Jw.Ji.vtvfiB-'ra twW.W.1WWWlf-'Vty-.,.Mai' .r.aa.t4,i.ti .!'- TUB BULLEfM Save Your Fats Our boys get sulfa drugs and ammunition when you savo used kitchen fats. Weather Forecast Mostly clear today, tonight and ,-, Saturday. Slightly cooler today and colder east portion tonight. . CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume Llll THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, FRIDAY, FEB. 9, 1945 NO. 56 Allies Lame riv on Western Frocufe ft .ft , RED ASSAULT TROOPERS STORM FRANKFURT City's Capture May Collapse Berlin Defense Soviet Spearheads Probe Across Oder River; Foe Using Up More Reserves . London, Feb. 9 IF Moscow and Berlin reported today that Rus sian assault forces were storming Frankfurt from bridgeheads on ' the west bank of the Oder on both sides of the keystone base 33 miles w east of Berlin. The fall of Frankfurt would collapse the Oder river defense line before Berlin and bare the capital itself to frontal assault. Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's spearheads across the Oder were probing westward behind : an earth-shaking bombardment of Russian artillery massed on the east bank of the river, Moscow dispatches reported. The German high 'command's only reference to the sector be fore Berlin said that the Germans "succeeded in narrowing down or eliminating by counterattack several enemy bridgeheads." Violent Battles Reported A supplementary Berlin broad cast reported violent battles both north and south of Frankfurt, and Moscow dispatches said the nazis were throwing all . available j,., strength into an effort to wipe out .the.Spviet footholds which clamp- ed a pincers on the strategic city. i , On either side of the Oder-Berlin front, Soviet armies were swing ing westward to protect Zhukov's flanks, threaten the Baltic port of Stettin, and hew out expanding pockets west of the Oder in Siles ia. -A nazi communiQue reported heavy fighting in the area of , Pyrltz, 23 miles southeast of Stet-1 !L"' an,?u0n? a eastward through the Arnswalde and De utsche Krone areas. Reds Push West. Berlin said the Russians opened powerful attacks from the Steinau bridgehead across the Oder north-' west of Breslau, and were pushing westward. The German command said the Soviets reached the out skirts of Liegnitz, big transport center 40 miles west and slightly Tirtyth ftf T3 Vo dill Eighteen miles' north of Frank-1 furt Soviet armored forces fought in the streets of burning Kues- trin, which the nazis said had been encircled "temporarily" by the junction of Russian bridge heads across the Oder. A Moscow broadcast hinted at an impending announcement on the battle of the Oder before Berlin by the Red army command. It said Zhukov's front had been "wrapped in official silence, which usually precedes some big an nouncement." Industrial Fund Deadline Is Set Bend chamber of commerce di rectors meeting with Carl A.John son, chamber president, today noon were told that many contri butions have been made to the Bend industrial fund this week and that over $6,000 of the fund has been subscribed up to early this morning. The drive for voluntary contri butions will close on Monday, Feb. 12, Johnson announced. He said that from the city-wide interest shown in the move to establish a fund for postwar industrial de velopment, he felt sure the bal ance of nearly $4,000 would be contributed by the closing date and the fund would be built to its full amount to match a city fund of $10,000. The directors heard and ap proved written reports from the legislative, aviation and milk committees of the chamber. Bond Quota Set For Deschutes The February war bond quota for Deschutes county has been set at $122,500, It was announced to day. This county ranked 22nd in the state In February when $77, 160, or 57.7 per cent, of a quota of $133,700 was subscribed. First Allied Gaunt young men who had been strapping soldiers when the war started, officers with deep lines carved in their emaciated faces, men hobbling with canes and men too ill to walk, enter the grounds of an evacuation hospital after their daring rescue by American rangers and Filipino guerillas from Uabanatuan prison camp, Luzon. Boards Requested to Observe .Seei;fy$:5.erWcmeacfmenf Essential Farm Workers Are to Be Deferred Until They Can Be Replaced, Says Hershey Washington, Feb. 9 (U.E) National selective service head quarters reiterated today that local draft boards must observe the Tydings amendment to the selective service act, which provides for deferment of essential agricultural workers until they can be f enlaced. Gov. John C. Vivian of Colorado last nif?ht ordered local draft boards in his state to observe the Tydings amendment. Commenting on that order, a national selective service official said Vivian was acting along Manila Ravaged By Jap Vandals ManlIa- Feb-9 ""-"It is a hard, cold fact that the city of Manila has not fallen," Arthur Feldman, Blue network correspondent, re ported in a broadcast from the Philippines Friday. "The Japs are fighting hard for Manila. The Jap defenders, while in the death throes of their de fense, are nevertheless conduct ing a reigri of terror, death and destruction which still continues. "It should be pointed out that the enemy's program of pillage and destruction is so wanton that it has passed way beyond the stage of destroying military ob jectives. "I believe it will be some days before any -victory parade swings down the Avenida Risal." Pomona to Observe Birthday Celebration of the 20th anni versary of the founding of the Deschutes county Pomona eranpe will start at 10 a.m. tomorrow in the Fastern Star grance hall with 60 charter members present and a class of 70 candidates awaiting Initiation. Eugene Fitzgerald, mas ter of Eastern Star grange, will open the meeting. Approximately 150 persons are I exnected to attend the anlversarv j celebration. Miss Bertha J. Beck ecretarv of the state granee. Portland, will be the principal sneaker. Verne I-. Llvesay. ro cional agricultural advisor of the Orepon war nrice administration. Portland, will speak. Mrs. Live ;av will 'accomnanv him to Bend. E. H. Youni?. of the Fastern Star I rranre. will give a short history! nf the founrtlnp of Pomona. Mrs.' g'ne Ackley, chaplain: K. II. P. F. Reldel of Carroll Acres IslYounp, treasurer; E. E. Varco, the program chairman. j secretary; C. E. Dickey, gate keep- A luncheon will he served at;er; Mrs. D. O. Stanton, Ceres; noon and a dinner at 6 p.m. toiMrs. C. I. Dunlap, Flora; Mrs. F. those present. Mrs. Clarence! S. Shenard, Pomona; Mrs. A. Smith is chairman of the food ; committee. Initiation of candidates will be held after dinner and will be fol- Prisoners Liberated ' - the same lines in his state as 'Mai. Gen. Lewis B. Hershev, national selective service di rector, has acted on a nation wide scale. The official pointed out that Hershev in a recent mem orandum to state directors called for the "screening" of men now agriculturally deferred to deter mine whether (heir deferments were necessary under the Tydings amendment. Up To Board In an editorial in the current issue of the Selective Service Bul letin. Hershev pointed out that the Tydings amendment does not provide an exemption from mili tary service for farm workers. . "It vests in the local boards the duty of determining, in the case of each registrant, whether or not such registrant meets the reaulre ments of law after a full consid eration of all the pertinent facts," he wrote. "These facts include the extent the registrant is engaged In agri culture, how essential in the war effort are the products of his ef forts, how necessary Is he to his production, and whether there is a replacement available." lowed by a program and dance for members only. Organized Tn 1925 Pomona grange was . formed here on Jan. 5, 1925, when a mass meeting of members of all the granges in Central Orepon was held at Eastern Star hall for the purpose of organizing the new grange. Mrs. Bertha Snipes, state deputv. The Dalles, attended and assisted in effecting the organiza tion. The following charter members were elected to office at that meet ing and installed later In the day. Thev were Fred C. Sheoard, mas ter: Olaf Anderson, overseer; Mrs. C. M. Rasmusscn, lecturer; O. M. RasmuESen. steward. A L. Good- rich, assistant stewprd Mrs. Eu- Goodrlen, lartv assistant steward Master of Deschutes county Po mona for 1945 is Mrs. B. C. Allen of Terrebonne. in Philippines Blizzard Strikes New England Alia Boston, Feb. 9 (IB One of its worst blizzards in recent times dropped 12 to 14 inches of snow on New England today, paralyzed virtually all transportation, and cost at least eight lives. ' Thousands of persons were ma rooned. Work stopped at many shipyards and war plants. Enor mous snowdrifts, piled up by a raging northeast wind, prevented night shift workers from reach ing their homes and day shift workers' from reaching their jobs. The Boston and Maine railroad appealed to the army for troops to clear its tracks. Power and light wires were down over a wide area. The Prov idence, R. I., .weather station had been able to communicate only occasionally during the night with Boston headquarters, it was re ported that traffic in Providence was severely hampered. Roads Snow Clogged Portsmouth, N. H., had . no transportation. Workers were un able to reach the navy yard. Even the main highways were snow clogged. There was neither bus nor taxi service In Portland, Me., and few hardy workers dared .the 10-foot drifts in the streets to reach the vast New England Shipbuilding Corp, plant in South Portland. Boston had an official snowfall of 14 inches two inches more than In the St. Valentine's day blizzard of 1940 that crippled the area for nearly a week. The total snow on the ground In Boston proper was 19 inches. Kenneth R.Craig Killed in Belgium Kenneth R. Craig, half-brother of Wilma and Kay Summers, 325 Congress avenue, and a former Bend resident, was killed In action In Belgium on Christmas day, ac cording to word received here to day. Harold W. Summers, father of the girls, reported that he had received a letter from Craig's brother, James, In Maywood, Calif., telling of the tragedy. Craig, a member of the 82nd paratroop division, enlisted in Portland In December, 1941. He had numerous Bend friends. Mayor Is Hanged, Berlin Reports London, Feb. 9 mi The Berlin radio reported today that the mayor of Koenlgsbcrg, 45 miles northeast of . Berlin In the Oder bend, was hanged for leaving his post without authorization. , A home service broadcast Idcn-; tlf led the mayor as Kurst Loesser. The red army : offensive In the ' Oder bend now has carried to the area of Koenlgsberg. I Manila Battle Enters Bloody Mop-Up Stag 37th Doughboys Cross -v River and Quickly Set , ' Up Wide Bridgehead ' By Francis McCarthy (United PreM Wr Correapondknt) .' Manila, Feb. 9 (tPi-The battle of Manila entered Its last and blood iest phase today as American In fantrymen swarmed across the Pasig river to. root out and destroy t,ho Japanese trapped in the south ern half of the city. ! :Doughboys of the 37th (Buck eye)' division crossed the Pasig in amphibious tanks and on pontoon bridges late Wednesday and quick ly established a wide bridgehead on the. south bank opposite the maiaeanang palace. The Japanese put up only weak resistance along the :rlver bank, but they stiffened later Wednes day night and fought back savage ly with mortars, artillery and rifle fire. - Position Weakened ? Their position was rapidly dis integrating, however, and it was believed that all organized opposl tlon would be crushed within a very few days at most. The ad vancing 37th was deep Into the southern half of the capital early today and herding' the. (Japanese su'rvivorsi hack slowly. irrtothe waiting guns of the U. S. 11th airborne division moving up from the 'south. The main body of the 11th air borne was reported slightly north of Nichols field Wednesday night, but forward elements apparently were well north of the enemy- held air base and cutting into the rear of the Manila garrison. Hamcs Spread Desperate street battle was go ing ahead under a great pall of smoke and flame that blanketed the entire southern half of Manila. The Japanese still were burning and wrecking wantonly Inside their narrowing pocket and It was feared that the port and a vast area of the central city would be burned to the ground .before the last enemy has been killed. ' (Tokyo broadcasts said the Jap anese have evacuated all but a skeleton force from Manila and indicated that the Philippine presi dential palace was among the buildings destroyed by their de molition squads.) The main business section of the city was reduced to blackened ruins, although most of the fires in the northern half had been brought under control and life in that American-held area was re turning to normal. Troops Pour In Troops, supplies and ammuni tion were pouring into the city at a terrific rate following the repair of the wrecked bridges north of Manila, and there was little like lihood the remaining Japanese could hold out for long. Meanwhile, other American troops practically completed the job of cutting Luzon in two along a line running southeastward from the Llngayen gulf beach heads 110 miles north of Manila. Yanks Launch By Boyd D. Lewi and i. Edward Murray (United Vren War CorrMliondMiU) Paris, Feb. 9 (IP The big push has begun. From Holland to the Alps, Gen. Dwight D. Elsenhower Is hurling American, British and French troops into the climactic battle of Germany. Tbe aim Is to destroy Ger many's fighting forces before summer In conjunction with the red army's offensives In the east. I The chances of success are far better than they were In the al lied offensive which ended Dec. 16 wltft German Marshal Karl von I Rundstedt's counter-attack In the Ardennes. I This time, the western allies are attacking while the Germans are engaged In a losing battle to save Berlin In the east. The Siegfried line already has been breached In three areas. And the nazis are desperately short of two vital war necessities men and oil. Best guesses place German strength at 80 divisions. But even Berlin Called City o f Death As Soviet Armies Approach ' Refugees Reaching Sweden Relate Tales of Horror; Bomb Death Toll Is Reported Great : ; London, Feb. 9 (UP) Refugees described Berlin today as a city of death and ruins whose survivors expected the red army to reach the capital "within a week or two." ' "It's like the end of the world," one of a group of more than 20 Swedish refugees said on his arrival at Malmo, Swe den, after fleeing Germany through Berlin. . . Others snid the bodies, of thousands of Berliners who were killed in air raids or died from hunger, exposure or disease had been buried in the streets. They believed a state of siege would be proclaimed soon.. , "The death toll is so terrific," one refugee said, "that squads regularly are going the " ' rounds of stricken Quarters. collecting bodies door to door or from sidewalks where they naa oeen thrown. "Bodies are taken to the nearest open space and dumped without identification in mass graves, or even burned in funeral pyres." Thousands Killed I T"u . , 1- . i - . . i y A IllfUOallUS vlllvl I trul ls I1UVIT placed the number as high as 15,000 or 20,000 were killed in the American air raid on Berlin Saturday, the refugees said. A Swedish engineer suggested that a new-type bomb may have been used. He said people scores of yards from where the bombs fell were killed "by air pressure." "Not only did the new bombs seem to carry a greater weight of explosive than before, but they seemed to have a fantastically wiae oiasting encct," na saia. i City In Panic ' Descriptions of death by air pressure spread through the cltj JlkV wildfire; so the' people die not know whether to take shelter or not. Never has there been such panic In Berlin as since last Satur day." Much of Berlin has been knocked flat by bombs, the travel ers said. Nothing remains in the center or the capital, they re ported. Refugees said the fond situa tion was desperate. A Berlin broadcast said the food minister of the reich had decreed that all German farmers henceforth must deliver all wheat, barley, and rye to central collection centers to help meet the shortages. Chandler "Picks" 1948 Opponent Washington, Feb. 9 (tPi Sen. Albert B. (Happy) Chandler, D., Ky., has picked the 1948 presiden tial nominees himself and tiov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York. While Dewey was lunching with republican congressional leaders in the capltol yesterday, Chandler asked Sen. Kenneth S. Wherry, R., Neb., to introduce him to the New York governor. Asked by reporters why he In vaded the GOP huddle, Chandler responded: "I'd never met Dewey before. I wanted to shake hands with the man I'm going to run against in 1948." MEN INDUCTED Madras, Feb. 9 (Special) The following men were Inducted from the local selective service board In the month of January: William M. Craig, Terrebonne; Palmer A. Trommler, Eugene; Sadaki Akl yama, Hunt, Ida., all enlisted in the army. Donald L. Smith, Cul ver, went Into the navy. Climactic Battle these are undcrstrength and prob ably total fewer than a half mil lion men. Germany's strategic troop re serves once held east of the Rhine have vanished in the battles of the Ardennes and the eastern front. The morale of the remaining soldiers varies with rank. Com mon soldiers are beginning to show signs of discouragement, but they still fight stubbornly when well led. Some of the fa naticism and blind obedience have gone, however. Junior officers, mostly drawn from the Hitler youth, remain ar rogant and boastful of new weap ons and military miracles which will turn the tide at the eleventh hour. Older officers see the handwrit ing on the wall. They know Ger many has lost the war, and this time they sec no easy way out by whlch they can gain a breathing I spell in which to rearm for a new try at world conquest. Signs of Germany's lack of oil and gasoline are many. Prisoners Co. I Veteran PMo Art studio uSgti -John T.. Mobuttn, -.Co. 1 veteran with 34 months of service In the South Pacific, has returned to the states for his first furlough since the start of the war. He holds a presidential unit citation, a combat Infantryman's badge, a purple heart, two major engage' ment stars and a good conduct medal. He was 16 when he left Bend, and was 21 last Friday. 5,800 Men Strike And Plants Close Detroit, Feb. 9 mi The Brlggs Manufacturing company announc ed today that a strike of 5,800 workers has closed two plants making parts for B-29 bombers and will force shutdowns at three others today. One of the plants due to close employs 4,429 workers at Evans vlllc, Ind. The others are In De troit. Company spokesmen said that the closures were forced by short age of parts made at the Mack avenue plant here, whore the strike began Tuesday over pay rates for 15 men. He said the dis putes would affect 6,710 workers today, not including the 5,800 strikers. The strikers, who are members of local 212, United Automobile Workers, (CIO) union, have voted to return to their Jobs Monday If the war labor board will guaran tee to have two arbitrators at the plant. The WLB said it could not com ment on the request. for Germany confirm that military convoys are running out of gasoline and stall ing on roads for days at a time waiting for fuel trucks. Allied pilots repeatedly strafe vehicle and armor concentrations that fail to burn, indicating their tanks are dry. Morale on the German home front also is ebbing fast. Disci pline prevents any outbreaks, but captured letters to prisoners clearly show the state of discour agement. The Immediate stake In the bat tle Is the great Ruhr and Rhine land industrial belts Germany's only Important source of coal, metals and manufactured goodH now Mint the Russians have over run Silesia. Rut even vlrtnrv in the navoff battlers In east and west may not ! end the fighting In Europe. Well, j Informed sources believe possibly 200,000 nazi dlehnrds who cannot expect mercy will go on waging guerilla warfare in the Bavarian Alps, m Five-Mile Gain Made By Units On North Flank Ruhr and Rhineland .: Goal of Canadians in . Strike Against Enemy Paris, Feb. 9 (IP) Armored and Infantry divisions of the Canad ian first army broke into the northern flank of the Siegfried line today in a full-scale offensive that carried forward almost five miles on a six-mile front aimed squarely at the German Ruhr and Rhineland. Advancing steadily behind a screen of flame-throwing tanks, . veteran British and Canadian in fantrymen spilled over the Ger man border southeast of Nljme gen and drove several spearheads deep into the Relchswald forest. Progress Made Vanguards of the attacking force were reported half-way through the forest early today, Imperiling the twin strongholds of Cleve and Goch that form the northern anchor of Germany's west wall. ' '. ; First army paratroops, fighting as infantrymen, were reported to have pushed almost five miles Into the forest from the west to within about four miles south west of Cleve and five and one half miles northwest of Goch. German resistance, soltened ' and In some places paralyzed by a thundering allied aertaL and ar-. tlllery bombardment, showed few. , signs of stiffening this morning, 24 hours after the start of the offensive that promised to set the whole western front aoiaze. Aerial reconnaissance Indicated, however, that the Germans were recovering from their initial sur prise and were beginning to rush reserves Into the threatened area. Seven Towns Fall At least seven towns, two ot them German, were captured in the first 12 hours of the advance and one allied column on the northern flank of the assault line was reported less than three miles from the Rhine-crossing town of Mllllngen. The outer belt or tne sicgineq fortifications already had been cracked and field dispatches indi- bated that the flooded, soggy ter rain was proving almost as great a barrier as the Germans to the allies' forward progress. More than 1,200 prisoners were captured in the first onrush, and the bag was reported mounting rapidly. Headquarters spokesmen made It clear that the big push was on to break open Germany's western front In coordination with the red army march on Berlin from the east. Mrs.L.D.Wiest, Pioneer, Is Dead Mrs. L. D. Wlest, 85, who, with . her husband, arrived in Bend In 1900 and settled on a homestead that is now a city addition, Wles toria, died In her sleep last night at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Montelle G. Coe, In Redmond. Mrs. Wlest had been In ill health for the past several weeks, but it was not believed that her condition was serious. Mrs. Wlest was preceded In death several years ago by her husband, Bend's first irrigation engineer. It was Mr. Wlest who first surveyed Bend. He arrived here on August 15, 1900, when only a few scattered ranch homes marked the site of Bend, and was joined here by his family in Sep tember of the same year. He erect ed his original home near the spot where the Wlest residence of later years was built, on East Third street. Was Pioneer Town When the Wiest family first set-1 tied here, the only semblance of a "town" was a log cabin, near the Deschutes river in Drake park of the present. That log cabin later served as the first home of The Bend Bulletin. Aside from her daughter In Redmond, Mrs. Wlest Is survived by one other daughter, Mrs. Her- bert Howell, of Astoria. Grand' children surviving are David Coe, Mrs. Arthur Tenter, Phyllis Coe and Joan, Jean and Jeanette How ell. Funeral services have not yet. been arranged.