Call Be fore 7 . The Bulletin circulation office re-! maim open unfit 7 o'clock each eve-' . ning o tory tubscribert. Cat) S4 . before 7 p. m. ft you fail to receive your paper. 1 . ; . E BEND BUI1 Volume LIU CENTRAL OREGON'S; DAILY NEWSPAPER m Weather Forecast Intermittent rmln today, tonight and Saturday with snow over mountains. Slightly colder Saturday. THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEB. 2, 1945 Allied Armies Seize Colmar n New Drive Germans Abandon Entire Sections of Barrier as Troops Move Into Rear Paris, Feh 2 (IP) Allied armies oke into the big Alsation strong- ld of Colmar and the outer ust of the Siegfried line today bincident with the disclosure pat Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower lid his commanders had been Inferring on current operations. American and French forces errunning the German pocket l the Rhine in lower Alsace ushed into Colmar, Its biggest tv. alter gams loresnaoowing le doom of this enemy bridge- ad left behind In the early inter push through most of the stern strip oi rTance. United Press correspondent inton B. Conger reported from 6sace that tanks and infantry of n. Jean De Lattre De Tassig- 's French First army, including nited States units, cracked into lulmar. The Franco American push ped out the northern section of e' coimar pocKei aiong me biine, and the Allies were fight s' within mortar range of the ig Ncubreisach bridge behind the rmans holding out in the ountains northwest of Colmar. To the north- three American mies were wedging into the !m of the Siegfried defense belt a broad front In the border gion of Germany, Belgium, and uxembourg. . The First and Third armies, Ightmg below the Ninth army rctor, were closing on the Sieg- led line's main works along a mile front. Supreme Headquarters an- puneed that Eisenhower and his aff had conferred with Lt. Gen. hiar N. Bradley, lath army roup commander, but permitted, ttle speculation about the gather- .Big Thing rooking- The converence was held rainst the significant . back- round of a Russian drive to the pproaches Of Berlin and Amerl- n penetrations of the Siegfried. brks. Its importance was indicated by le fact that it was announced all, for the usual meetings etween commanders go un raided. The announcement pecified that the principal mem era of the supreme commander's laif were present, another indi ition that big things were cook ig. i Field dispatches said the Ger-' lans were abandoning entire (ctions of their first-line Sieg lied defenses and pulling back in I the main fortifications three four miles farther east without struggle. The withdrawal, ap rently dictated by the need of (serves to meet the Red army ish in the east, was reported pi pronounced lonschau, where NO. 50 Thirty Million Koreans Face Starvation By George Wang (United Pn War Correspondent) Chungking. Feb. 2 (IP Thirfv million Koreans are. starving und er a strict Japanese wartime ra tioning system which already has cost the lives of millions, three K-orean students who dpsertprt from the Japanese army declared today. Thousands of Koreans have committed suicide after murder ing Japanese oppressors, and more thousands have revolted in small-scale unsuccessful rice riots, the trio of -deserters from the Japanese 65th division in north China said after a two months' trek to Chungking. The three whom I interviewed arrived at Chungking in a group oi w Koreans seeking the pro tection of their provisional govern ment in the Chinese capital.' An estimated 10,000 Korean con scripts have successfully deserted from the Japanese army. Second Wreck In Gorge Kills Bend Resident The Dalles. Ore.. Feb. 2 (IB- Fatalities resulting from two wrecks on the Bend branch of the S. P. and S. railroad rose to three today with the death of O. E. Cochran, an engineer on one of the freight trains which col lided head-on yesterday. ere known to have built a uble wall of defenses covering le cologne plain. The Dalles, Ore., Feb. 2 (IP) A work train was derailed today en route to the scene of a previous freight train collision on the Bend branch of the Spokane, Portland and Seattle line, killing the con ductor and delaying reopening of .the line.. company oinciais said conduc tor Charles Wilson, 64, 309 Turn-eJo-avervra,- Bond, was--riding the only car derailed when the work train struck a dirt slide 25 miles north of Maupin and about nine miles from the spot where two freight trains collided yesterday, killing one trainman and injuring five others. It was estimated the line would be reopened about 10 p. m. 30 Cars Derailed The flatcar on which Wilson was riding contained steel to re pair the damage from the first wreck, in which 30 boxcars were derailed. It was believed the earth slide was caused by rising temp eratures which thawed the frozen banks in a railway cut. The slide was slightly west of Sinamox. . The wreck yesterday was near Oakbrook, near milepost 39 on the Bend branch. Killed was A. J. Dodd, brake man. Seriously injured were O. E. Cochran, and John Harper, engi neers on the two S. P. and S. fi-nioht trainQ that mpt in A hltnrt. northeast ot,ne snowstorm slitrhtlv before the Germans , noon. Also hosDitalized in The 27,100 Allies Die at Nippon Camp on Isle Released Prisoners Tell Stories of Horror; III Men Refused Medicine Ceneral MaoArthtir's Headnuar ters. Luzon, Feb. 2 Ui Capt. Ralph Hibbs of East Oskaloosa, Iowa, said today at least 20 Amer ican and Filipino prisoners had been executed and hundreds, per haps thousands, of others had died oi neglect in prison camps on Luzon. Hibbs, among the 510 allied pris oners rescued from the Cabana- tuan prison camp by rangers in a daring . commando raid, said 27, 000 Filipinos and 100 Americans died of various causes in the O'Donnell prison camp alone and more than 100 Americans died at Cahanatuan. Prisoners often were beaten with sticks which they called "vi tamin sticks, Hibbs said. When men fell ill, the Japanese often refused to release medical sup plies for them, he said. Over 1(H) Die Once 100 men died of diphtherial before they were given anti-toxin. Another 100 died of dysentery, he said. Hibbs said that in a camp , at Bilibid, the ancient Manila prison, the Japanese gave prisoners rot ten vegetables covered with ma nure. American officers had to use clubs to keep the starving pris oners irom eating them, he said. The Japanese laughed at the sight." he added. ; Hibbs served with the 31st in fantry at Bataan and was adju tant at the O'Donnell camp hos pital under Col. James W. puck worth of 101 Cervantes . Blvd., San Francisco, Calif., doctor-hero of the Bleee of Bataan and an other of the prisoners rescued from Cahanatuan. - Report Confirmed . Duckworth, senior officer among the rescued prisoners, con- Reds Lash at Oder . : . , . ) ).' . - ft - 6 ft ft ft ft ', it ; : ft n n n k a lit units wd River Lone ft an Nasugbu Bay Landing Made By Americans' U. S. Troops Converge on Capital From Two Sides; City's Fall Seems Near ove on M By William B. Dickinson. ' (United Ptmt War Correepondenu) x . General MacArthur's Hearquar- ters, Luzon, Feb. 2 (U American tanks and Infantrymen converged on Manila from two sides today. The capital and the entire Japa nese defense system in southern Luzon were outflanked with a surprise landing 13 miles below the mouth of Manila bay.- Amphibious forces of th U. S. Eighth army, knifing into the enemy's thinly-held west coast de fenses for the third time in 48 hours, swarmed ashore early Wednesday at Nasugbu bay, 41 miles southwest of Manila. The landing was completed without loss and at last reports the Americans were advancing in land through weak opposition at a pace that may already have car ried them to the shores of Manila bay, within artillery range of Corregidor. Back Door Opened The new thrust broke onen the Back door to Manila, already menaced by u. s. sixth army vet- flr?nod.;kS5aiejikjK from tt dying daily at Camn O'Donnell nnrth. The Sixth- army's 37th louse Expected o Support Bill Washington, Feb. 2 (IB Early use approval of the George bill, signed to divorce lending agenc s from the commerce depart- Dalles, but with lesser irijuries, were W. G. Frazier, fireman, Tom Delaney, conductor and H. W. Higganbottom, b r a k e m a n. All trainmen were from Wishram, Wash. Siding Missed The accident occurred when the southbound freight train missed the siding at Oakbrook and ploughed into the northbound train. One locomotive was piled on its side off the roadbed and the other was derailed and Dauiy dam aged. More than 30 boxcars, many of them filled with freight, were cnt, appeared assured today crumpled and piled up along the Ith Conspnnpnt imnmvomont in tracks. ospects for senate confirmation I The injured were taken to Shcr- Henry A. Wallace as secretary (Continued on Page 5) commerce. Although opponents of the mination declared they would "itinue their fight to block con Jmation when It Is taken up arch 1, It seemed doubtful that again could muster the vote ' which they almost forced a icision on the nomination yes rday. May Follow Lead widespread sentiment among ith republicans and democrats dicated that the house would How the lead of the senate in ussing the George bill to remove e Construction Finance corpora n and allied agencies from the mmerce denartmnnf. The senate passed the bill yes- for a brief period after the sur render of Bataan in 1942. "The Japs were panicky over the death rate," he said. "They sent me there and allowed me to take six truckloads of our equip ment and supplies. "Within a month, the death rate was cut to 100 a day, and durinc the second month to 15 or 20 When Filipinos were able to leave they were freed and gradually the camp was closed out. Prisoners Burled Duckworth said he was able to save 80 of 160 American prisoners whom he found .criticallv 111 on his arrival at the O'Donnell camp. He said his personal dealings with the Japanese had been "satis factory, but reported that "many hundreds" of war prisoners were buried at Cabanatuan Maj. Emil Reed of Brownsville, Tex., formerly regimental com mander of the 26th (Filipino) cavalry, said some American sol diers at Cabanatuan had been beaten until they died East States Face Gas"Blaclcout" Washington, Feb. 2 (IP The war production board today pro hibited theaters, movies, bowling alleys, night clubs and other amusement places in the seven- state weather stricken Appala chian area from using natural or mixed heating gas for any pur poses during the next three days. The agency removed Illinois, Indiana, and Michigan from an earlier list of states covered by the 72-hour ban. 'Six More Weeks of Winter?' Groundhogs Present Answer 5HTTttEPlRT,GUYStf C. II. WHITE DEAD Portland, Ore., Feb. 2 U" Fu fral services will be held tomor- for Clarence H. White, found and partner of the Ellison bite artists bureau of Portland, d a former publisher. He was into a huddle. Out of the huddle came the solemn announcement: "Six more weeks of winter, boys. Let's finish our nap." Then, unconfirmed reports said, the marmots disappeared and so did the sun. And in the higher nip sun. noenrdine to the best country snow flurries brat over dope from the lavalands and can-! the Cascade divide, yon rimrocks, throw some fine! Old timers in Bend, asked for shadows against the snowy back-! comment on the groundhogs and zround. In fact, there appeared ' their shadows, said: "Hooey," to be one shadow for each ground-1 then added: "Who expected win fpntral Orpuon proundhoEs. re- rdaybyavoteof 74 to 12 f ollow-: nowned as weather prognostica g the pattern adopted by Wal-I tors of no mean ability, burrowed ce supporters once they became ! from lava bed snow today, blinked winced that the former vice at a February sun that seemed sident could not be confirmed to be skidding through clouds me loan agencies remained in ; and sat wearily on their naunencs e department. hog. - , Chief Chuck Groundhog, grand father of the lava bed tribe, re portedly called his descendants tor to end before March 15 any way? ' And in the lower country, the sun came out again. , (Buckeye) division was reported 20 miles or less north of the cap ital, on and probably beyond the Angat river line below Calumplt. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's com munique said the 37th's patrols were operating freelv throughout the area, indicating that the Japa nese were making no attempt at a determined-stand above the cap ital. Caught between the two Amer ican columns, the Japanese in Manila faced the prospect of re treating southeastward around the shores of Laguna De bay with in the next few days or being trapped and annihilated inside the city. Their only other alternative was a flight to Corregidor for a death stand on .'the rock." laps Make Report (A broadcast from the Japa nese-controlled Singapore radio said enemy units entrenched along the Manila highway were strong ly supported by tanks and artil lery units. American spearheads, the broadcast claimed, were "com pletely cut off from communica tions and are receiving insuffi cient supplies by air.") As the battle for Manila moved into its final stage, there was fierce fighting in the foothills of the Zambales mountains 50-odd miles to the northwest, where sev eral thousand Japanese were be ing Domoeo ana shelled out of their hilltop positions lust west of Clark field and Fort Stotsenburg. At last accounts. American planes and artillery were cutting the enemy force to pieces with an almost-continuous bombardment, clearing the way for an infantry assault to dislodge the Japanese survivors. Artillery Blasts Nips Near Clark Held r f - N , . ' , . " " -s ' ' Blasting Nipa isolated in suicide caves of their own making in the low foothllli of the Oabualllan range some five miles from Clark Field, Lujn, these Yank artillerymen lean on their gun braces to prevent their 75-mm. Oeld gun from recoiling out of position. Photo by WUlard Hatch. NEA-Acme photographer for War Picture Pool. Timber Faller Shot at Shevlin 10 More Nippon Ships Are Bagged Washington, Feb. 2 (IP) Ameri can submarines have sent 10 more enemy merchant vessels to the hsttom in far eastern waters, .the navy revealed today. J : The bag announced today in eluded two medium cargo trans ports, three tankers, three cargo vessels, and two transports all vital to Japan's efforts to main tain tenuous sea lanes to its stolen empire in the south. ' This latest haul brings to 989 the number of enemy vessels sunk by U. S. subs in this war. Of the 989 sunk, 104 were combatant ships and 885 non-combatant. 65 ships Destroyed Since Jan. 1, the navy has an nounced the sinking of 65 enemy vessels by American submarines. Five of these were warships. The last two navy announce ments of submarine sinkings have specified that the vessels were sunk exclusively in far east ern waters, indicating that the American undersea craft must roam closer to enemy home wa ters for their prey. Many sinkings previously were listed as occur ring in the western pacific. Claude Powell, 27, a tlmtior faller, Is In the Lumberman's hos pital here suffering from a shot gun wound In the rieht ernln and ! house the right arm, and State Of fleer i dP,Pmed the rpal npcd House Approves Work-Fight Bill Washington, Feb. 2 (IP Chair man Elbert D. Thomas, D., Utah, of the senate military affairs com mittee today predicted that the house-approved "work or else' bill probably would be ready to send to the senate tomorrow. After a close committee session during which several amendments were adopted, Thomas told re porters there would be no further hearings requested Dy botn latior and Industry because both the senate and house military affairs committees have considered na tional service legislation for two years. "All that has been declared at the hearings has not changed what the president has asked, what war mobilization director Iiyrnes has asked, what tho chief of staff and the chief of the fleet have asked, and now what the of representatives has Thomas Berlin Braces In Death Stand As Reds Near (B, Unltod Pr) k . Berlin braced for a death stand agalnU. -oruruahinft red army today as nazt spokesmen specu lated uneasily that the allied "big three would go over their heads to the German people with a new surrender demand similar to Pres ident Wilson's historic 14 points. With Russian tank columns barely an hour's ride away, the German capital was reported griped by terror and a rising note oi hysteria was evident even in official propaganda broadcasts over the Berlin radio. Allied Offensive Looms in West Washington, Feb. 2 (Ui Acting secretary of War Robert P. Pat terson suggested today that the Germans soon will feel the pres sure of a powerful allied offen sive from the west, and said that their ability to hold on the Oder river in the east was doubtful. It Is obvious that the Germans have yet to feci the full weight of another all-out allied offensive In the west," Patterson told his news conference. "Though they occupied us with their own offen sive In December and our liquida tion of lt at great cost to the nazls in January, they must know they cannot count upon a respite In tho west." "With short supply lines and an Interior network of roads and railways the Germans may be able to stand on the Oder, although even that ability Is In doubt," Pat terson said. 'At the other side of the rclch they naturally will fight desper ately to prevent a - wide - open breach of the west wall. Terrain and fortifications in that area, In addition to the weather, pose dl flcultles for us. Even the fall of Berlin might not end the war. No doubt the Hitler gangsters would like to fight to the last German." Army to Release Maneuver Lands (Approximately 4,000 property owners in the Oregon rmy ma neuver area will shortly have their lands restored to then), it became known heia today with tne arrival in tsend or Lt. John R. Llndsey, of the office of division engineer, Pacific division, San Francisco. Lt. Llndsey establish ed neadquarters in room 7, Pen ney building, and said that he expected to be here about a month writing finis to the maneuvers in this area. The maneuver area embraced lands in Jefferson. Deschutes. Crook, Klamath, Grant, Lake and Harney counties, and was used by approximately 75,000 troops dur ing the war games In the summer and fall of 1943. Available Here Lt. Llndsey, who was stationed at Camn Abbot where he handled tne obtaining of maneuver rights oi strengtn were prospective. a o ill a Zhukov's Men Near Frankfort East of Berlin . Germans Say Russian Tank Unit Chased Back After Crossing Stream London, Feb. 2 (tPi The Ger mans reported today that power ful Russian forces massing along the Oder east of Berlin were try ing to smash across that last big barrier before the capital, In the streets of which the terrified ci vilians were throwing up barri cades. The German high command said strong red army units had reached the Oder on either side of Frank furt, 38 miles due east of Berlin. and northwest of Kustrln. where the Oder elbow points down within 3U mues of the city. j . Error Made A nazi military commentator re ported that the first effort by Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's First White Russian army to force tne Oder was made at Kustrln, 42 miles east-northeast of Berlin. "The courageous citizens of Kustrln chased back a soviet tank detachment which was trying to cross tne uoer, destroying six oi the tanks and damaging others," the commentator, Wilfred Von Of fen, said in a German home serv ice pep talk, Moscow dispatches said Zhu kov's armor and mobile infantry were flooding across al broad Brea'cJI of the German border east of Berlin and now were closing in on Frankfurt and Kustrln to exploit gains of armored spear heads blazing the soviet trail to Germany's "Rhine of the east." Oder Reached Both flanks of the red army which bad raced from the Vistula to the Oder'in three weeks were fanning out in strength as the fdrees at the center of Zhukov's offensive front massed on the Oder. The German Transocean news agency reported that "new and tremendous battles" were immi nent in the Oder-Warthe bend northeast of Berlin and in Silesia, where both sides were throwing in fresh forces and decisive tests and claims arising out of the ma neuvers, planned to mall release rorms to an the property owners involved in these counties. He said that any queries concerning the release of the properties should be directed to him at the Penney building, and that he would be available there for Interviews. to- Glenn Ray this afternoon was en said. He said the legislation "Is to de- Co. I Veteran Back in States Pfc. Delbert D. Stowe, 24, v.amKA. t) 1 ' I lume iU uieoiievnn logging camp ; VP0p the morale of our country! has returm!d to the United States iu ias imo cusiooy jonn ayter,!and support the boys wno are from the south Pacific, and la said to be waiting there to sur- fighting for our country and who j now In the Lettcrman's hospital render. The victim and Hayter were said to have been partners as timber fullers. Powell was reoorted to be mar- ried and the father of four daugh- feel that thev haven't got all the support they might have had." LT. TERRELL WOUNDED Washington, Feb. 2 HD Lt. Wil liam .T Tnrrr.Il Ron flf Rohert J. ters. State, police hero said that Terrell of Gilchrist, has been they had no Information to in- wounded In action In the Euro- dlcate a motive for the shootinc. Innan area, the war denartmcnt wihi-ii uceurrea ar me logging : has announced. camp about 9:30 this morning. At the Lumberman's hospital It was stated that Powoll's condi tion is critical. Attends nts Kairl that he had been wounded bv No. 4 ! shot, and that some of them also'stroyed in the face of pressing AIRBASE DESTROYED Chungking, Feb. 2 HH The U. S. army announced today that its airbase at Suichwan has been de- struck his right arm. Japanese forces. in San Francisco, according to word received from him today by his mother, Mrs. Earl Norman, 210 East Franklin avenue. Del bert's father is Floyd Stowe, also of Bend. When Mrs. Norman Inst heard from her son, Delbert was on Blak Island. He was a member of the national guard here when it was mustered in as Company I, and has been with the unit In the south Pacific ever since. In wir ing to his mother he said that he "felt fine," but gave no hint as to the reason for his hospitalization. Bulgarian Prince Reported Killed (Mr United Prou) The Ankara radio reported day that Prince Cyril of Bulgaria, former Premier Bogdan Filov, and Lt. Gen. Nikola Nlkov, former regent, were executed In Sofia last night after being condemned ror treason by a peoples court. The Sofia radio reported earlier that the court passed death sen tences on three former regents, 22 cabinet members, nine king's counselors, and 66 former mem bers, of parliament. The regents were Cyril, brother of the late King Boris and uncle of the boy King Simeon II; Filov and Mikov. i Prison terms were given 49 other deputies and the court ordered confiscation of the prop erty of the defendants, the broad cast said. A crowd of 150,000 gathered In front of the palace of justice to hear the sentences passed on the officials, convicted of dragging Bulgaria Into the war as an ally of Germany and of "evil deeds" connected with the war, Sofia radio said. Stockholm relayed a disnatch from Berlin saying: "Berlin now Is a front line city In the fullest meaning of the term. Berliners have been made to realize that they must expect fighting In the streets. Barricades Built "Barricades are being built fev erishly in a number of streets, In cluding the center of the city in the presence of the bewildered onlookers. The explosions from blowln" up bomb-wrecked houses are adding to the fateful atmos phere, and might soon merge with the thunder of guns in the east. "Berliners are deeply impressed by the sight of marching Volks- sturm (home guard) units with their rifles and Tommy guns. A general tension Is noticeable. Peo ple tear newspapers from the hands of the vendors. U.S.S. Growler Reported Lost Washington, Feb. 2 (IP) The navy late yesterday announced loss on patrol of the submarine Growler the submarine whose former skipper, Cmdr. Howard W. Gllmore, was washed to his death after he Issued the order "tnkei her down!" ' Frederic Chopin A (Treat musician A famous lover A PoUih patriot 1 1 the here of ear next serial Jlory "A Song to Remember", Willard Wiener Starts in The Bulletin Monday