ivwrwrt of Of" WARSAW FALLSff M N Story Column 8 BENP BULLETIH JOIN THE MARCH OF DIMES FIGHT INFANTILE JANUARY 14-31 PARALYSIS Weather Forecast Rain west portion today, spread ing to east portion tonight. Thurs day, occasional showers; warmer east portion tonight. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume LI II THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON, WEDNESDAY, JAN. 17. 1945. NO. 36 ED THE 2 Sixth Army Columns Merge, Continue Race Toward Manila And Provisional Island Capital Speculation Grows That Japs May Not Even Attempt to Defend City; Lack of Bridges Is Handicap to Yanks; Tarlac Fall Expected . General MacArthur's Headquarters, Luzon. Jan. 17 (TIE) Two strong Sixth army columns have merged near Paniaui, 3G miles inland, and are sweeping across the Luzon plains toward Tarlac and Manila virtually unopposed, a front dis patch said today. Tarlac, a provincial capital and strategic communications hub only 12 miles south of Paniqui, was expected to fall without a fight and speculation was growintr the Japanese miirht not even attempt a strong defense of Manila, 65 miles farther south. II. D. Quigg, United Press war correspondent with forces ' " fin fhfi T.livnw ntai'n oni'rl U Ban on Nippons Asked By V.F.W. Auburn, Cnlif., Jan. 17 (IP) Approximately 300 residents of Placer county, led by the com mander of a local post of tbe Veterans of Foreign Wars, last night signed a petition agreeing to boycott returning Japanese Americans and "persons who do business with the Japanese." The action came as the climax of a meeting called to protest re turn of the Nisei to this fruit growing and mother lode mining area of northern California. A citizens' committee was or ganized in an attempt to obtain as manv signatures as possible to the petition, which reads: Agreement Slimed 'jJ"We the undersigned" agree nof " y purchase, do business or fra ternize with any returning Japa nese and that we also will boycott and refuse to do business with any other persons who do busi ness with the Japanese." The meeting was called by Deputy Sheriff Jack Hannon, com mander of Donncr Post No. 1942, VFW, who was appointed a com mittee of one by his post at a meeting last week. "We do not want the Japs hack," Hannon end other speak ers at the meeting said. Several women said they would withdraw their children from schools at tended by Nisei children. Allies Capture .Sixteen Capitals London, Jan. 17 UP) Warsaw was the 16th European capital to fall to the allies since the capture of Rome on June 4, 1941. Seven others still are held by the Ger mans. The liberated capitals, in the order they fell, are Rome; Wilno, Lithuania; Paris; Bucharest, Ru mania; Brussels, Belgium; Mon aco, Monaco; Luxembourg, Lux embourg; Sofia, Bulgaria; Hel smkia, Finland; Tallinn, Estonia; tan Marino, San Marino; Riga, Latvia; Athens, Greece; Tirana, Albania; Belgrade, Yugoslavia, and Warsaw. Still controlled by the Germans are Budapest, Hungary (now un der Russian assault); the Hague, 'Netherlands; Oslo, Norway; Co penhagen, Denmark; Prague, Czechoslovakia; Vienna, Austria, and Berlin. People Queue Up m Wrong Line Portland, Ore., Jan. 17 (in J-ustomers lined up for a block 'May in front of a building. A poll, taken in various seg ments of the lineup, showed the customni-c ti,.,nKi i l'; u:.CBarp,s'e.x,w'1lske-Mtion 'tie bovs' ieans. nointlnsq hnttpr J" extra shoe stamp or "some Ping really good, it's such a long "ne, I wouldn't miss this one on net. The crowd actually was headed fir a special income tax informa- "n of (ice. set up to relieve con fMtion at the Custom house build- STOVE EXPLODES firemen shortly before today were called to the Cit ny,n tu"H..r- rv , i : kZlr of Greenwood avenue and ; King, commander-.n-chiet or ne I J" street, where a small oilU. S. fleet, asserting hat the in-, h -'love hart .,i creas nc intensity of the war re- "we hjH " "" , small fire Ther wai no rianviee 0 'he pronertv according to the Bremen. accoraing to me ww ""u jjtotii, noiU tUC two columns ioined forces near Paniqui after advancing from Moncada, four and a half miles to the north, and Camil ing, 11 miles to west north west. Lack of bridges was causing more difficulty than enemy oppo sition in the frontal advance on Tarlac, Quigg said. He said the Americans may use the roadbed of the narrow-gauge railway run ning from Moncada as the road bed for a new highway to Manila. Highways Merge Five highways merge at Tarlac and its capture would put the Americans only 20 miles from the great Clark field air center and almost half way from the Ltn gayen gulf to Manila bay. Though there was.no sign of -Japanese preparations for a stand north of Manila; the enemy was offering stiff resistance and even attempted a futile tank counter attack at the northeastern corner of the bridgehead. Francis McCarthy, United Press war correspondent in the north eastern sector, said enemy resis tance was stiffening steadily in the area and there appeared little doubt that the Japanese would make a last-ditch stand to retain control of the road running from Damortis on the southeast cotist of the gulf of Lingayen to the summer capital of Baguio, 17 miles to the northeast. Fighting Reported Brisk fighting was raging less than 1,400 yards east of Damortis, he said, but the Americans were killing at least six Japanese to every Yank lost in the northern sector. (A Japanese uoraci aispaicn said American convoys, consist-1 ing of 50 transports with escorts of cruisers and destroyers, had been attacked heavily by Japa nese planes south of Negros is land in the central Philippines.) Most enemy troops encountered in the frontal advance on Manila have been of poor quality, largely from labor battalions, and a con siderable number surrendered. None offered any organized re sistance. BULLETIN London, Jan. 17 UP The Red army today captured the fort ress city of Czestochowa only 15 miles from the German lior der, and hundreds of other towns anfl villages in a three ply offensive pulverizing the nazl defenses of all occupied Poland. FDR Again Calls for Law to Washington, Jan. 17 'IB Presi-1 Roosevelt recalled that in his I dent Roosevelt today determined- annual message to congress on ly called on congress for enact- Jan. b . he had iuMcd both . without delav" 01 legisia- force 4-F's into essential to force 4-F's into essential jobs, and also renewed his request I tne urgent neea oi mis icgis- proauction ot critical items of mu-! Mr. Roosevelt said in nis tetter for a national service law. jlation has not lessened but ha.Snitions, ships and to repair to May: He made the requests in a letter, Increased since the sending of my 'damaged vessels. j "It Is true that there has been to chairman Andrew J. May, D., i message," he said. They said army and navy man- a trend toward increased place- Ky of the house military affairs! He said that while the May j power needs for overseas action ment of manpower within the committee which is currently! bill is not a "complete national j would require a total of 900,000 last two weeks, but there is dan holding hearings on a bill by May j service law, it will go far to secure ; inductions by next June 30, and , ger that this trend, which un to force 4-F's into war jobs on; the effective employment in the; that an estimated 700,000 Indus-! questionably due to the belief that threat of induction into special j war effort of all registrants under ; trial workers must be added to '. congress contemplated prompt labor battalions. I the selective service law between; the nation's work force if urgent action, will be reversed by reports To bark up his demands, he the ages of 18 and 45," war needs are to bo met. now current In the press that con sent to -May a joint letter from "While there may be some dlf -I "You are Intimately familiar, gresslonal action is likely to be Gen George C. Marshall, army ferences of opinion on the de-tMr. President," they wrote, "with delayed." chief of s taff, and Acim. t-rnesi j. of the creasing Intensity of the war re- 'quires "every conceivable effort") ito build up and supply the armea Iorces BIG AIR FORTS CONTINUE TO BLAST FORMOSA AREA AND HIT AT CHINA COAST Pearl Harbor, Jan. 17 (U.E) B-29 Superfortresses bombed military installations on Formosa in daylight today after carrier planes wrecked at least 30 and perhaps 100 or more Japanese ships off that island bastion and the Chinn coast in a three-day assault. It was possible that planes of Admiral William F. Halsey a Third fleet extended their attacks on the Formosa-China coast area into a fourth day in conjunction with the B-29 raid. Both Superfortresses and carrier planes attacked Formosa last Sunday and on Jan. 9. A brief war department announcement in Washington dis closed the latest Superfor-' tresses strike mounted by Ma.i. Gen. Curtis Le May's 20th bomber command from bases in China. Though no details were available immediately, it was likely the B-29's struck at airfields, supply dumps and similar military targets. Hong Kong Bombed First reports from the Third fleet covered only preliminary re suits of the second and third days Monday and Tuesday (Japa nese time) of the carrier-based assault on Formosa and the China coast,' where targets included Honk Kong, Canton and Swatow. On Monday, a Paciifc fleet com munique said, the navy fliers sank nine ships totaling about 22,000 tons and damaged nine oth er ships and nine small vessels. Another 82,000 tons of shipping was sunk or damaged Tuesday, including the 17,000 -ton tanker Kamoi last seen listing, and two oilers set afire, the communique said. Ship Total Mounts Though only 30 ships were tden- titled specifically in the commu nique, the large toll of tonnage listed for Tuesday indicated the number of ships hit during the 48-nour period actually totaled be tween 60 and 70. , . . . ....... Observers believed that when figures are received for Sunday, the first day of the attack, the total number ot ships hit may ex ceed 100. 'Mac Steps Out, Faces Get Red Washington, Jan. 17 Ui The war department, in a "memor andum to the press," today told of the embarrassment of a group I of crewmen from a navy attack cargo ship who served as a shore party directing unloading opera tlons at a L,eyte beachhead. A. signalman whose job was to Lnun tha conttiv ulna rf nthnp . ......n lnrtir, approaching. "Get that boat out of here," he shouted. The ship continued toward the beach. It struck bottom 15 yards from the shoreline. An army lieutenant's head appeared o.vcr the ramp. Get Orders "Send a 'Duck' out to pick us up," he called. The assistant beachmaster shouted back in a truculent tone: "Walk in. The water's fine." The landing craft's ramp drop ped. The first man to jump into the waist-deep surf was Gen. Douglas MacArthur, supreme Allied cammander in the south west Pacific. The embarrassed beach party was put at case when the general waded up and, with a beaming smile, greeted with. "Good morn ing. How are things going?" The war department didn't dis close the reply if any. naiiunai service arm i-r iegixia - tion. ian ui mi- piumyr nuwn . mu- n more important in tne war , mu.-n e 'J ' effort than the perfecting tails, tie saia. of tans, ne saio. me Marsnan-King tetter sam it j was xne.r ou y to report an l"urgent necessity for immediate Norway Forces Take Over Front Stockholm, Jan. 17 (IB Nor wegian forces, reinforced by po lice troops'trained In Sweden and flown to northern Norway in American transport planes, have taken over the Finnmark front from the red army and have lib erated half the province, It was disclosed today. Advancing west across moun tains from the Tana valley dis trict the point reached by Rus sian forces which liberated East Finnmark the Norwegians in creased the freed portions of Finnmark, northernmost province of Norway, to 80,604 square miles. A communique from the Nor wegian government in exile in London said the Norwegian troops - were holding positions south of Porsangerf jord and were in contact with the enemy. The Norwegian Telegraph agency said the Norwegians had cleared the area along the west boundary of Finnmark and had captured the Banak airfield, one of the bases the Germans used for air attacks on allied convoys bound for Murmansk. Season on.Trout To Be Discussed Late opening of the upper Des chutes river trout season, which resulted In a storm of protest lo cally, will be discussed at a meet ing of 'Central Oregon sportsmen in the Deschutes county circuit court room on either Friday or Saturday night of this week, it was announced here today. Attending the meeting will be Frank B. Wire, state game super visor. He will be here either Fri day or Saturday, and the date of the meeting will be arranged to fit his schedule. The game commission has ten tatively set May 12 as the date for the opening of the up-river trout season. , Col. Chenoweth On Way Home Portland, Ore., Jan. 17 'Ui Lt. Col. William C. O. Chenoweth. of Bend, Ore., one of the survivors of the Bataan "death march" was in Portland today, on his way home from Walter Reed hospital, Washington, D. C. Chenoweth, a West Point gradu- ate of the class of 1937, was ac- i ()ay told tno rc(a ,,.ade group of companied by his wife, Mrs. Annj ,he organization. The newly elect Chenoweth, and his son William, I ,.,i nmsiHent met with the retailers 4 ',4 and daughter, Nancy, 3. ! Col. Chenoweth is one of 83 who swam from a torpedoed Jap-j B. A. Shellhart was named su anese prison ship, many of whom j porvisor for the group, with R. W. made their way to Philippine is-, lirandis as director in charge, lands, where they were treated Shellhart said that committee ap by Filipino doctors and protected ; pointments would be announced by guerilla bands. in the near future. Force 4-F's Into War Jobs action" to relieve "the acute need .United States should make every for young and vig0rous replace-1 conceivable effort to enable the f i - - - ito Provide manpower to increase nit? gu-di importance or regaining- me otlensive on the western front de-land pressing It, together with operations against the Japanese, witn constantly Increasing intensi-;of ty in me montns to come. To this or . our manpower on 'end, therefore, we feel that theifront." Blows By Allies Stagger Nazis On West Front Ardennes Salient Now Hammered Into Small Pocket; British Help Paris. Jan. 17 HP) Allied troons hammered the Ardennes salient down into a narrow'pocket on the rim of the Siegfried line today and swung over to the attack on either flank with two offensive thrusts that staggered the Ger mans in Alsace and the Nether lands. Hard fighting still raged in the Houffalize area where a few Ger man panzer units were struggl ing to escape envelopment by the American First and Third armies. but the focal point of the Arden nes battle had shifted eastward to the St. Vith area and late dis patches said the nazis were being squeezed inexorably back across their own frontiers. Nazis Compressed The remnants of Marshal Karl Von Rundstedt's three attacking armies were compressed Into a thin band of Belgian and Luxem bourg soil extending down about 50 miles along its eastern base from Monschau to the Echternach area and measuring about 12 miles at its widest point. An Allied headquarters commu nique reported that the Germans were being forced back all along the Ardennes front, giving ground fairly rapidly on the southern and western flanks and fighting back furiously against three American First army divisions driving in from the northwest on their last strongpoint at St. Vith, ' Fiftv miles to. the north, tank- led British army troops lashed out against the German salient west of the Roer river In a sur prise attack that official spokes men said was making good pro gress against only moderate re sistance. The Tommies shoved off from the Sittard area early yesterday in what appeared to be a limited of fensive aimed at eliminating the Roer bridgehead as a possible springboard for another nazi counterdrive. There was no immediate In formation on the scale of the Brit ish attack which at last reports was pounding steadily ahead into a triangular saueni rougniy ir miles at its base on the Roer 15 miles on each side, bounded by Sittard in the west, Roermond in the north and Getlenkirchen in the south. United Press War Correspond ent Ronald Clark reported that the British advanced about 1,000 yards during the night to capture one unnamed village and enter a second. Johnson Lists Chamber Aims Mutual aid for members and cooperation with other organiza tions in the development of the community, are the two prime ob jectives of the Bend chamber of commerce this year, Carl A. John son, president of the chamber, to when they gathered to perfect iheir orpaniaztlon for the vear. , - - Instructions." Me auuea mat as me uiineu nations enter upon a truly total offensive" It was vital that their drive should not slacken "because any less than total utilization the home The Plain Road io Berlin f iLi-iLr - iBotjcliSeoi XSSSSVl LITH- CtboIholm Ud ' "Tr, PP L AN D Warsaw was captured by the flat, Polish plains that made the Hitler s mechanized hordes In 19J9 now stand as a threat to Berlin. Map also shows how all transportation routes converge on the Ger man capital. Bill Motivated By 'Lower 13' Murder Shows Up in House Logging Truck Measure Also Introduced in Salem; Candidate Advertising Given Study v Salem, Ore., Jan. 17 (U.E) "lower 13" murder case in which an alleged "concession" was .brought Into the trial, was introduced into the Oregon senate today by Sen. Frank H. Hilton, Portland. It states in clear terms that a confession produced by threats or fear may not be used as evidence, and that only confessions signed before a court oath-administering officer may be accepted as evi dence. A confession only, without warrant conviction under the terms of the measure. Permission for logging trucks to proceed to their des tination after being stopped for violation of overweight laws, under certain conditions was sought by Sen. Rex Ellis. The trucks could complete the trip if they carried a flag indicating that they were overweight, and drove at no more than 10 miles per hour. Hill Passed In the house, a bill to facilitate the absentee voting of Oregon's soldiers passed over the objec tions of five democratic represen tatives who disliked the clause in the measure which would provide for unilorm portraits in the vot ers' pamphlet. The bill would change the time between filing of a candidate and .the ensuing election from 45 to 70 days, would require the uni form pictures, and would elimi nate voters' pamphlet advertising for unopposed candidates. Rep. Warren Erwin, Portland, said he thought "characteristic" pictures of candidates should be permitted. Referring to a picture of Willis Mahoney, tlefeated can didate for the U. S. senate, in the last pamphlet unci which showed him on the Whitehouse steps, Er win said there should be no ob jection to It, and described a hy pothetical case where Henry Se mon, Klamath Falls republican, ran for governor and wanted to use a picture of himself "with a hoe, in the middle of his potato patch, and dressed In overalls." "He should be permitted to use such a picture If he desired," War ren maintained. St. Helens Man Namedto Board Salem, Ore., Jan. 17 'Hi R. W. Simeral, St. Helens, today was ap pointed as a member of the state board of education, Gov. Earl Snell announced. Simeral has been serving on a protem basis during the absence of John J. Winn, whose term ex pired on Jan. 1. Winn is In mili tary service. PAIRS, PEARS nrscrssEn Salem, Ore., Jan. 17 nr. Sen. Earl T. Newbrv. Ashland pear grower, who yesterday made gifts to the legislators, today re- minded the senate that "all good things come In pears Replied Sen. Thomas Mahoney, Portland, "I've seen the time when I didn't think a pair was so hot." Red armies today, and now the same invasion of Poland so easy for A bill motivated by the recent other proof of a crime, cannot 70 Tons Paper Collected Here Reviewing their activities since they took over salvage paper col lection in Bend last October, mem bers of the Junior chamber of commerce today revealed that they have already shipped a total of 70 tons of paper to processing plants. As a result of the last two city wide pickups, one of which was held last Sunday, a carload of paper weighing more than 20 tons was shipped last night to a paper mill at Longview, Wash., and an other 20 tons Is ready to be trucked to the processing plant, according to Don Higgins and George Thompson, co-chairmen of the salvage work. The Jaycees pointed out that their collection of salvage paper has almost equalled that gathered In recent Portland drives, nnd that they have approximately only 10 per cent of the area and population. More Paper Needed Hlgglns said that, the chamber is in receipt of Information from the war production board to the effect that salvage paper collec tions Is far below the war needs, and he urged Bend residents to continue saving old paper, maga zines, books and cartons pending another pickup In several weeks. Airmen Destroy 130 Jap Vessels Washington, Jan. 17 ni'.-Rcar Adm. M. F. Schoeffle, assistant chief of staff, operations, said to day that U. S. naval forces have sunk 130 Japanese vessels total ing 230,000 tons, damaged 200 others and destroyed 400 enemy planes In recent strikes against enemy bases from Formosa to French Indo-China. Summarizing results of naval activities from Jan. 2 to Jan. 10 In support of Gen. Douglas Mac- Arthurs operations In the Philip- pines, Schoeffle said: . "This has given us all here great lift. Less than a year ago, we must remember, our forces were progressing toward the Mar shalls. Now they have moved 3,600 miles to the westward In less than a year." Soviets Sweep Across Plains Toward Berlii Entire German Defense In Poland Believed to Have Quickly Collapsed London, Jan. 17 HP) The red army captured Warsaw today in its greatest triumph of a six-day winter offensive sweeping across Poland and rapidly undermining the German positions along a 600 mile battlefront. Marshal Stalin proclaimed the capture of Warsaw in a special order of the day which revealed that the First White Russian army had forced the Vistula north of the capital and clamped it in a pincers. cutting lt ott irom tne west, Soviet assault forces stormed Warsaw from three directions and wrested it from the Germans. The announcement of Warsaw's liberation came as a flood of nerv ous nazl broadcasts reported that the Russians had plunged wltnm 15 miles of the stleslan irontier ac Czestochowa, had shattered the Nurew river line of German de fenses northeast of Warsaw, and were racing at top speed across central Polund. Defense Collapses The entire German defense in Poland appeared to have collapsed under the weight of probably the mightiest single land offensive of the entire war, and Stockholm re layed Berlin hints that the nazis had written off all of Poland. Stalin, announcing the capture of Warsaw on the sixth day of the winter campaign, ordered Mar shal Gregory K,-Zhukuv'g -victors . saluted with 24 salvos of Moscow's 324 victory guns. . . Khukov, Stalin's deputy in the Soviet supreme command, set up Warsaw for a three-way assault by a double flanking maneuver. Swinging up behind the capital from a great bridgehead south of It. the Russians captured Zyra- tlow, 29 miles northwest of War- saw, and cut the roads running west from the city. Then the White Russian army stormed ucross the Vistula north of Warsaw and wheeled down to close the pincers and Isolate the city. crossing avoiihni Storming In bom three direc tions end avoiding a dangerous crossing of the broad Vistula from the long-held Praga suburb, the Russian "by combined blows from the nonh, west and south captured the capital of our ally, Poland, the city of Warsaw, the most strategic center of the Ger man defenses on the river Vis tula." Stalin said. He paid tribute to troops fight ing under 13 generals, Including the commander-in-chief of the Pol ish First army, thus revealing that the Poles had taken part In the strategy which liberated their capital. Also praised were four generals of artillery, six generals of armor, and seven generals of the red air force. The capture of, Warsaw first was announced by the Lublin radio. Report Released The radio Polski report from Lublin, seat of the self-styled pro visional government of Poland, that Warsaw had fallen at first lacked confirmation in any other source. Even the BBC, which re corded It, did not include it in its (Continued on Page 6) Snow Piles Up In Mountains; Routes Open Light showers at dawn turned to a heavy snowfall along the crest of the Cascades as the morning progressed, causing state highway maintenance crews to use snow plows along the San tiam summit, it was announced at the local highway department offices. Reports Indicated that the snowfall was general along the mountains, piling up several inches of new snow on the Wapl nitia and Willamette highways. Light snowfall was also report ed at Sun mountain on The Dulles-California highway, but all roads, with the exception of the McKenle pass which was closed several weeks ago, were open to travel. The forecast called for con tinued snow showers at higher levels, but with warmer weather predicted for the east portion to night and tomorrow. 0. n ;rsiitfftfirii;Hiv'x1'"