to his base at Columbus, Miss. A former Bend high school student and football player, Lt. Murphy attended the University of Oregon belore enlisting. City Development Plans Discussed Carl A. Johnson, newly elected president-of the local chamber of commerce, at today's meeting of the Bend Lions club in the Pine Tavern spoke on industrial de velopment for Bend and urged the united support of every citizen and .organization in working with the chamber to make this develop ment possible. The program, as already work ed out, was explained in detail by Johnson. The immediate plan is to raise money for an industrial promotion program. This sum has been placed at $20,000. One half will be provided by the city and half by business and property owners. The fund will be ad ministered by a committee rep resenting the doners and the city. Johnson said, to interest new in dustries in coming to Bend. Development Comes First 'The first and foremost pro gram for this year for the Bend chamber of commerce will be the promotion of plans for industrial development of this area," John son added. , A committee from the Prine- ville Lions club, including Presi dent Don Taylor, Charles Downey and Elton Mooney, invited the Bend Lions to a Lions party in Prineville on January 27. Claude Cook, coach, discussed the basketball schedule remain ing for the Lava Bears. State Barber Law Unconstitutional Salem, Ore., Jan. 9 Uli The Oregon supreme court today de clared unconstitutional the law permitting a majority of barbers to fix minimum prices for a county. The act was passed by the 194 J legislature and was appealed by Earl La Forge, a barber of Mult nomah county. La Forge contended the act vi olated the due process clause of the 14th amendment and unlaw fully delegated legislative authority. j 'if fX F' (fx Total War Program for Five Years to Cost 450 Billions-FDR Washington, Jan. 9 U Im-for the fiscal years 1941 through i Social Security Reconversion portant statements in President 1MC, will total 450 billion dollars." "I hope that the congress will ..A, ,nn, . . ... ... Roosevelt's messaee transmitting KorelBn Aid give early consideration to exten- A ,B aS " 'lr , , w",r-"'lt Roosevelt s message ' ransm tmg Wp continue to provlde slon and mprovt.mpnt of "l Z" war against two powerful enemies 10 congress ms . budget Progress of flip War "I have not made in the past, and I shall not now make, any prediction concerning the length i of the war. My only prediction is that our enemies will be totally defeated before we lay down our arms." "We would make a great mis take if, jn our military and bud getary planning, we underesti mated the task of defeating Ja pan." War Costs "The total war program .. .1 wanted a "thorough, sweep ing and complete audit and in vestigation" into the Oregon liquor control situation to dis pel "certain statements, in nuendos, and accusations" that have arisen in connection with the purchase of liquor stocks by the states of Oregon and Wash ington. Initial housekeeping chores were completed in the house, as it voted to give itself the copies of the Oregon laws that are furn ished to each member, to furnish legal date to committees and to obtain needed equipment. First Bill Passed The first house bill introduced that to pay for the expenses of the 1945 session was passed to its second reading, and in a move just prior to adjournment, Rep. Vernon D. Bull, (D., La Grande) introduced house joint resolution No. 1, which would call for a constitutional amendment to change the legal voting age in Oregon to 18 years. First senate bill introduced was one that would repeal the com munity property law In the state, while other bills were in prepara tion to substitute legislation for some of its provisions. Recent supreme court action in validated the income tax return use of the law by married couples. Both houses adjourned shortly after completion of the governor's speecn. Airport at Baker Suffers Bad Fire . Baker, Ore., Jan. 9 IIP) All buildings . and seven privately owned planes were destroyed by fire Monday at the Baker munici pal airport, at an estimated loss of 823,000. Included in the buildings lost were the main hangar, adminis tration building and repair shop, all under one roof. Four of the planes, valued at $0,000 were owned by the Baker flying school and were Insured, said L. D. Shurtleff, proprietor. ine otner tnree planes, valued at $3750, were owned by Fred Shaw, an airport meenanic, put no in surance was carried on them. A weather station and two near by buildings were saved by city nremen. Oregon Far Over Its Bond Quota Portland, Ore., Jan. 9 UP) Final Sixth war loan drive re- ports, released today, show that Oregon succeeded its over -all bond quota by 46.9 per cent, with total sales amounting to $157,221, 512. The state goal was $107,000, 000. Oregon citizens bought $40,714, 912 worth of E bonds, against a quota of $34,000,000, with the over subscription amounting to 19.7 per cent. Complete figures for each county and community are being compiled by the federal reserve bank and will be an nounced soon, E. C. Sammons, state war finance committee chair man, said today. HURT IV ACTION Pfc. Hugh T. Lowther, son of Charles E. Lowther, employed at the Horseheaven mines in Jef ferson county, has been wounded In action in the European theater of war, according to information from the war department. Hugh is a grandson of Dan Crowley, pi oneer resident of the Ashwood community. if.nd-lea.se, and our allies to pro-icial vide reciprocal lend-lease, to the j full extent necessary to win the ; war. Lend-lease has been and will be an instrument of war; it will be liquidated with the end of the war." Agriculture "... we must develop a pro gram to eliminate malnutrition and rural poverty . . . farmers and the nation as a whole must be protected against heavy fluctua tions In agricultural prices and income, and this must be accom- j plished without the accumulations of unmanageable surpluses." Billions Sought To Meet Costs OfGlobalWai Flexible 1946 Budget Is Presented to Congress By President Roosevelt By Lyle C. Wilson (United PreM Stuff CorrMpondent) , Washington, Jan. 9 " Vxes dent Roosevelt today presented to congress a flexible 1946 fiscal year budget calling for reduction of ex penditures to $83,760,000,000 and estimating cumulative .war au thorizations at $450,000,000,000 for six years. The 1946 expenditures would be approximately $17,802,000,000 less than those in the current 1945 fiscal year. ' The six year war authorization figure covers the period from July 1, 1940 to June 30, 1946. Roosevelt told congress that there was no justification for tax reduction so long as we are en gaged in major war. And he fram ed this budget to meet the even tuality of war in Europe continu ing for another 18 months. Reduction Planned This budget message contained a pre-view of Roosevelt's post-war demobilization and employment plans. They evidently contemplate reduction of annual government expenditures to $50,000,000,000 through the demobilization per iod 'and, ultimately, to $25,000, 000,000 where they would level off. He s.i lil that as demobilization accelerates after the war "there may be 60,000,000 men and women to be employed." "Manifestly," Roosevelt said, "full employment in peace time can be assured only when the re duction In war demand is approxi mately offset by additional peace time demand from the millions of consumers, businesses, farmers, and by federal, state and local governments. "That means that consumers' expenditures and business 'invest ments must increase by about 50 per cent, measured in constant prices, above the level of the year 1939 if full employment is to be provided by private enterprise." Expenditures Lower To that end he proposed post war overhaul of the wartime tax structure to stimulate consumers' demand and promote business in vestment. Spending, revenue and deficit estimates were all down in this budget compared with those for the current fiscal year which will end on June 30. The 1946 fiscal year, budgeted today, will run from July 1, 1945, to June 30, 1946. The public debt is going up to an estimated $252,000,000,000 on June 30 and to $292,000,000,000 on June 30, 1946. Roosevelt will ask congress to raise the statutory debt limit, now $260,000,000,000. He estimated interest on the public debt alone would cost $4, 500,000,000 In the fiscal year 1946. His calculation of war expendi tures for the next fiscal year ranged from less than $60,000,000, 000 to more than $80,000,000,000 depending on when or whether Germany is licked In the period covered. He arbitrarily nrnnnsorl $70,000,000,000 as a tentative esti mate of war spending. Of this amount, $39,000,000,000 would be spent by the army, $22,000,000,000 by the navy, and the rest by other government agencies. Mould Cut Expenditures This budget would reducp over. all 1946 expenditures hv jihnnt $17,802,000,000 from the $101.- 562,000,000 being scent in the cur- rent fiscal year. These figures in clude outlays by government corp orations as well as the iwasiim The 1946 net deficit would be down approximately $12,000,000, 000 from this year's expected $53. 182,000,000. Roosevelt estimated net treas ury revenue in the 1946 fiscal year at $41,254,000,000 compared with the 1945 estimated of $15, 729,000,000. securltv svstpm nn,i win : examine the financial basis of the program." Taxes Wartime taxes must be main- tained as long as large-scale war expenditures are necessary. There! dependent on the progress of tho reclns.siflod as available for mill is no justification for tax reduc war." Itary service, It was said. in a major war." ) The Pnblic Debt I (He said It would rise to $292 ! oinion oy june do, J346.; : i lavor a policy oi orderly but steady debt reduction, consistent with the objectives of long-run economy policy. Qermans Believed Pulling Out Of Bulge; Tank Battle Rages Snow Lined Foxholes Are Cold Yank infantrymen hastily dig foxholes Into the snow-covered, frozen shoulder ot a road some where in Belgium as German advance rolls towards them. Moore Is Named District Attorney Arthur J. Moore, Bend attorney who for 10 years served as Des schutes county district attorney, today was again appointed to that post by Governor Earl Snell to act pro tern during the absence of District Attorney Robert Fo ley, now a captain in the signal corps stationed in New Guinea. Moore succeeds Charles E. Board man whose term as acting district attorney expired early this month. The appointment came as a complete surprise to Moore, who said that he had not been in com- munication with the governor, nor had he any hint that he had been considered for the post. Moore had been Deschutes dis trict attorney between 19J8 and 1928, serving two and a half Moore Is Surprised "Tills is the first I've heard of lt," Moore said when informed that a United Press dispatch from Salem told of his appointment, ef fective today. Moore said that he would be unable to accept the position im mediately because of several pend ing civil actions in which he could not legally represent his clients while serving as district attorney. Moore, a republican, is appoint ed to fill the vacancy created by Foley's absence in the service, either until the latter returns or until the end of the four year term to which Foley was reelected without opposition at last fall's elections. When Foley entered the serv ice, Irving D. Brown was named acting district attorney and held the position until he enlisted in the navy late in 1943. Uoardman was then named as Brawn's suc cessor, taking over the duties of the district attorney on Dir. 15, 1943. Joe Stenkamp Hurt in Action Pfc. Joe H. Stenkamp, 19, suf fered a broken leg and an in jured right arm during action In Belgium on Dee. 21, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Stenkamp, 54 Sullivan, have learned. Joe, a Graduate of Bend high school, was employed by Western Union here before entering the sen-ice a year and a half ago. He was with an infantry unit when wounded. or against onlv one of them we ! will give unqualified priority to all war production and to all manpower needs of war. Never-1 theless, some reconversion of war are found engaging in profession industries maV hecome OOSSible. :il unnrla ulcn ulll hn nrnmntlv "Large-scale demobilization can hardlv ho oynorlnd to hppin dur ing the period covered in this budget. Nevertheless, as we con tinue to mobilize for a long, hard war, we must under no eircum- stance be caught unprepared for I peace. Bradley Says German Losses May Affect Course of War Americans Seize More Prisoners Than U. S. Losses to Foe; New Attacks Are Expected Twelfth Army Group Headquarters, Jan. 9 (U.E) Lt Gen. Omar N. Bradley said today German losses in the naz: counterof fensive have been so materially the course of the Bradley, in his first public statement since the launching of Marshal Karl Von Rundstedt'a counteroffensive, said that the number of German prisoners taken since December 16 by the American armies alone is greater than the number" of American troops reported captured or missing in action. Bradley said the Gel-mans are hot on the verge of collapse and that "there is considerable Deschutes 4-F Men to Get Call Approximately 375 4-F men be- iwLi-n i in- ages oi is ano ja years who are under the jurisdiction of the Deschutes county selective service board face Immediate in- duction for military service tin- less they get Into essential in - dustry at once, It was announced here today by board officials, Members of the board have al ready begun the reclassification of such men in order to fill the urgent needs of the army and navy, it was said. "These men have been amply warned by the press and radio In the past weeks and there can be no other alternative," said J. D. Donovan, chairman of the board. "We are fully aware who these men are, and they should receive their calls for service shortly." Warning (ilven Donovan also warned that the practice of moving from one job to another without fust notifying the local board would result in immediate reclassification to the status of 1-A for induction. Like wise men who have been deferred because of employment In the merchant marine and who have left that work, will be called up for army or navy service unless they immediately report to the Recruitment and Manning organi zation for sea duty. Men in the 4-F classification, regardless of the physical defect which brought them this status, will be summoned for military service unless they immediately enter essential war work. If they lane mis siep iney musi nomy , the board. By entering essential work they will be reclassified as 2 BF. Will tall Youths All men between 18 and 20 who ' have been deferred for farm 1 jwoik will shortly be called for! pre-induction physical examina ! tions, Chairman Donovan said.! He pointed to the fact that re- cently President Roosevelt ruled that older men could do the farm work and are available for this purpose. . Men who have been discharged! from military duty, and those with 4-F classifications and who CITY MANAGER NAMED Coos Bay, Ore., Jan. 9 nil ; Robert E. Baumberger, city man- lager at Mill Valley, Calif., will be oiierea tne post as nrsi city man- nger for Coos Bay, the council .in- nounceu tooay. Comfort serious they are likely to affect war on the western front. fighting ahead." The allied command, he said, had appreciated the pos sibility of a German attack through the Ardennes but ad- mited frankly that "the actual liming of the attack and its strength were somewhat of a surprise. I No Risk Involved Bradley said that the area chos- bv Ru'iJstedt for his offensive 1 jlnrs ,.unnillf! up lo our fronts. The terrain, he said, was per fectly suited for regrouping of allied forces which was carried out by Lt. Gen. Courtney Hodges, commander of the American First army, and Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery In the north and by Lt. Gen. George a. Patton, of the Third army in the south. Thus, said Bradley, Rundstcdt was contained "before he could do much damage." Bradley indicated that Rund stedt's gamble might actually work out to shorten the war in stead of to lengthen it. v Bend Mill Gets Federal Timber The Iii-ooks-Scanlon Lumber Company Inc., today was revealed as the successful bidder for 4, 000,000 board feet of timber in the Bull Springs and Tumalo reser voir area, and the company plan ned to begin logging operations at once, it was reported at the of fices of the Deschutes national forest. The timber covers ap proximately 1,200 acres, and was sold by the government at $7.50 stumpage rate. About HO acres of the newly ac- t urefl timber atljoins the present ii,.,,f,k.s,.;.in ,..., (. The purchase will afford the: company about a half month's i cut, it was said The government sold the tim ber, according to Charles Overbay, assistant Deschutes for ester, because of the ravages insects and the drouth conditions. Portland Ruled By 26 Mayors Portland, Ore. jan. :i 'it-' in theory, Portland has 26 mayors Monday in the absence of Mayor Earl Riley and four other com missioner members of the city council who were In Salem to at tend the opening sessions of the : state legislature. City attorney L. E. Latourette! explained that each department head In the city government acted without higher authority during absence oi me council, nmmgn his own office functioned In an auvisoiy capacity wncii net-L-ssuiy. U. S. Soldiers Facing Enemy In Deep Snow Storm Handicaps Units In Slashing at Nazis; Fire of Foe Not Heavy , Paris. Jan. 9 Ul'i American and German tanks were locked in a roaring battle today on the ap proaches to La Roche, keystone base of the Ardennes salient, and front dispatches reported signs that the Germans might be pull ing out of the entire bulge under cover of a delaying action. A snowstorm enveloped the mighty clash of armor around Samree, three miles northeast of La Roche on the highway to St. Vlth, limiting the First army march southward to gains aver aging a third of a mile. , uemians withdraw Allied armor and infantry were reported encountering "remark ably light" artillery and mortar fire, indicating a German general withdrawal from the north side of the bulge toward ridges guarding the one remaining highway out, which already was under the fire ot U.S. troops less than four miles away. "There are indications that the Germans are beginning to move out of the Ardennes bulge slowly by fighting a delaying action, and that they may take up positions along a ridge south of Houffallze as soon as they have cleared their armored units from the bulge," a dispatch from Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges First army headquar ters said. " ' - -. ' Lt. Gen. Omar N. Bradley, com mander of the 12th army group, warned, however, that the Ger mans are not on the verge of col lapse, although their losses In the Ardennes offensive have been so heavy they are likely to affect the course of the war in the west. Units Close In While Hodges' armor battled the German tanks three miles northeast of La Roche, other (Continued on Page 5) Miami-to-Africa Clipper Crashes Miami, Ma., Jan. 9 tH Pan American Airways reported today that a death toll of 23 was indi cated in the crash of the 10-year-old China Clipper which plunged into the sea at Port of Spain, Trin idad, last night while enroute from Miami to Africa. Navy divers sought 35 of the passengers and crew members be lieved trapped in the sunken wreckage of the huge flying boat. Seven were known to have been saved and eight bodies recovered of the 30 persons aboard. W. O. Snyder, manager of Pan American here, said latest reports "indicate that 23 of 30 persons aboard the plane were lost." The clipper left Miami at G:30 a. m. yesterday on a regularly scheduled flight to Loepoldville, Belgian Congo. The big ship ar rived at Port Au Spain, Trinidad, about 9:30 EWT last night. The crash followed an attempt ed landing, it was believed here, Trinidad was a regularly sched. uled stop on the run Inaugurated last Sept. 30. The plane was reportedly carry ing a double crew, 12 men. The two crew members killed were Capt r... .,: L. W. Cramer, and Radio i Operator T. J. Fleming, both of Miami Budget Figures Washington, Jan. 9 'U'i The budget at a glance: For 1940 fiscal year, which be gins July 1, 1945: Total spending-SS3,7f0,000,000, a drop of $17,802,000,000 from this vpar. war .-.pi-ouiiiK S70,000,000,000, down S19,000,000,000 from the cur rent fiscal year but upping au thorized war program for six years to $-150,000,000,000. Income $ll,2r:,000,000 a cut of $4,175,000,00. National debt 5292,300,000,000 by June 30, 1946. Debt interest $4,500,000,000, higher than all government ex penditures for fiscal year 1931. Taxes No changes recommend ed for war period.