HE 3D ILlfflW i Society Notices f The deadline for society newt 1 society news days of publication, Tuesday, day and Saturdays, ts 30 a. m. Volume UN Red TROOPS BATTLE CONFLAGRATION II I I A , japsnoidUUT As Fire Rages In Isle Capital Whole Areas of City Enveloped By Sea of Flames; Nippons Perish By Francis McCarthy (United Prest War Correspondent) Manila, Feb. 7 tP American troops fought fire and the Japa nese enemy through the streets of burning Manila today In the final tragic act of the capital's libera- ion. (Radio Tokyo said American warships joined In the battle Mon day and Tuesday with a violent two-day bombardment of the Is land fortress of Corregidor, at the mouth of Manila bay.) (The report followed specula tion that a landing on Corregidor might be undertaken to unlock Manila bay to American shipping. Tokyo suggested also that the warships might be planning to force the Strait of Corregidor to reach Manila Itself where, the en emy said, American troops have fallen into a "most clever and well-prepared trap.") Landing Made (The new Delhi radio quoted Tokyo as saying that American troops have landed on Bohol is land, midway between Leyte and Cebu in the south-central Philip- ; i Severa thousand Japanese, scattered in isolated pockets 1 throughout Manila, were dvine in a welter of flame and gunfire. The enemy apparently was determined to gut the city before surrender ing it to Gen. Douglas MacAr thur"s liberating army. The cornered enemy blasted and burned everything about them In a frenzy of senseless destruction that began at sundown Monday, after they had blown up most of the water pumping stations to hamper effective fire fighting. Fire Sweeps City Whole areas of the city were en gulfed in a roaring sea of fire as the flames spread from the down town business section into the northern districts, roasting Fili pino civilians and Japanese sui cide squads alike. The conflagration mushroomed from block to block throughout VMonday night and on into day ?ht Tuesday, fed by exploding asoline and munitions dumps Stnat went un with oanh.chaHixj fblasts. Observers atop the tower of Santo Tomas university, many of them Americans liberated from the Japanese onlv n few hours earlier, were able to watch the course of the street battle all Mon day night by the light 6f burn ing buildings on all sides. Santo lomas itself was still untouched and its water pumps were work ing. Blazing embers were show ering down all over the district. Nippons Killed Grim-faced American infantry men and Filipino guerillas stalked survivors of the foe garrison. Huge Man-MddeLake Takes Shape on Upper Deschutes m "'egon s newest lake, man-made NWlcklup high in the Deschutes Oregon's newest lake, man-made basin. iS ranirltv talrinir ohonn nnH I already hnlrlc dciin -.. t t water, Aubrey E. Perry, Des chutes watermaster, announced here today following a trip over mountain snow courses. Already he rapidly expanding lake has Backed up to Browns creek, and j"umps that covered the bottom lands in the reservoir basin are covered. ,. Tne reservoir region, visitors to he upper Deschutes report, con trasts strikingly with the timber covered basin of former years, 'nen the river lazily meandered through a forest of jackpines and Past a great stand of yellow pines on the benchlands. Perry reports it is the plan of -!rvor,h Unit district to store I'l.OOO acre feet of water In the IPL'ii.H I t ... i i. I "". iMsin mis season, ana ne I ""mates that at the present rate 3 i inflow this goal will probably 'Reached. r. wa'crmaster s trip Into the "Pper Deschutes country was made on Feb. 2, just prior to the . - tw. 4, IU3L IU 1 1 1 1, npav- storm, and at that time the now cover was alarmingly light! on Thurs A irmniDes Japs Shell Santa Tomas Prison Camp at Manila By Ralph Teatsorth (United Preu Tat Correspondent) Manila, Feb. 7 HIE) Japanese today shelled Santo Tomas and Bilibid internment camps where thousands of allied ci vilian internees and prisoners of war are being sheltered. Bombardment of the camps continued sporadically throughout the day. The internees and prisoners h'ad remained in the two camps pending completion of the mop-up of Japanese resist ance inside the city of Manila. In midafternoon, the Japanese scored at least four direct : -hits on the main university Spies Held Aided By Nazi Officers New York, Feb. 7 (IP) The Ger man consulate at Boston, with the help of German ship crews, brazenly recruited Americans to serve as nazl spies in 1940, a secret military commission was informed today at the trial of two alleged spies. One of the men on trial, Wil liam C. Colepaugh of Connecticut, said the Germans entertained him at beer parties, invited him aboard their shlDs and "discussed with me the possibility of my going to Germany." Colepaugh made his statement to the federal bureau of investi gation soon after his arrest and it was offered in evidence today against him and Erich Gimpel, the other prisoner.' Gimpel is a native of Germany. The two allegedly Invaded the United states from a nazi submarine last Dec. 29, bent on espionage and sabotage. The report on Colepaugh's state ment, relayed by army public re lations officers from the star ctiamber trial, indicated that the trip to Germany was offered Colepaugh so he could study at the nazl marine engineering schools. Ceiling Placed On Farm Wood Washington, Feb. 7 (IP) The of fice of price administration today set ceiling prices on all types of fire wood sold by farmers. Effective next Monday, ceiling prices for farm wood will be fixed at the highest prices charged by the farmer for the same types of wood in March, 1942. Heretofore farm, sales have been exempt from price control where the value did not exceed $75 in any one month. OPA said this exemption has led to "exorbi tant" prices in some areas. . BULLETIN London, Feb. 7 P Thirteen persons were killed when a plane carying some members of Prime Minister Churchill's staff crashed on the way to the "big three" meeting, it was announc ed tonight. On that date there was 8.7 Inches of snow at Cascade summit. Cres cent lake storage on Feb. 2 was 31,035 feet. Crane prairie storage is com paratively low this year, only 23, 490 acre feet, and Perry does not expect the basin to "peak" more than 50,000 acre feet. Its capacity is 50,000 acre feet, but there is a greater water loss through seep age at that level. Perry also took snow measure ment at Three Creeks lake on February 1, and found only 1.6 Inches there, compared with 4.1 inches in the previous year. Perry warns farmers using Three Creeks lake storage that there Is an inch of solid ice under the light' snow, and predicts that a sudden thaw will send the accu mulated . moisture prematurely into the lowlands. At Hogg pass, 9 0 Inches of snow was measured on Feb. 1, compared with 12.4 at the same date last year and 48.0 the pre vious year. However, since Perry made his Feb. 1 measure, heavy snow has blanketed tne jsanuam T . I .j . . . . . , divide, with four feet reported at the summit yesterday. CENTRAL OREGON'S THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 7, 1945 building at Santo Tomas. A shell dropped directly in front of the entrance of the main building at Bilibid. , Santo Tomas was under fire, probably from mortars, intermittently throughout the day. Mac Arthur Escapes Fire Gen. Douglas MacArthur visited internees at both camps today but luckily escaped enemy fire. The internees of Bilibid origin' ally had! been evacuated '.two nights ago when fire swept that portion of the city. Big fires still were burning in Manila near the waterfront and south of the Paslg river. Macarlo Arebejo, Manila real tor, said many square blocks in the city north of the Pasig had been destroyed. Arebejo estimated that street battles, fires, and demolitions had caused $2,000,000,000 (B) damage. Veterans-Group To Draft Measure Salem, Ore., Feb. 7 (IP) Con flict between various veterans or ganizations over the type of state veterans administration to be enacted by the legislature ap parently vanished into thin air today, as the groups decided to "get together" on the drafting of a piece of legislation which would be acceptable to all of them. Chairman Harvey Wells, of the house military affairs committee, told veterans representatives at a public hearing today that the bill now under consideration (HB271) was only to "get the ball rolling." "If you don't tell us what you want, how can we get it done for you?" he asked them, and referred to the criticism both for and against the measure he had re ceived. He emphasized that the committee would endorse any "practical and workable program" which was presented, but that up to now, the bill now in committee was the only one presented. Bill Explained The bill, which calls for the ap pointment of a $5,000a-year di rector of veterans affairs, was ob jected to by Pete Frederickson, state commander of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, largely because of the centralized authority, and because he said it would create a duplication of effort. The meeting ended on an ami cable note when officers of the three veterans organizations agreed to cooperate In drafting a new piece of legislation. Aid Preferred Rex Kimmell, assistant attorney general who drew the original bill by request,-preferred his aid. ' Rep. Wells told the men that "as soon as you get what you want, come and see us. We'll defer ac tion until we hear from you." Frederickson, Penn C r u m m, The Dalles, state leader of the American legion; Milton Wood cock, Corvallis, Disabled Veterans and Floyd K. Dover, Grants Pass, D. A. V. and the Purple Heart, spoke at the meeting. Parish to Join In Polio Benefit The Father Luke Sheehan coun cil of the Knights of Columbus has arranged for Saturday night, February 10, a polio benefit party, for members of the parish, It was announced today by Lowell Jen sen, in general charge. The party will he held in the Catholic parish hall. All proceeds will go into the polio lund. There win be dancing and other entertainment, and a buffet lunch will be served. An advance sale of tickets ts being conducted. Yanks Explode New Drive on Western Front Berlin Warns Great . r. Offensive Soon to . - v Be Launched By Allies ":' Paris, Feb. 7 iu?) The American Third army exploded a new of fensive across the Luxembourg border into Germany today and battled into the Siegfried line along a 22-mile front north of Echternach. Veteran shock troops of four American divisions opened the at tack between one and three a. m. this morning, crossing the Our and Sure river in rubber assault boats at seven points under heavy rifle and machine gun fire from the opposite shore. Nazi troops holding the river lines that form Germany's fron tier with Luxembourg were over whelmed In the first onrush, and field dispatches indicated that American tanks were moving across behind the Infantry spear heads to support the offensive. Une Buckles The new drive brought Ger many's buckling Siegfried line under direct assault by the Amer ican Third and First armies all along a 70-mile front extending northward from the Echternach area to the headwaters of the Roer river. It came as German military spokesmen were trumpeting anx ious warnings of an Imminent full-scale offensive by the Amer ican Ninth and British Second armies massed along the Roer river east and northeast of Aachen. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third army forces already had breached the Siegfried wall at one point above the new attack front, and the First army farther to the north was plowing slowly through stiff opposition into the chain of dams controlling the level of the Roer river along its entire length. Two of the five Roer dams al ready were In American hands or under direct artillery fire, and capture of the remaining three would clear the way for the U. S. Ninth and British Second army drives into the Cologne plain. Doughboys of the Fifth infan try division kicked off the new Third army assault on a five-mile stretch of the Sure river between Echternach and Bollendorf, where they won three firm bridgeheads on the east bank of the river and pushed . ahead into the outer works of the Siegfried line. OPA Group Joins In Bend Meeting Operation of the Western Pine association experiment station, and other research work being done by the association in the field of timber byproducts, was explained in detail to members of the Bend war price and ration board last night by Carl Rasmus sen, manager of the plant. The meeting, attended by more than 30 persons, was held in the ration headquarters in the library build ing. The evening was featured by the appearance of Dale Lindsay, assistant price executive of the Portland area, and Jack Hub bard, also from the main head quarters. Both made short talks, lauding the local OPA employes and the volunteer workers. Lind say announced that he is being transferred to the San Francisco office, and that Hubbard will suc ceed him. Refreshments, Including sand wiches, coffee, cookies and pop were served those present. Group Listed Local ration board members and volunteer workers attending the gathering were: Lindsay, Hubbard, Jackson T. Moore, board supervisor; Chair man and Mrs. H. P. Carlile, Mrs. A. T. Herrllng, price chairman; Rasmussen, Mr. and Mrs. Glfford Brlggs, Mr. and Mrs. Albert West fall, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. KImsey, Mr. and Mrs. Georger Thompson, Mr. and Mrs. George Slmerville, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Hamilton, Bruno Rath, George Childs, Mr. and Mrs. William Navlor. Waltpribv Brier. Optv William C rhastv Nelson, Mrs. Vern Everett, Mrs. Fred Stookey, Mrs. M. S. Phelps and Mrs. Nels Skjersaa. DAILY NEWSPAPER L " i ir $ . (NEA Ttlephoto) Jubilant, cheering Filipinos enthusiastically hall these American tanks speeding toward Manila to liberate the Philippines capital exactly three years, one month and one day after its capture by Japanese forces on Jan. 3, ig 3' Meet in Black Sea Area to Plan Nai Defeat Washington, Feb. 7 (U.P.) The White House announced todav that Presi dent RooseveltPremier Josef Stalin, and Prime Minister Winston Churchpl are conferring "in the Black sea area" on plans for the final defeat of nazidom, ioint ! occupation. of. Germany, "ihere is complete agreement, the announcement ; Al j; 1 1 nil i t y-i erauons in tne iinai pnase The conference started then went into plans not only tor joint control of deteated Uermany but also into "the political and economic problems of liberated Europe." Anglers' Path Bill Approved Salem, Ore., Feb. 7 UPi The house today passed and sent to the senate a bill which would give the state game commission emi nent domain rights for paths along fishing streams of the state. The only dissenting vote was Rep. Giles French's. The bill was designed primarily to prevent property owners along streams Jrom restraining fisher men from crossing their land for fishing purposes. Rep. William Nlskanen, Bend, Introduced the bill, and said that Oregon was one of only a few states which traditionally recog nized the right of fishermen to angle where they wish. He cited instances of the denial of that right. FLIGHT BAN MODIFIED San Francisco, Feb. 7 ui MaJ. Gen. H. C. Pratt, commanding general of the western defense command, today issued a procla mation permitting resumption of limited civilian flying within the western air defense zone begin ning Feb. 10. MacArthur Visits Santo Tomas Bursts of Fire and Is Kissed By Santo Tomas Internment Camp, Manila, Feb. 7 HP) Gen. Douglas MacArthur paid a visit to this camp today amid bursting mortar fire, as 3,600 newly liberated pris oners wildly cheered his every gesture. MacArthur was accompanied by an honor guard of about 100 troops of the famed First cavalry division, many of whom had stormed Santo Tomas only three days before to free the Internees. The cavalrymen smartly pre sented arms as MacArthur drove up In a staff car. The general wore khaki with five silver stars in a circle on his collar and his fa mous gold-braided cap of a Philip pine field marshal. Entering the lobby of an an cient Santo Tomas university building where American prison ers were housed, MacArthur was warmly embraced by several of the women Internees. MacArthur, who was escorted Ft. Leavenworth, Kansas, of the 'First cavalry, fondly embraced Mrs. Carl Seals, wife of Gen. Seals, eaip it ? Filipinos Hail Manila-Bound tugnai uorps pnoro. and i'firtrufoun,da.tiohg:f praJastine peace.'L. ... or me war agamsi nazi uermany. . with military discussions, the White House said, and Peace Is Goal High on the agenda, the an nouncement said, were discus sions looking toward "the earliest possible establishment of a perma nent International organization to maintain peace." The White House did not say when the three war leaders, ac companied by their foreign secre taries and staff chiefs, started their meeting. Nor did It Indicate the place except to say that lt was in the Black sea area. The announcement said, how ever, that "meetings are proceed ing continuously." It added that a communique will be Issued at the conclusion of the conference. In the first official word on the "Big Three" meeting, the White House announcement made si multaneously In London and Mos cow said the conference began with military discussions and has extended through problems of peace, including "Joint plans for the occupation and control of Ger many." Also under discussion were "the political and economic problems of liberated Europe and proposals for tne earliest possible establishment of a permanent International or ganization to maintain peace," the White House said. "Meetings are proceeding con tinuously," t h e announcement said. , wncf was sum uuwn in a plane ai- ! n .... .... .... ..1.1.. .1 is now a prisoner of war. "Oh, general, I'm so glad to see you and all your troops. You and they were magnificent," Mrs. Seals said. "I'm glad to be here, Mrs. Seals," MacArthur replied. "I'm a little late, but we finally came." Mrs. If. L. Harries, widow of a colonel who died on Corregidor, also embraced MacArthur. Both women were so overcome with joy they almost broke down. Words poured from their Hps In broken sentences as tears welled In hundreds of eyes. Mrs. Walter Stevenson of Lon don, who was an old friend of MacArthur and of his father, could hardly talk. She could hardly re member her own name. Mrs. Eda KnowltlnR, Columbia, Pa., whose husband, Edward, also Is an Internee, grabbed MacArthur and planted a kiss on his cheek. "General, we can't tell you how glad we are to see you," Mrs. Knowltlng exclaimed. "Mrs. Knowltlng, I can't tell you, mi ' & IN MANILA Yanks , said, for joint military Dp- ti India Air Forts Strike Thailand Washington, Feb. 7 mi Super fortresses from India today at tacked Thailand and French Indo china while single B-29's from the Marianas by Japanese report attacked the Kobe area. The Tokyo home radio said the attacks on Kobe occurred both last night and early today but that no damage was done. Re connaissance flights over the Kanto Shlnetsu district which in cludes Tokyo and Yokohama were also reported. Specific targets were not an nounced Immediately, but they may have been the transportation center of Bangkok, cupital of Thai land, and either Hanoi, the capital. or the Saigon naval base In Indo china. The attacks came as the Japa nese feverishly reinforced and fortified the China const against expected American landings. NAZIS HAVE VERSION London, Feb. 7 lli Dr. Otto Dietrich, nazl press chief, said In Berlin that the "big 3" meeting is "probably aboard a warship." Camp Amid Women how glad I am to be here. I only wish I could have made it soon er," the general said. Children two years old and men and women who had aged more than three years since the be ginning of their long Internment, crowded around MacArthur. Theyi came so close in an erfort to touch him that MacArthur had trouble passing along the corridor. On the second floor MacArthur shook hands with a group of Ba taan nurses, practically siiecch less wUh Joy at seeing their com mander again. The Japanese shelled and sent mortar fire all night Into the university grounds. No one was killed, but a few internees were wounded. A few minutes before MacAr thur arrived, three motar shells burst against a university build ing less than 50 yards away. As the general's party drove away, still more mortar fire fell on the university grounds. MacArthur cooly took absolute ly no notice of the bursting shells. Weather Forecast . Rain today, ; tonight - and 1 Thursday. Little temperature change. Strong winds on coast, . NO. 54' Dim Russians Cross Final Barrier In Dash West Complete Destruction Of Nazi Germany Near, Assert Moscow Officials London, Feb. 7 IP Russian troops were reported unofficially from Moscow today to have brok en across the Oder river before Berlin, and the Red army's official ' organ said the "complete destruc tion of nazi Germany is very near." . ' . ..- The German high command re ported that Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's first White ; Russian . army had expanded its bridge- . head across the Oder In the Kuestrln area 30-odd miles east of Berlin one of a number the nazls said the Soviets had thrown across the last natural barrier before the capital. Moscow dispatches and various broadcasts from the Russian , capital contained guarded but un sir mistakable reports that Zhukov had stormed beyond the Oder and achieved at least temporary suc cesses in nailing down bridge heads. , :- -t. . ; :- : .j Two Armies Beady - One broadcast from Moscow by an American- correspondent said , - ' two Red armies stood "poised to leap upon Berlin. The last natur al barrier before Berlin and cen- tral Germany, the Oder, has been stormed and captured. The situa tlon this morning is altogether too wildly promising for speculation." Another said the position of the Germans had "really became serious to the point of despera tion" and "it now looks as though the drive for the German capital is really on." The German high command's only reference to the situation be fore Berlin in Its dally war com munique said that "on the Oder front the enemy was awe to widen slightly his bridgeheads north of Ratibor, at Brieg, and at Kuestrln." Pressure Increases Red Star, the Soviet army organ, published dispatches des cribing the battle of the Oder and said editorially: "Surpassing all precedents and possibilities in modern campaigns, the Red army's pressure not only Is not weakening, but is gaining strength daily. Its objective, the complete destruction of nazi Ger many, is very near." Soviet dispatches said Zhukov's vanguard had' hurdled the Oder In the Frankfurt area and was on a broad highway "leading like an arrow to the heart of Berlin." The Moscow radio described a Red army surge across the Oder on a broad front in Silesia and added: "Similar scenes will come to light as soon as the story of Zhukov's crossing of the Oder can be told. This is all I can say now about Zhukov's spectacular bat tle raging this very minute. Fight ing is now going on In the forti fied forefield of Berlin." Bridgeheads Seized The German radio said yester day that Zhukov's first White Russian army had seized four bridgeheads across the Oder 33 to 44 miles east of Berlin in the general area of Frankfurt and Kuestrln. Today the German Transocean news agency in a broadcast dis patch suld that along a JZ-mlle stretch of the Oder east of Berlin, Zhukov uppeared to have com pleted his preparations between Kuestrln and Fuesternburg "for a thrust against Berlin." So far, Transocean said, the main forces on the Oder were held before Frankfurt and Kues trln, and attempts to cross the river with "major formations" were blocked. More Men Massed In a similar vein a United Press dispatch from Moscow said Zhu kov was "massing more armor for a break across the Oder" while battling in the outskirts of Kuestrln and Frankfurt. It added that unconfirmed reports already had reached Moscow that ad vanced elements were across the river and battling to secure firm crossings for the main weight of the army behind them.