" v HS. vkv,it ai-t i jj4 . jwi ' of n ni, rrr EMU LA Weather Forecast Intermittent rain today and to. night Showers and cooler Friday. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume LIU TWO SECTIONS THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, FEB. 8, 1945 NO. 55 THE BETO Ml A w W 11 1 II U I JLJLTO- ? B Yank Troopers Start Crossing Manila River Tokyo Says Americans Are Entering Blackened ;,-., iLern Half of Citu Manila, Feb. 8 tP) American troops, employing amphibious tanks, have started crossing the bridgeless Pasig river into the burning, Japanese-held southern half of Manila, enemy broadcasts reported today, while Japanese re sistance was eliminated in the northern half of the city. Halted temporarily when Japa nese sappers blew up the last of the four bridges across the Pasig, which bisects Manila from east to west, U. S. forces have effected a crossing west of Malacanan Palace, the Japanese reported. Tokyo radio, quoting a Domei (Japanese) news agency dispatch, said Japanese garrison units were "fiercely attacking" the river bridgehead. Air Troopers Approach While a heavy artillery barrage poured down on the surviving Jap- S. 11th airborne division were cutting their way into the enemy rear from the south. (An indication that the Ameri cans may undertake the re-conquest of Corregidor, island fort ress in Manila harbor, was seen in secretary of war Henry L. Stimson's announcement in Wash ington that the harbor soon will be reopened to U. S. shipping.) The work of Japanese sappers Tuesday night nullified the feat of a daring American naval of ficer who a few hours earlier dashed through a hale of gunfire to remove a spluttering demoli tion charge from the last bridge over the Pasig. Japs Cut Off Cut off from all supply and reinforcement, the Japanese still were fighting back defiantly in the southern half of the city, bat tling desperately to hold the 11th airborne division ana mining sr. Tl'u tillery and mortar fire across the Pasig river into northern Manila. Some of the enemy shells were landing in the Santo Tomas uni versity grounds, where thousands of liberated American internees were quartered. At the same time, Japanese de molition squads were roving wan tonly through the southern city, dynamiting and burning homes and waterfront installations, even in the walled city. . Fires Checked Most of the fires set by the enemy in the northern section were brought under control by American 37th infantry and first cavalry division in their street-to-street cleanup of. that half of the capital. Quezon city, just east of Manila proper, also was cleared of its last suicidal Japanese de fenses. The 37th and first cavalrv was massed all along the north bank of the Pasig, but the wide and i swift-flowing river was under ttrtai,,, Annmp ovA it wan ho. lieved likely that the Japanese would be able to hold out until the 11th airborne breaks into their main positions from the rear. Third Brother Dies in Action Pfc. Glenn W. Tester. 27. was kll.ed in infantry action in France on January 9, the war department has informed Mrs. Tester, 32 Revere street. Memorial services will be held for him at the Mis sionary Baptist church at 3 p. m. Sunday. Pfc. Tester came to Bend from I'jyeu on me- BrooKS-ocamuii Lumber Company Inc., railroad until he entered the army in Aug ust, 1942. He went overseas a year ago this month and partici pated in the Anzio beachhead battle arid the march on Rome. During the Italian campaign he was awarded the combat infantry man's badge, the purple heart and a good conduct ribbon. Two of Pfc. Tester's brothers were killed in action last year. They were Sgt. Denton Tester and Pvt. Earl Tester, both of Tennes see. In addition to his wife, Pfc. Tes ter is survived by a son, Charles, one-year old; his mother, Mrs. M. F. Tester, Telford, Tenn.; two sisters and three brothers, all of whom, except Pfc. Frank Tester, now serving in Panama, reside in Telford. They are Miss Dorothy , Tester, Mrs. Guy Engle, Carroll rmerly employed by the Brooks Scanlon Lumber Company, Inc., here, received a medical discharge recently after infantry action in the European theatre. Tokyo Asserts Big Fight Due In Isle Region (Br Unltal Prtu) Radio Tokyo said today that the Japanese will open a counterof fenslve soon In the Philippines with the support of their fleet. The counter-offensive will touch off "some of the greatest battles the world has ever known." Tokyo said, quoting the official Domei agency. Though the United States can afford to lose the battle of Luzon, Domei said, "it is not so with Japan." Japan must win If she is to survive, the agency explained. If Gen. Tomoyukl Yamashita plans to retire to southern Luzon, Domei said, "the imperial Japa nese navy will not onlv nrniwt , . , , f IL. nks.but.als keep him in operational contact with Japanese garrisons entrenched in numerous Jaoanpse-held islands to the souw. The broadcast was recorded by the FCC. . . y Liquor in Car Causes Arrests Reminiscent of the old rum run ning days, two Washington ship yard workers were held in the city jail here today, an expensive automobile was confiscated, and Bend police were sorting approxi mately 90 bottles of costly whisky found in the car occupied by the men. Both suspects were held on suspicion pending the issuance of a complaint charging importation of whisky without a permit, In jail are Jack Fred Gerard, 24, a welder of Kent, Wash., and Jack R. Leonard, 25,- a ships me chanic, of Renton, Wash. They told officers they had purchased the whisky in California and was takings it to . their "aged grand fathers" In Washington. Revela that the contrabrand whisky was in the car came following an ar rest on a speeding charge. Coupe Sighted Officers Robert Hourahens, Fred Painter" and Chester Nord strom were cruising In a prowl car shortly before 2 a.m. when they observed a large coupe trav eling rapidly north on Hill street. They followed. As the officers gained, the other car increased its speed until forced to the curb by the police machine. Officers said that they also found a .22 calibre rifle and a .32 calibre revolver in the car. The automobile was registered to Leonard, and he claimed that he had a permit to carry the weap ons, but he was unable to produce it, officers reported. Manila's Harbor To Be Reopened Washington, Feb. 8 (IPi Secre tary of War Henry L. Stimson fold a press conference today that Manila harbor soon will be re opened to American shipping. This was regarded as a clear indication that American forces soon will undertake the re-conquest of Corregidor, island for tress in the harbor where Amer ican and Filipino forces made their last valiant stand in the early days of the war. "With the freeing of Manila, the government of the Philippine peo ple will be re-established in its capital," Stimson said. "The harbor of Manila will be reopened and from bases in the Philippines American planes and ships will cut Japanese sea routes to the East Indies and separate Japan from the oil, rubber and i other resources of the Indies and i Malaya," he said.' . Washington Believes 'Big 3' Making Real Progress in Making Plans for Peace Epoch By Lyle C. Wilson (United Preta Staff Correspondent) Washington, Feb. 8 ilP An nouncement of the "Big Three" conference raised great hope here today that the meeting in the Black sea area is reaching real agreement on Europe's peacetime future and the style of Germany's post-surrender straightjacket. President Roosevelt, Prime Min ister Winston Churchill and Pre mier Josef V. Stalin have agreed on the strategy 10 insure uer- mnnv's militarv defeat. Now they have begun political and economic talks. These latter are the key to the future, perhaps the most im-, pOnani COnverHailUNS III litcmuir mcih w wnc. ory of any living person. Both Roosevelt and Churchill The world will pay for any mis-1 are reported planning to speed takes made on the Black sea j directly home from the confer shores and benefit from all wisejence to rally public support. Ten decisions. 1 tatively scheduled side trips ap- Roosevelt is believed to have parently have been abandoned, told Churchill and Stalin that the Official announcement that the United States prefers not to par-1 Roosevelt-Stalin - Churchill meet ticipate in the ultimate, long-term ! ing was taking place was made Sale of Herds Causes Drop in Butter Output Lack of Farm Labor Also Factor in Lower Midstato Production Redmond, Feb. 8 Butter manu factured at the Central Oregon Cooperative creamery in Red mond decreased by 12.8 per cent last year as compared to 1943, Marvin Davidson, manager and treasurer of the concern, stated yesterday at the annual business jcoKiuaj ai l 1 1E7 annual uuamcsa meeting held In Redmond. This, he said, was due to a decrease in the number of dairy cows in Cen tral Oregon where herds have been sold, and, due to lack of milkers, the number of cows be ing milked has been reduced. The plant manufactured 525,805 pounds of butter last. year. Additional butterfat payments totalling $8,425.12 were distributed yesterday. After payment of in terest on stock and payments of butterfat dividends of one cent per pound a net of $7,542.66 was transferred to the undistributed margin account, Davidson stated. McKenzle Speaker ' Principal speaker at yesterday's meeting, which convened at 10 a. m. in the Odom theatre, was Dr. Fred K. McKenzie, professor of animal husbandry at Oregon State college. Dr. McKenzie, recently engaged in animal husbandry work in Peru and Chile, showed technicolor moving pictures of those lands and explained the valuable work being accomplished In furtherance of the "Good Neighbor" policy In South Ameri ca. Dr, McKenzie is a new-comer to Oregon, having worked In Mis souri and Colorado prior to his employment in South America. G. A. Brown, manager of the Interstate Associated creamery, Portland, the sales agency for the Redmond association, outlined the sales program under wartime reg ulations. He announced that a plant, which -will cost $180,000 when ' completed is now " under construction in Portland and, on completion, will house' the Inter state Associated creamery. Directors Re-elected Don B. McKenzie, former mana ger of the Redmond plant and now manager of the Farmers Co operative creamery In Payette, Ida., made a brief speech in which he complimented the association on its progress. Three members of the board of directors were reelected at a busi ness meeting presided over by M. E. Taylor, president. They were M. E. Taylor, Redmond; P. H. Spillman, Powell Butte, and C. C. Vice, also of Powell Butte. The meeting adjourned at 1 p. m., following which luncheon was served to 350 members and friends in the Townsend hall. In accordance with a long established custom, the luncheon, which was furnished by the Central Oregon Cooperative creamery, was served by members of the Redmond Chamber of commerce. U. S. Reclamation Men Confer Here Conferring on plans for the completion of the North Unit ir rigation project, four officials of the U. S. Bureau of reclamation, stationed at regional headquart ers In Boise, Ida., were here today. They spent the entire day in con ferences with officials of the Bend bureau. In the party were R. J. Newell, assistant regional director; J. S. Moore, director of operations and maintenance; Howard R. Stinson, regional counsel, and D. G. Tyree, assistant regional counsel. policing of Germany. It is under stood that task is to be assigned to Great Britain and the Soviet Union with the possible assist ance of France. We would par ticipate directly In post-war occu pation, but for a limited time only. Compromises by all three toward mutual over-all agree ments generally are expected. As surances that United States troops would not be among the semi-permanent European police detail could count heavily toward I winning American acceptance of j such compromises as the presi- Drove Reds Foght f Flanking Drive May Cut Road To Nazi Capital Frankfurt Isolation Is Goal of Russians, Says News From Hitler's City London, Feb. 8 (IB Moscow dispatches said today that Rus sian forces waging a violent battle of the bridgeheads across the Oder before Berlin were developing a flanking drive to cut the Frank furt-Berlin road and isolate the key bastion on the west bank of the river. . . The German high command said Marshal Gregor K. Zhukov's assault troops had established an unspecified number of footholds on the west bank of the Oder along a 35-mile arc facing Berlin, and supplementary nazl broad casts reported that the Soviet bridgeheads had been widened. Zhukov's armored vanguards were reported by Moscow to have rlDDed into the northern ana sua. urbs of Kuestrln and Into the eastern fringe of Frankfurt, while massive infantry formations surg led up to the Oder and stamped out virtually all of the German toeholds on the east bank. . New Drive Developed "The' battle for the Soviet bridgeheads on the west bank of the Oder raged unabatedly, with the Russians developing a drive to cut the Frankfurt-Berlin roaa and isolate the bastion city,' United Press correspondent Henry Shapiro reported from Moscow. Although the Red army com mand has not yet confirmed the reported crossing of the Oder a little more than 30 miles east of Berlin, the Moscow dispatch re oortine the flanking drive, togeth er with the nazi acknowledgement of new Soviet gains beyond the river, indicated that Zhukov had solidified his crossing sufficiently to renew his push toward Berlin. Frankfurt lies on the west oanK of the Oder 33 miles from the city limits of Berlin. Sufficient Rus sian progress for a swing in be hind this key city would raise the possibility of an approach wltnin 30 miles or less of the bomb-scarr ed and refugee-clogged capital. Battle Is iolcnt Violent fighting, is in progress for small enemy bridgeheads across the Oder between Fuersten- berg and Kuestrln,'' the nazl com mand reported. It was Its only reference to the sector on the approaches of Berlin. The Transocean news agency said Zhukov hurled fresh reserves Into- the battle before Berlin, and expanded the bridgeheads be tween Fuerstenberg, 43 miles southeast of the capital, and Kuestrln, 38 miles east of it. The DNB news agency reported especially violent fighting in the western edge of Kuestrln, sug gesting that the Russians had overrun most of the town at the confluence of the Oder and War the, and might have the river crossings there within their grasp. The agency said the Kuestrln gar rison repulsed all "concentric" attacks. simultaneously yesterday in Lon don, Moscow and Washington. Berlin already had accurately broken the news of time and place. The announcement said the three men with their foreign min isters, chiefs of staff and advisers probably Harry L. Hopkins for the president were meeting in the Black sea area. The big three have completed their military dis cussion and the staff chiefs are working out details for Ger many's early defeat. In search of "firm foundations for a l.-isting peace," the conferees now have begun the other phase of their conference, "These discussions," the com munique said, "will cover joint plans for the occupation and con trol of Germany, the political and economic problems of liberated Europe and proposals for the ear liest possible establishment of a permanent international organiza tion to maintain peace." Looms on 4 wa,1 ' l!i' I y A '; ' 'ti-U :V'1 W Jrs-Ti Pvt. Henry Weber (left), 27, former Vancouver, Wash., shipyard foreman and logger, has been sen tenced to life at hard labor because of his refusal to obey orders of his commanding officer to drill. His wife and four-year-old son, Wayne, are pictured at their Vancouver home. Weber at first faced death for his refusal to drill, then today it was announced that the lesser sentence had been Imposed. Russian Soldiers Carefully Guard ' Big 3 'at Conference VioV Area Protected as Churchill, Stalin , Xnd RooseveltUoin. il. E(cha, Meetirtr ; , Cairo, Feb. 8 (UJ?) President Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill, and Premier Stalin opened their conference Mon day at a town somewhere in the Black sea area, which earlier in the war teemed with German troops, it was reported today. Roosevelt and Churchill reached the rendezvous first, and worked like beavers while waitihgr for Stalin's arrival some time bunday afternoon, according to reliable reports here. Five-star American generals, British field marshals, and soviet military leaders were believed to have started their Card Games Here Regulated By City Card playing in men's enter tainment centers in Bend today had won the official sanction of the cltv as a result of action taken last night at a meeting of the city commission in the city hall. On motion of Commissioner Loyde S. Blakley, Mayor A. T. Niebergall and Commissioner Melvin Mum kres voted to permit the playing of pinochle and rummy under cer tain restrictions. The games will be licensed, It was decided, if "hlckles," or tok ens good for trade at a value of five cents each, and not exceeding $1 worth, are employed. Permis sion to play these two games, held to be more of an entertulnlng na ture rather than gambling, was granted, the commissioners said, as a means of halting reported gambling In private Bend resi dences and outlying places. Games Hailed Card games in the entertain ment centers had been halted by police about six months ago, after there was asserted evidence that a "gambling syndicate" existed In the city. Carl A. Johnson, saying that he represented what he felt was the attitude of the business men of the city, urged that card room opera tion be put on a decent basis. Mayor Niebergall said that legiti mate business was suffering, and that the lack of patronage In men's entertainment centers was reflected In a loss to other busi ness establishments. Johnson ar gued for a "live yet decent city," and promised to head the prosecu tion of anyone violating "this con fidence." Several ministers who were present Joined in expressions that they were not opposed to "clean recreation," but were unanimous in their stand against "anything that would bring a return of gam bling." Attending the meeting were rtovs. a. R. V. Bolster, Kenneth Tobias, R. H. Prentice and Robert Mcllvenna; Commissioners Nie bergall, Blakley anrt Munkres; Sgt. L. L. Hirtzel of the state po lice. Police Chief Ken C. Gullck, Fire Chief LeRoy Fox, City Re corder George Slmcrvllle, City Manager C. G. Relter and Earl (Continued on Page 8) Sentenced for Refusal to conferences six days ago as a prelude to the second meeting of Roosevelt, Churchill and Stalin. Entirely Military The first phase of the con ference was entirely military. Later the diplomats joined in talks. Some of the greatest mili tary figures of the war got to gether and spent long hours In discussions carried out In a cordial atmosphere, according to reports. One of the most striking fea tures of the conference was said to be the way the Russians were taking no chances with the se curity of the allied leaders. Troops guarded a wide area surrounding the scene of the conference, allow ing none but authorized persons within the perimeter of security. fjonierence Held Roosevelt and Churchill were reported to have conferred often while waiting for Stalin's arrival. They sat at each other's table for meals. Most of the soviet conferees ar rived before Stalin, and were on hand when the Americans and British arrived, acting as their hosts. "Trailblazers" NoW in France With U. S. Seventh Army, France, Feb. 8 (IP) The American 70th "Trailblazers" Infantry divi sion now Is serving with the Sev enth army In France, It was an nounced today. . The 70th was activated and trained at Camp Adair, Ore., and later at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo. It arrived In France recently, and before all of it was on the front some units were in action against the attacking Germans last month. Heavy Bombers Strike Germany London, Feb. 8 IW--An hour long procession of heavy bombers swept eastward toward Germany today to continue the air offensive against Adolf Hitler's war poten tial. The daylight air fleet followed 1,300 British bombers which at tacked western and central Ger many late yesterday and last night They struck their heaviest blows at Kleve and Goch, anchors of the north end of the Siegfried line. West ft- Crossings Drill Objector GWen Life Sentence - Camp'- Roberts, tiallf., Feb.' f (Ift Pvt. Henry Weber Of Van: couver, Wash., who says he Is op posed to war, hate and killing, today was under sentence of life Imprisonment at hard labor af ter a court martial board com, muted his death penalty for his refusal to obey an officer's -coifi-mand. The general court martial, which returned the verdict yester day after having been ordered to reconsider the case, directed at the same time that Weber be dis honorably discharged from the service and that any pay or al lowances due or becoming due by roriett. A reviewing authority will de termine the place of Imprison ment. Justice Promised The socialist labor party, New York, a left-wing group of which' Weber Is a member, promised through Its regional head, Hebert Stelner, that it would do every thing possible to "see that he gets Justice." "The punishment still doesn't fit the crime," Stelner said. He said the party was not paci fist but opposed the capitalist sys tem which produces war. Some of Its members have gone Into conscientious objectors' camps or non - combatant groups, Stciner said. The American civil liberties union said lt was opening an in vestigation into what a spokes man termed a possible case of "er roneous induction into combat service." Wife Speaks In Vancouver, Mrs. Weber, the mother of their three-year-old son, Wayne, said that although mem (Continued on Page 4) Italy May Lose Under Terms of Washington, Feb. 8 mi A congressional source said today that the Italian armistice terms call upon Italy to give up all her colonies, turn over the Mediter ranean island of Pantellerla to Great Britain, and possibly cede the Adriatic port of Trieste to Yugoslavia. The armistice terms, signed on Sept. 3, 1943, have never been made public despite considerable agitation in this country and In Italy. The White House, state de partment and war department have repeatedly declined to do so on grounds of military security. The controversy over the Italian armistice terms Is based on charg es that they are too harsh, and Ilnllun sources have felt that Is why the allies never have made mem puonc. i no armistice terms signed with axis satellites Fin- ana, Bulgaria, Komama ana Hun-1 gary were made public lmmedl ately. Italy was a full-Hedged axis member. The congressional source said that the terms were so harsh that Front Fliers Strike At Nazis on Dutch Salient Jittery Germans Light Skies With Flares as Allies Press Forward Paris, Feb, 8 HP) More than 1,000 allied medium and fighter bombers struck through murky weather today at German posi tions directly in front of Marshal Sir Bernard L. Montgomery's Dutch salient aimed around the Siegfried line toward the open plain or northwest Germany. - supreme nnauquurtera suurces and front dispatches revealed many signs that the northern wing of the western front was boiling up. Nazi broadcasts dwelt on allied plans for an imminent offensive and one forecast an air- '. borne operation on the scale of that against Holland last fall. ' Stronghold Captured Amid indications of imminent big scale action, Lt. Gen. Courtney H. Hodges' First army captured the Siegfried stronghold of Schmidt and pushed on nearly a mile through easing resistance to the area of the key dam in the Roer rivers flood control system. From Montgomery's 21st army group area a front dispatch said American and British bombers flew through clouds and occasion al drizzles al day to hammer Ger man communications and troop concentrations In the area east of Nljmegen, anchors-base "or "the east wall of the salient in Holland. At supreme headquarters cor respondents were able to report that the bombing the scope and weight of which was revealed only by the front dispatch was dangerously close to the allies lines a tactical operation carried out despite unfavorable weather. Mares Light Sky SHAEF sources also revealed that the Germans, apparently on edge, kept the Nljmegen salient aglow last night with flares In large numbers, presumably to re veal any allied activity. Hodges' headquarters announc ed that units of the 78th division slugged to the edge of the State forest a mile and a half north of the Schwammenauel dam, one of a scries along the upper Roer that may. hold the key to the start of a general allied offensive forecast by the Germans. A handful of Germans held out In the cellars of Schmidt, key to the dam system and two and a half miles northwest of Schwam menauel. But the doughboys had overrun the town Itself for the second time In three months. The mounting clamor of Ger man forecasts that allied armies were ready to strike for the Rhineland and the Ruhr from the broad area around Aachen was accompanied by reminders that control of the Ruhr dams was essential to any drive across the river. The dams, backing up a com bined mass of 160,000,000 tons of water, would release an 18-foot wail of Water down the Roer val ley, cutting off any allied troops who had pressed across the last natural barrier before the Cologne plain. Its Colonies Armistice Italian Premier Ivanoe Bonaml sent President Roosevelt a 100 page letter last September listing specific grievances. "The armistice terms for Italy could have been no stronger had they been for Germany," the con gressional source told the United Press. "The only saving clause was one that provided for amend ment of final peace terms in ac- mrrlnnn, ulth lha ovtant Tt n 1 . r fought against the axis." This source, however, claimed that such a promise of relaxed terms was Ineffective because the armistice terms limited the Italian army to 11,000 men and over looked the contribution of 300,000 Italian partisans fighting behind axis lines. The economic parts of the armi- j stice, tnis source said, are so j harsh that Italy could not fulfill tnem in many years. They led Bonomi to appeal for easing of the financial terms on Jan. 31, assert ing that Italy "cannot bear up under the massive weight" of the financial burden.