Univ of Ore nbmm JSSJiJ, KS) "iJffillLB. FIR B3 Story Column 8 Weather Forecast Partly cloudy today, tonight and Saturday with local fog In valleys. Not much temperature change. THE BEMB BUY WAR BONDS and five lha chanfa to fff M INFANTILE PARALYSIS! JANUARY 14-31 CENTRAL OREG ON'Sj D AILY NEWSPAPER Volume Llll THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON, FRIDAY, JAN. 26. 1945 NO. 44 m ; BULLET! - U. S. Troops Blunt Foe Drive In Alsace, Then Launch New Assault in Region of Bulge Yanks Hit at Hitler's Lines Along Front " Some 30 Miles Long; Fighters Cross River, And No 'Opposition Met; British in AVtion By Boyd Eewis (United Press War Correspondent) Paris, Jan. 26 (EE) American armies blunted the nazi offensive in northern Alsace today, seized another five square miles of Germany west of Cologne and, according to a Berlin report, struck out from the former Ardennes bulge in a new assault along a 30 to 35-mile front. The 102nd infantry division of the Ninth army added an other five square miles to the American line along the west bank of the Roer river 27-miles due west of Cologne, with an unopposed advance .across the Wurm river just north of Linn ich before dawn. . ' The advance resulted in the capture of Brachelen, two " , , , , .miles northwest of . Linnich C 1 oenaie uroup Votes Against Henry Wallace Washington, Jan. 26 (IP) The senate commerce committee to day voted against the nomination of Henry A. Wallace to be secre tary of commerce. The committee also voted, 15 to 4, to recommend senate pass age of a bill to strip the com merce department of its super vision over the multi-billion dol lar federal lending agencies. A motion to armrove the Wal. j.Ace nomination wag rejected, hy f ivuie oi ii xo o. ' ' Session Closed The votes were taken in a two hour closed session which wound up with friends of Wallace even losing a motion to put the nomi nation before the senate without any recommendation. That mo tion lost by a vote of 11 to 6. Committee chairman Josiah W. Bailey, D., N. C, said he would report the committee's action on both matters to the senate next session on Monday. Hoyt Protests U.S. Policies Ssan Francisco, Jan. 26 IP Palmer Hovt. ouhlisher of thp i Portland Oregonian and former ffiomestlc chief of the office of - war information vpstnrHav warned that the United States is losing the war diplomatically while winning it on the military front. It's time, Hoyt said, "that we win this war on every front, dip-, iomatic as well as military. "The events in Greece, the mess In Italy and Belgium, the confu sion that darkens the future of France ... the complete break down of Chiang's Chinese legend, all indicate how tragically we nave failed to make the proper deals when we held the blue chips. "Are we so enthralled with the British empire policy," Hoyt asked, "that we cannot force by immediate sanctions the actual lilting of news censorship there so that we may know what is going on?" U. S. Protests "ta fviripnrpR nt 'mpire policy seem tardy, weak nd ineffective," Hoyt declared. HO SnnkP flt a mwllnn nf (ki Commonwealth club here. Boston Animals May Face Death . . Boston, Jan. 26 (tpi The Boston c"y council was split today over proposal to shoot the animals at the Franklin Park zoo includ lne a sacred cow and utilize money for their feed for play ground purposes. The proposal was made at yes terday's meeting by City Counci lor William J. Keenan who said the animate a nnn.matit nt i S23.5O0 per year could be trans-1 "Oregon has the greatest out ferred to the park commission, door playground in the world Thp ri. . -u ' Panchorn sa d. "vet Oregon Is bo .T""'T,V,-... .1 .".. 'or munition MAC4RTHITR hon'OHFD c..,?1",HL!t ,1"U"E' . I ltJlrTl fai-ed their voice in song twiay "Our sister states are already j post war matters." -"Happy Birthdav to You " active in further promoting and, Pangborn is managing director The Occasion was the birthday preparfng for post war tourist of KGW, the Oregonian radio sta ' Gen. Douglas MacArthur. travel. The average American lsltion In Portland. and 10 miles inside Germany, Patrols reported the Germans had pulled out of the area under cover of darkness last night. Springboard Enlarged The British Second army also enlarged the allied springboard for the next phase of the ad vance into the German Rhlneland with a 2,000-yard advance that engulfed six more nazi villages six to 12 miles northwest of Lin nich. ' The British forces reached the Wurm along a two-mile stretch and erased all of the German bridgehead west of the Roer with the exception of .a strip less than a mile deep. Grebben, Huloven, Dremmen, Horst, Norm, and Ho ven were captured and a front dis patch said the German lines were ."sagging at a Quickening tempo." a uerman uinb aispaicn orona- cast by Berlin said tank-supported American columns attacked yes terday morning on a wide front stretching from a point southeast of Malmedy in eastern Belgium to the junction of the Sure and Our river in central Luxembourg, but did not make clear .immediately the scale of the assault. No Mention Made Latest American dispatches from the Ardennes front made no mention of a new asault, but told of advances of up to a mile and a half within sight of the river border of Germany in the con tinuing process of whittling down the former nazi bulge to a harm less bump. 'In French Alsace, Lt. Gen. Alex ander Patch's Seventh army halt ed the 24-hour-old German offen sive above Strasbourg and won back a good proportion of the terrain yielded along a 20-mile front between the Rhine and the Hardt mountains. Patch's men threw the Germans back across the Moder river and restored their defense line east of Haguenau, 15 miles north of Stras bourg, and re-took part of the Uh willer and Ohlungen forests west of Haguenau, but the Germans still were clinging desperatelv to a bridgehead across the Moder in the latter area. PENDERGAST ILL Kansas City, Mo.. Jan. 26 (in T. J. Pendergast, 72, former po litical boss who was convicted of income tax evasion, is seriously ill and associates fear he might not live until his federal court Stalin announced tonight that the probation expires in May, lt was Russians had captured Hlnden reported today. burg, nazi stronghold. Peacetime Tourist Travel To Be Promoted in Oregon Portland, Ore., Jan. 26 P la tourist at heart, and his natural Thn ArtvprtlslniT Fedpratlon of ! desire to travel, inhibited by war, Portland is enlareing to statewide wi" be freely indulSed after the portiana isenuu-gingiosiaiewiuewar We cannQt oup ghare of scope under the name of Oregon these freeIy spent dolars lf we j Advertising club, to assume ando not begin at once to plan fori active part in Oregon's post-war! the post-war years. j problems, particularly promotion of post-war tourist travel, Presi dent Arden X. Pang born an nounced today. The board of governors ap proved a change In the constitu tion to provide for establishment of "community committees in at least 15 of the state's leading cities. thr. toast known of all Pacific 1 Icoast states. The tourist, in thej naot has snent monev in Oregon. but too often only when he is enlbroad coverage of community - r-aiifornia in Wash, committees, can serve Oregon in on" Jones Protests Appointment Retiring Secy, of Commerce Jesse H. Jones (left) testifying In favor of legislation to curb powers of his designated successor, Henry A. Wallace, tells Senate commerce committee that the Government's loan adminis trator should be a man of proven and sound business experience. At his sfde is Senator Walter George D Oa.) author of the proposal to divorce from the commerce department all the functions of the Federal Loan Agency. Supplies Moving Oyer China Road By Albert Ravenholt (United Press War Correspondent) With First Allied Convoy on Ledo-Burma Road, Jan. 26 (IP) This first convoy of more than 100 supply-laden military vehicles moving toward Kunming over Asia's high mountains and great rivers is the pay-off on American effort in the Orient. And lt Is a pay-off in more ways than keeping our promise to China to revitalize her with a stream of war material over a land route. These, trucks rolling eastward mark the finish .of a phase of the history of the war in the Far East a phase strung with the names of striking personalities and hot ly contested Burmese and Chinese villages: Stilwell, Wingate, Sultan, Mer- m s maurauders, Cochrane s com mandos: Shinbwiyang, Teng- chung, Jumbubum, Maingkwan, Lungling. It has been a war punctuated not only with battle casualties, but with those caused by malaria, monsoons, typhus and blazing neat. Odds Discounted But beneath the personalities and color there's a more signi ficant pay off: the allies have proven that the Japanese aren't the only Asiatics who can fight modern war with the odds against them and emerge with a major strategic victory. The enemy's steady retreat on all Burma fronts dally confirms the long-held contention of Amer ican strategists that if the Japa nese no longer were able to block the road and pipe-line to China, the remainder of Burma would be of little value to them, not worth the price of holding it. COLD CAUSES BLAST New York, Jan. 26 (IPi Custom ers said it looked like the fourth of July today in Mrs. Francis Piecari's candy shop in Brooklyn. Lime, cherry, strawberry pop, and root beer froze and exploded in her shop window. VITAL CITY TAKEN London, Jan. 26 IP Marshal ine lounsr innusiry snouia oe spread from boundary to boun- dary of Oregon. It is a state-wide problem, with need for statewide I coordination. Conversations and correspondence with advertising leaders throughout Oregon con vinced our board that as a state wide organization the Oregon Ad vertising club can be of real serv ive in working with and assisting those groups and agencies who are concerned with the problem In their own areas. "It is our hope that the new Oregon Advertising club, with a ithls, as well as in many other NIPPON AND U. S. FORCES REPORTED IN BIG BATTLE CLOSE TO CHINA COAST By Frank Tremaine (United Press War Correspondent) ' Pearl Harbor, Jan. 26 , (IIP) Unconfirmed Chinese re ports said today that 50 American and Japanese ships battled for nine hours in the East Shanghai Tuesday in the biggest naval engagement since last October. Japanese forces broke off toward their homeland. Bdme the Chinese army newspaper said. The newspaper said tne engagement began at 3 a.m. ' . w-.1-" '.a-v ..,;v.,-i'JjBhina : time) o f f-iYunskia Blood Purge Due, Germans Assert London, Jan. 26 UP Nazi propa gandists, struggling to rally their own people and to sow dissension among the allies, reaped a new peak of hysteria today with a series of shrill warnings of a "blood purge" that, they said would sweep all Europe if the red army overruns Germany. The official press and radio line set by Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels painted a gloomy picture of Germany, deserted by her allies at the critical hour of the war, fighting alone to "save civilization" from Bolshevism. Goebbels Speaks Goebbels led off the outburst in Vila wonlrlv affinla In rtaa Potph asserting that the wehrmacht was lighting in the east to save Europe and all humanity. The red army, he said, has thrown 200 divisions Into its win ter offensive In an all-out bid for a victory that would "transform Europe into a sea of blood." ' Goebbels railed at Britain and the United States for continuing the war in the west while Ger many was "defending the life of the entire civilized world" in the east. Dee Haines Wins Rank of Major Word has been reoeived here of the promotion of Captain Dee Haines, Bend man now serving with the American forces In the European theater of war, to the rank of major. He is serving with Quartermaster unit of the Seventh army. Major Haines has been in the service three years, and has been Overseas for 21 months. He enter- ed Europe the "hard way", via Afrjca Sc, I(al and southern France. Mrs. Haines and two children Suzanne, 5 and Judy, 3, are mak- mg their home in Bend. Major Haines is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Haines, Bend, Clarence Sager Listed Missing Pfc. Clarence Paper, son of Mrs. J. F. Duryee, 1363 Harmon boule vard, has been mlr,sing In action In Luxembourg since Jan. 5, ac cording to Information received from the war department. The young man, who has been over- j seas about eight months, spent a junougn nere last spring. He was born Ir. Pasco, Wash., on August 19, 1923 and attended Pasco high school for one year, transferring to Bend high school in 1938. He graduated here in 1941. df Wallace China sea within 300 miles of the battle at noon and fled 650 miles to the northeast. Sao Tang Pao at Chungking (Wenchow) and Fingyang, on the China coast some 250 miles south of Shanghai and 200 miles north of Formosa. Gun fire was audible at Pingyang, it added. Pacific fleet headquarters made no. comment on the report, but units of Admiral William F. Hal. sey's Third fleet launched carrier planes against Okinawa, 475 miles east of Yungkla, Monday some 12 hours before the supposed on gagement. Third Fleet Silent There have been no official re ports on the whereabouts of the Third flopt since the Okinawa raid. During Third fleet attacks on the Formosa area bunday, a major American warship pos sibly a battleship or an aircraft carrier was damaged. It was the first time since the early days of the Pacific war that American warships have been re ported In the East China sea, which is bounded on the north by Korea and Japan, on the west by China, on the south by Formosa and on the east by the Ryukyu islands. American warships have not tangled with Japanese naval units in strength since the second bat tle of the Philippines last Octo ber, when the Third and Seventh fleets smashed three Japanese task forces off Leyte. Flow of Dimes Suddenly Halted Portland, Jan. 26 Ui Smoke hungry cigarette customers were delighted to buy a package of cigarettes for 14 cents and drop the change from a quarter In the March of Dimes milkbottle in a Portland drugstore. Some customers would buy a carton at the ceiling price of S1.28 and contribute the change from a $5 bill. Then the OPA arrived and cited the proprietor to appear for an illegal tying-in price. OPA officials explained that any cause as worthy as the March of Dimes shouldn't require the purchase of a scarce commodity as a prize and that there was no way to separate worthy from racketeering operations. Syndicate Buys New York Yanks Now York, Jan. 20 Wi The New York Yankees were sold to day to a three man syndicate headed by Col. Leland S. '(Larry) MacPhail. who will become presl dent and general manager of the club. The purchase price for what is considered the most valuable franchise in baseball was between $2500,000 and $3,000,000. Yank Fighters Rapidly Close In on Manila ;. Clark Field Captured as V Americans Surge Across Isle; Stotsenburg Taken i By William B. Dickinson ' (United Press War Correspondent) General MacArthur'g Headquar ters, Luzon, Jan. 26 (U The 40th (California) division, with Clark field's dozen airstrips and adja cent Fort Stotsenburg firmly In its hands,- rushed on to the south today within 40 miles or less of Manila and 20 miles of Manila bay. (A Tokyo broadcast recorded by the FCC said today that the American command appeared to be planning "new developments in the, Luzon war situation with the massing of fresh troops." The broadcast called attention to in creased number of ships In the waters south of Luzon and an in tensification of air attacks on the Manila area, Including Corregidor Islai a in Manna bay.), River Lies Ahead The division was expected to make rapid progress without a major battle at least as far as Cal umpit on the Pampanga river, 24 miles southeast of Clark field and 26 miles northwest of Manila. The San Fernando river, half way between Clark field and Cal umolt, offers a possible enemy de fense line, but there were no indi cations of any large Japanese forces there and the fixed de fenses were not too strong. De struction of bridges across the San Fernando may slow the ad vance, however. It appeared more likely that the Japanese would make their stand it at all, at Calumplt, within easy striking distance of Manila. Amen lean planes destroyed a Japanese concentration of troops and ve hicles at Camulplt soon after the invasion or L.uzon Jan. y. MacArthur 65 Gen. Douglas MacArthur cele brated his 65th birthday today by announcing the capture of'Clark field, greatest air base in the west ern Pacific and where his original air force was wiped out by Japa nese dive bombers only a few days after jhe sneak attack on Pearl Harbor Dec. 8. 1941. Though cratered by American bombs and littered with the wreckage of Japanege aircraft, Clark field probably quickly can be restored to operational condi tion. Its dozen airstrips and thou sands of acres of dispersal a read make Clark field big enough to handle the entire present strength of MacArthur's Fifth and 13th air forces thousands of planes though it was obvious that all would not be concentrated there. Base Is Vital From Clark field, American planes can fan out over Formosa, 475 miles to the north, French Indo China, 775 miles to the west, and Hong Kong, 650 miles north west, as well as cover any project ed landings on the China coast. The 40th division met only scat tered Japanese patrols and light harassing sniper fire in its cap ture of Clark field, 50 miles north west of Manila, and Fort Stotsen burg, three miles farther west. Pressing on to the south, the division overran Angeles, four miles below Clark field, 45 miles from Manila and 22 miles north of Manila bay. Magalang, six miles northeast of Clark field, also was reached. Anti-Closed Shop Provisidn In Work-Piqht Bill Attacked Washington, Jan. 26 uiiThe house rules committee today pro vided for house action next week on proposed "work or else" Iclsla tlon, but members made it clear that a strong fight would be waged to add antl-closcd shop amendment Acting rules committee Chair- man Eugene K. Cox, D., Ga., and Rep. Howard W. Smith, D., Va., a j member, both expressed convlc-1 tion that persons "drafted" into essential war Industry work un- j der the bill should not be com- pelled to join a union even though j the plant to which they were as- signed worked under a closed shop union contract. Rep. Paul Kllday, D., Tex., a - member of the house military af fairs committee which drafted the bill, testified that such an amend ment had been adopted by the committee but subsequently was eliminated as a "compromise" de signed to remove all controversial features from the bill. Kllday said the same thing hap pened to a fair employment prac- BULLETIN London, Jan. 26 (U.P.) Marshal Stalin announc ed triumphantly tonight that the red army had bar ricaded the back door of East Prussia in a drive to the Baltic - sea, i trapping about 200,000 German de fenders of the once proud Junker province. btalin s order of the day putting the official seal on nazi admissions that East Prussia had been isolated, said in part: "Troops of the Second White Russian front, con tinuing their impetuous offensive, today captured the East Prussian towns of Muhlhausen, Marienburg, and Stuhm, important strongholds of the German defenses, thus cutting off the East Prussian group of the German army from the central district of Ger many." Break in Cold Wave Due East (Br United Press) Weather forecasters promised a break today in the' cold wave which has engulfed the eastern seaboard from Maine to Virginia and set low temperature records In New York state. Subzero temperatures still pre vailed In several New England areas and northern sections of New York, but fcecastera said the mercury would climb as-much as 25 degrees later today and snow would fall in most states affected by the cold snap. Marine forecasters hauled down storm warnings which had alert-1 ed small craft from Block island to Cape Hatteras and Chesapeake bay as gale winds subsided gen erally. In northern New York, where school systems and transporta tion lines were virtually frozen to a standstill, the promised re lief would end record-breaking weather. Albany, Buffalo, Roch ester and Syracuse recorded ther mometer lows that broke records which had stood for three gener ations. Six deaths resulted from the freeze-up. Junior Citizen To Be Named at Jaycee Dinner Nearly ' 100 memoers of the Junior chamber of commerce and Its auxiliary are expected to nt tend a banquet at 7:30 o'clock to night in the Pine Tavern when an award will be presented to the out standing junior citizen of Bend. Besides members of the organiza tion, leaders of other service clubs and civic groups of the city have Deen invited to attend. A feature of (he evening will be an address by William M. Tug- man, managing editor of the Eu gene Register Guard. Tugman, who has won national recognition for his post-war development ideas, and who was directly re sponsible for Bend's peace time planning, was expected to deliver a highly Interesting talk. tlcc amendment which would have prohibited any employer from re fusing to take on, because of "race, creed or color" any prospec tive worker assigned to him by federal authorities. Cox said the military committee chilled the enthusiasm of the public and congress for work or fight legislation when it took out "the anti-closed shop amendment." "It should be put back in the bill to show who's master of this country, the government or labor unions," he said, Chairman Andrew J. May, D., Ky., of the military affairs corn- mitHK denied that thn proposal; waft an "anti-strike 1)111," as con-i tended by Rep. Charles Halleck It., ma. "If a fellow goes out on strike you could throw him In jail under this hill," Halleck said. "The committee had no Inten tion of writing a bill to stop a man from striking who has the right to strike under law," May replied. OderDefensive Line Breached By Stalin Men Moscow Reports Great Air Battles Raging as Fleets Go Into Action By Robert Mtisel (United Press Surf Correspondent). London, Jan. 26 (IPi Russian armored columns were reported striking Into the Polish-German border area little more than 90 miles east of Berlin today as other -red army forces to the south breached the nazis' main defen sive line along the Oder river. The German Transocean news agency said two Russian flying columns were Intercepted and "de stroyed" after they had swung past the Polish fortress city of Poznan and driven almost to tho border of Germany's Branden province. . At tho same time, Berlin said a third armored spearhead plunged 55 miles north of Poznan to the area of German Schneidemuhl, 95 miles southeast of the Baltic sea port of Stettin. Border Reached The closest approach to Berlin apparently was made by a flank ing force that swept around the northern side of Poznan to reach the border near the German town of Driesen, 94 miles from the nazi capital, 53 miles northwest of Poz nan. The second breakthrough came near the Polish border town of Zbaszyn, 42 miles east-southeast of Poznan and 97 miles from Ber lin. At Zbaszyn, the Soviets were only 58 miles east of Frankfurt. on-Oder, the last defensive outp'ost before Berlin. There was no Immediate confirmation- of the fterman- reports' from Moscow, but late soviet dis patches said Russian troops were storming into the eastern out skirts of Poznan while strong ar mored formations were looping past the city on the north and south. Frankfurt Appears Goal An Exchange telegraph dispatch from Moscow said "large soviet mobile columns" were skirting for Frankfurt, leaving their support- ing elements to clear out the nazi garrison at Poznan. The sudden breakthrough to the nazi frontier at the center of the long eastern front came as red army divisions In Silesia ripped through a half-dozen breaches in the Oder river line on the southeastern road to the nazi capital. Enemy reports disclosed that the nazi hl"h command was throwing probably its last re serves of air power Into the battle in an all-or-nothing gamble to turn back the red army invaders. Berlin revealed that perhaps 3,000 fighters and bombers which the Luftwaffe had been hoarding to meet the Anglo American air forces' spring offensive in the west were swarming out over the eastern front to cover the reel ing nazis armies and rake the ad vancing Russians with bombs and gunfire. Warplnnes Attack Moscow dispatches simultane ously told of "huge" formations of soviet warplanes on the attack. and It appeared that the greatest air battles of the eastern cam paign were In progress over a vast area extending from the Car pathians to the Baltic scat-oast. I he nuzl gamble In the air came at the blackest hour of the war for German arms, with East Prussia all but lost, the strategic Oder river barrier broken In Si lesia, and the red army hammer ing at Poznan on the direct road to Berlin. Late Moscow dispatches said soviet troops had broken into the eastern outskirts of Poznan, 136 , miles east of Berlin, and were try ing to envelop the city before launching an ull-out drive to take -it by storm. Arctic Weather Claims Life of Babe in Carriage New York, Jan. 26 tP The two-month-old son of Peter and Marie Langua froze to death early today In a carriage beside his mother's bed. The infant, Victor, was bundled Into the carriage last night In the bedroom of his parents' cold Brooklyn flat. Mrs. Langua awakened and reached into the carriage to de termine whether her child was warm and blanketed. She scream ed. Neighbors summoned an am bulance and police, but the baby could not be revived.