THE BMD MJTLL ftoy That Bond Keep lending at home and end dying on battlefields. Buy an extra $100 war bond today. Weather Forecast Partly cloudy today, tonight and . Sunday with a few scattered showers northwest portion today. Warmer southwest today. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume LIU THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEB. 10. 1945 NO. 57 SIEGFRIED BARRIER it to r' JAPS PREPARE FOR DEATH STAND IN MANILA CANADIAN ARMY BREAKS Cornered Foe Fights Behind Ancient Walls NIppons Suddenly Turn On Pursuers With Big Guns; Smoke Pall Dense By Francis McCarthy (United Frew War Correspondents) Manila, Feb. 10 IP Japanese resistance in southern Manila flared with renewed violence to day as the cornered enemy fell back slowly toward the waterfront for a death stand inside the old walled city. Fighting through a choking pall K OI smuKe iiiul cuvcicu virtually a all south Manila) elements of two American divisions hit the Japa nese front and rear in the Panada can and Paco districts below the Pasig river. The converging attack was squeezing several thousand Japa nese slowly westward toward the burned-out port area, where they were expected to make their last stand behind the massive walls of the old Spanish city the Intra muros. Japs Lash Back After yielding the Pasig river crossing opposite the Malacanang palace to the U. S. 37th division air most without a struggle, the Japa nese lashed back suddenly at their pursuers with artillery, mortars and rifle fire. At last reports, the. 37th and vanguards of the American 11th air borne division advancing from . the south were rooting the Japa nese tram tnelr. street bameades and ruined houses in hand-to-hand battle that outdid in sheer ferocity anything Gen. Douglas MacAr thur's troops have experienced since they entered Manila a week ago. "The fighting is of the fiercest sort," MacArthur's communique reported tersely. Tokyo Reports Trap -(Tokyo, after announcing that all but a skeleton force had been evacuated from Manila, began boasting that the Americans had fallen into a trap in the capital. That verson appeared purely as propaganda invention, however, as front dispatches said McArthur was moving overwhelming forces Into the city and that its complete liberation could not be long de layed.) More than 30 miles south of Ma nila, equally heavy fighting broke out around Tagatay, where a pock eted .Tananp.cA fnrra Iniinrhpd turn counterattacks against units of M the 11th air borne division. Both thrusts were beaten off with seri ous losses to the enemy. (Continued on Page 2) 9 Year Old Boy Is Killed by Car Tacoma, Wash., Feb. 10 IP Nine-year-old Dale Atkins, one of a group of three children struck down by a car las,! night, died in a local hospital today. The youngsters were crossing a street when the car hurtled into them, narrowly missing Mrs. Oeorge Weller, mother of one of the children. Joan Weller, 6, and lean Atkins, 3, sister of the dead boy, were treated for lacerations at a local hospital. Police are holding Fred A. Wa Kin, 27, driver of the car, for ac tion w thn r.Mo..;nn nttn-nn.r Jqds Renort Cabinet Shakeuo: No Reasons for (Br United Press) Premier Geniral Kunlaki Koiso shook up his war cabinet Satur day, installing Welfare Minister Hisatada Hirose to the duaL post of chief secretary of the cabinet ina state minister of portfolio md ousting Takeo Tanaka, for mer cabinet secretary. Radio Tokyo said today. In broadcasts recorded bv 1'nited Prps In Ran Francisco fl'okyo called the reorganization partial shakeup ' and said tne tnew annnlntpfve wprp installed ; Saturday nieht at the imperial Ipalace. I Hirose also replaced Count jtial personnel shift in tne cao Jllideo Kodama, former military , met' dvisor to the Japanese forces in iMithern Asia, as state minister . Ithout rjortfnlio. Kodama was appointed minister of education, Succeeding LL Gen. Harushige .hi nn, n 1 1 1 iun;u oaiu " relieved of his portfolio at his J-"ii request due to ill neaun. Japs Battle MANILA. Statute Mile The bitter resistance of the Japanese in southern Manila flared with renewed violence today as the cornered foe fell back toward the waterfront for a death stand in theld walled city. It was expected xnai me japs would make meir Early Study of Ben ham Falls Reservoir Is Plan of Bureau l Larger Tracts May Be Arrangedfor Farmers' Settling on Jefferson County Xind projectw-V"' Early investigation of the determine its feasibility as a location for a big reservoir, was assured here today following a two-day visit, by bureau of reclamation officials from regional headquarters at Boise, Ida. Before departing today for Boise, R. J. Jewell, assistant regional director ot tne bureau, ficials that as soon as weather permits a reconnaissance sur vey would be made of the territory. Meantime, it was re ported, bureau officials would determine the land status at the site, and whether it would be available should congress Detroit Strike Involves 12,500 Detroit, Feb. 10 (IPi A strike over pay rates for 15 men today resulted in layoffs for approxi mately 12,500 Briggs Manufactur ing Co. employes and another wage dispute halted production of about 1,100 workers who struck yesterday at the Square D Co, plant here. Briggs strikers have voted to return to their jobs Monday, de- flying a war labor board order issued Thursday which called for "immediate" resumption of work at the Mack avenue plant where 5,800 employes walked off the job, Employes at other plants were laid off yesterday because materi als for bombers and tanks made at the Mack plant were lacking, the company said. The strikers are members of local 212, United Automobile Workers (CIO) union. The Square D strikers are mem bers of local 937, United Electri cal Workers (CIO) union. The company manufactures electrical equipment. Change Given Tanaka also was relieved "at his own request," Tokyo said, and was nominated to the Japanese house of peers. The Japanese broadcasts quoted a Japanese board of information announcement, which was made at 8:30 p. m. Saturday (Tokyo time), a half hour after the new members were installed at the ' imperial palace. Tokyo broadcasts gave news of the shift without attempting to explain the reasons for the shake- UD. One broadcast said Kolso slm- ply had "decided to effect a par- The Koiso government nao. been under increasing pressure since opening of Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Luzon campaign ; both bv members of the Japanese! diet and by industrial groups who want a larger share in direction I of war production. in Manila " " ' tti V? - INtiA TeknhofoJ last stand m tne intramuros. Benham Palis reservoir site, tn assured local reclamation of authorize the construction of another dam and reservoir on the upper Deschutes. Newell, J. S. Moore, direc- tor of operations and mainte nance for the bureau, Howard K. btinson, regional counsel and P. G. Tyree, assistant re gional counsel, left Bend this morning to return to Boise. New Contract Due While here the officials con ferred with members of the board of the Jefferson Water Conserv ancy district in Madras, assuring tnis group tnat a repayment con tract authorizing individual -land parcels of 160 acres rather than the present maximum of 80, would be drawn if acceptable to all par ties concerned. A meeting was held in Madras yesterday with the district officials. Meantime steps were taken to speed the digging of another 10 miles of the main canal in Jef ferson county, when E. B. Bishop, Orland, Calif., contractor, began to move equipment on the scene. Al ready the contractor has moved some heavy machinery to a loca tion on the Crooked river near the North Unit "big cut" above the Smith rocks. Oregon May Get More Road Funds Salem, Ore., Feb. 10 IP Con gressman James W. Mott, repre sentative from the 1st Oregon dis trict, said yesterday that even more generous highway construc tion appropriations for Oregon and other states than at present, will be made If a bill not yet intro duced in congress is passed. Mott, here briefly on a tour -of inspection of naval installations on the west coast, said tnat the bill passed recently was not ade quate, but that it did pave the way for future allocations. ine Din win prooaoiy oe en tered In congress only when men and materials are available for construction, he said. MAY JOIN BIO THREK London, Feb. 10 MPThe Paris radio said tonight that Gpn. Charles De Gaulle will take part ! in the big three conference. I If the Paris report is borne out, I u win represent a suuacn rever-1 sal of all reports so tar that France was excluded from repre- sentation at the meeting of Presl-j dent Roosevelt, Prime Minister Churchill and Premier Stalin, 1 Soviets Battle! For Outposts i Of Nazi Capital Elbing, Transport Hub, , . Captured; Konev Drives Wedge Close to Berlin London, Feb. 10 UPi Marshal Konstantin K. Rokossovsky's ar my today stormed and captured the East Prussian transport hub of Elbing, foreshadowing the end of a mop-up campaign against the remnants of 200,000 trapped Ger man troops. 1 . The first order of the day by Marshal Stalin in several days an nounced the fall of Elbing, in the Baltic coastal area 32 miles south east of Danzig, which had been surrounded a day earlier. . The East Prussian victory came as Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's troops speared within 25 miles or less of Stettin. They battled for the Berlin outposts of Frankfurt! ana Kuestrin while Marshal Ivan S. Konev's forces ripped through the Oder valley in Silesia. Wedtre Entered Konev's armor drove a wedge between Berlin and the Silesian capital of Breslau, striking deep into the main German defenses more than 22 miles beyond the uaer, tne nazls reported. "Troops of the second White Russian front, having broken the resistance of the surrounded en emy group, today captured by storm the town of Elbing, large center of communications and powercut stronghold of the Gen- man aexenses covering the ap- Fiuai-ura io me Day or uanzlg, Stalin's order said. i. The fall of Elbing, on the East Prussian railway to Berlin, col lapsed whatever thin hopes the nazis might have held of bursting through the barrier the Russians had erected across th side of the province. Keds Near Stettin North of Berlin nih.. r i forces pushed tn within o u thVSnVS '.he Baltic Prt of Sta tin in a drive to seal off tens ofi thousands nf " .'1 northeast Germany, the Polish corridor and Danzig. The soviet high command threw a cloak of seerecv nvv th n .lin front itself, but f I p l h m. Batches told of fierce fighting in Kuestrin and the suburbs of Frankfurt and Fuerstenberg. main anchors of the Oder river line 33 to 42 miles from the bomb wrecked capital. Ernst Von Hammer, military commentator for the official Ger man DNB agency, disclosed that Russian armored spearheads 120 miles southeast of Berlin had "penetrated deep into the main German defenses" on both sides of Kotzenau, which lies 25 miles west of the Oder. Blizzard Claims 24 Lives In East Boston, Feb. 10 (IB New Eng land's worst blizzard In almost 30 years left 24 persons dead today and the weather bureau said that light snow would continue to fall on thousands of persons tolling to clear streets and highways of mountainous drifts. Most major highways were open but thousands of automo biles still were stalled In deep drifts and secondary roads were clogged by snow. The weather bureau predicts light or intermittent snow over most of the six-state area today and tonight but said that snow removal work would be some what aided by mild temperatures, i Boston under snow I Not since A three-dav blizzard i that began March 7, 1916. had Boston seen so much snow as dur- Ing Thursday's storm when two official weather stations in the city recorded minimum falls of 14 and 17 inches. Hundreds of homes in south- eastern Massachusetts, Rhode xniunu mm itrcuuna oi v-onnccucui crews labored to restore power lines. Most deaths were due to heart wmnjui uk'iib s emergency attacks incurred either by per- sons who fought their way home 1 on foot through the storm or whol collapsed while seeking to clear I away the tons of snow on drive- ways or walks. - ' . - Bombs and Earthquake Hit Japan; Tokyo Target o American Fliers Washington, Feb. 10 UPi An earthejuake and hundreds of tons of . American bombs rocked the Tokyo-Yokohama area of central Japan in quick succession today. 1 ' The earthquake shook northern as well as central Japan at 1:50 P. M-.- Tokyo time, a Japanese Domei dispatch recorded by the FCC said.. Neither the intensity of the shock nor the extent of damage was Indicated. .". At 2:30 p. m. a Japanese su preme headquarters communique said 90 Superfortresses began an hour-long raid on the Tokyo-Yokohama area. "Some damage" was caused to ground installations, the communique said. " ' (A dispatch from United Press (iwar correspondent Lloyd Tupling tat 21st bomber command head quarters Guam, said the Super forts comprised one of the largest forces ever to hit Japan. Clothing Drive To Be Extended ; In order to salvager maximum of discarded clothing for the use of Russian civilians, the Junior chamber of commerce committee In charge of the drive in Bend to day announced that the salvage depot at 826 Wall street will r& main open all next week. The original plan called for the cam paign to end here tonight. As an accomomdatlon to don ors,, the depot also will remain otien until 8:30 -o'ciocn ; lontgm and also tomorrow, as well as dur ing the days next week, Virgil Ly ons, drive chairman, stated. Activities of school children last night and today in aiding the cam paign was evidenced at the depot where nearly three tons of cloth ing had been stacked up to noon today. ' Aid Requested 1 George Slmerville, coordinator for the Deschutes county civilian defense council, today asked that all block leaders help In the drive, assisting donors to get their bun dles to the depot. vwmg iu ine uuijiuiijr in lay ering rural districts, It was ex pected that the campaign would also be extended through next week in the Redmond, Sisters and Prinevllle communities. Attention was called to the fact that depots have also been established in each of these towns. In order to correct an Impres sion held by many donors that they must first launder their con tributions, Frank Prince, Jr., co chairman of the Jaycee drive com mittee, said that this is not nec essary. He stated that old but usable clothing is sought in any form, and that It will be cleaned at the major depot In Portland. 50 Army Patrols Jab at Germans Rome, Feb. 10 (in Fifty army patrols engaged in a number of sharp clashes as Increased enemy opposition was encountered In Jabs along the entire front, head quarters said today. Artillery pounded enemy posi tions south and southeast of Bo logna while troops engaged In mortar duels in the area of Mount Castellaro. Several German counterattacks were repulsed In the Scrchio val-1 le- In the west coastal sector. One attack In battalion strength was broken up in the vicinity of Lama. Plane Wreckage Seen Near Denio Boise, Ida., Feb., 10 (IPi The wreckage of an unidentified plane has been sighted near Denlo, Harney county, ure., on tne jNev- ada-Oreeon border, the Gowen .field public relations office re- j ported today. Neither Gowen field nor the ! mountain home army air field was .able to asertain whether the plane i was from their bases, or if It was another bomber on a cross coun- try flight or even a military plane. JAPS MAKE CLAIM . (Br United I'resn) Tokvo radio claimed Saturday that two American submarines were sunk by the Japanese air force In the southwest Pacific wrea. The broadcast was heard by United Press at San Francisco. The B-29s hit targets In the Tokyo area with "good to excel lent results", a spokesman said. The earthquake a little more than a half hour earlier was felt from Hokkoldo, northermost of the Japanese home islands, down through Honshu, Domei said. - The epicenter was said to be In Aomorl prefecture of . northern Honshu, with Hachlnore, a few miles Inland from the east coast, feeling the main weight, of the earthquake. All eastern and central Honshu, including the , Tokyo-Yokohama area, were shaken, Domei said, quoting an announcement of the central meteorological observatory. No other details were given In tne brief uomel dispatch. 21st bomber command head quarters, Guam, Feb. 10 IIP) One Honored By China Pvt. Donald L. Burleigh, who was recently awarded the grand stai of the Republic of China for outstanding and distinguished services rendered to the Chinese ground forces, graduated from Bend high school In 1942 and en tered the army soon after. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Bur leigh, route 1, Bend, who have five sons in the service. Bombers Renew Blows at Nazis London, Feb. 10 (IB American heavy bombers renewed the as sault on Germany today, hitting vital nazi army fuel supplies at Duelmen near the Dutch border in the wake of an allied night assault on railways and truck convoys In Holland and western Germany. More than 150 Eighth air force Flying Fortresses and about 130 Mustang fighters raided the fuel depot at Duelmen, southwest of Mucnstcr, and lashed at the nazi submarine pens on the Dutch coast at IJmuiden. Both the day and night raids were designed to hamper the Ger man forces facing the offensive of Marshal Sir Bernard L. Mont gomery's 21st army group. The American bombers encoun tered bad weather, which forced them to bomb the Duelmen depot by Instruments, although the IJ- piula"pn. submarine pens were oomoed py signt. Churchill Said Alliance With London, Feb. 10 IP Diplo matic sources said today that Churchill sharply spurned over tures by Gen. Francisco Franco obliquely proposing a close alli ance between their two countries. Churchill bluntly told Franco that Spain was not likely to have a part In the peace conference, and still less likely to be Invited into the proposed league of post-war security, Informants reported. A recent exchange of corre spondence between Churchill and T.'rnnrn Rtlll wnft tinted nfficlnllv 'as In the "Hcret" category, but a diplomatic Informant said Church ill's end of it constituted a "shock" to the Franco regime. Churchill was said to have re sponded to Franco's oblique sug gestion for a close Anglo-Spanish alliance with a recapitulation of the Franco government's anti-allied and pro-axis activity. I of the largest forces of Super- forts ever to hit Japan today bombed industrial targets in the Tokyo area with "good to excel lent results," the 2lst bomber com mand reported unofficially today. Preliminary reports indicated the attack was one of the most successful ever made on the Japa nese empire. Massed superiorts striking tor the second time within a week found Ideal bombing conditions over the target. Crew members . of the first seven elements of a mighty arm ada said the weather was clear and only light Japanese tighter opposition was encountered. The force was as large as any group of Superforts to hit the Tokyo area and probably the largest, spokesmen said, although the exact numerical strength of the raiders was not revealed evi dently for security reasons. Logging Industry k Portland, Feb. 10 (tPi-Stating that there will be no slack In pro duction or employment In the lumber industries of the north west after the war, Fred H, Brundace. WPB western log and lumber administrator, today paid high tribute to the employes and management or tne logging in dustry's 1944 production record. "The lumber Industry will not I slacked its production pace with the end of the European war. nor .oven whin the warfwlth Japan is over," Brundage declared tn prom Ising full employment on a steady year-after-year basis In the major industry or the northwest. Record Cited The administrator pointed with pride to the 1944 log production record which exceeded 1943 pro duction by 76 million board feet, but stated that all branches of the log-using Industries used less logs in 1944 except the pulp mills. Increased production, largely hemlock logs going to pulp mills, amounted to 177 million feet. 'The production in the western pine region, Including five states, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Mon tana and California was estimated at 5,960,000 or .6 of 1 per cent less than in 1943 while in the redwood region, production, estimated at 655,000,000, was 4.7 per cent over 1943," Brunuage stated. Chickens, Sheep In Same Class Salem, Ore., Feb. 10 tui Chick ens are now livestock, and dogs even those with priorities, had better watch out In Oregon. The house today concurred In senate amendments, and sent to the governor the bill (HB61) pro tecting owners of chickens from the depredations of dogs, the same way in which cattle, sheep and other livestock owners are pro tected. P. S. to dog haters (If any) it's still illegal to shoot a dog on a public road or In a city even if he is chasing a chicken. NEW CENTER CAPTURED London, Feb. 10 (ll'i Marshal Stalin announced tonight that the Russians had captured Prcus- sisch Eylau, East Prussian trans- pon cemer buu.m m wuu. b. to Have Denied Spain's Franco Whether Franco proposed an alliance with Britain against Rus sia was not clear. The informant said Franco wrote between the lines hinting at an alliance "to meet the dangers of bolshevlsm" but shunned any forthright pro posal. An Informed source disclaimed a rumor that Franco offered to mediate between the allies and the axis. ' Franco was said to have used Churchill's friendly reference to Spnln In a speech last year as an occasion for expressing his grati tude and a hope for closer rela tions in the future. The Spanish ambassador, the Duke of Elba, called on Churchill In November to deliver a note from Franco, the Informant said. Franco urged clarification of rela tions between their countries and paid tribute to Churchill's "mas terful and martial" qualities. 1 Planking Drive Carries Troops To Rhine River Berlin Says Allies Are ' About to Open Another Offensive Near Roer ' Paris, Feb. 10 (IP The Ger mans were reported today to have blown up the power sta tion, gate house, and bridge of -the main Roer dam as the Ca nadian First army shoved for ward to seize high ground over looking strategic Kleve. By Jack --Fleischer " (United Pr Wr Cwtspondsnt) Paris, Feb. 10 u The Canad ian first army offensive ground steadily forward on a front of more than tert miles today, broke clear through the Siegfried line within two miles of Kleve and reached the Rhine In a powerful flanking Bweep north of that Ger man stronghold. Alarmed Berlin spokesmen said British and American troops massed along the Roer river to the south were about to loose An other big offensive Into the Co logne plain, and the nazis appar ently were trying to forestall the drive by releasing the flood waters backed up behind the Roer dams below Aachen. Nazis Call Reserves . Front reports said the Germans' ' were rushing up reserves to dam the-Catutdlan break-through that,, threatened to ' turn the "Sof t" northern corner of their west wall ," ' and lay the industrial Ruhr open '' to invasion. , Resistance was stiffening slow ly as the nazi reinforcements swung into line, but headquarters spokesmen and correspondents at the front said Canadian and Brit ish Infantrymen still were mak ing good progress. -Moving forward in a drizzling rain that turned the battlefield into a quagmire and practically immobilized their tank support, the allied ground troops carved out gains running to three miles and more in the past 24 hours Big Ualns Made In the first 48 hours of their big push, Gen. H. D. G. Crerar's Canadian first army forces had driven as much as eight miles through the bristling wall of con crete pillboxes and tank traps pro tecting Kleve and, beyond it, the industrial heart of Germany. Field dispatches said more than 2,500 prisoners had been taken since the Canadians and Britons went over to the attack Thursday morning, indicating that virtually all the 3,000 to 4,000 combat troops of the German 84th divi sion holding that front had been knocked out of action. Late advices said the allies were moving on Kleve In force. Six Allied Ships Reported Sunk Halifax, Feb. 10 tut Enemy submarines have sunk six allied ships, one man of war and five mcrchantmcnt within a 22 -day period, it was revealed today. The warship was the Canadian minesweeper Clayoquot, whose sinking was announced by the naval department last month. One of the merchant ships was a Cana dian freighter. The others were not Identified. The period covered by the 22 days was not announced, but the Clayoquot was sunk In January. In permitting disclosure of the sinkings, censors said the sub marines, evidently new long range U - boats of which the Germans have been boasting, operated some times within the sight of Nova Scotia. Thirty-six men, eight of them members of the Royal Canadian navy, were lost. More than 200 survivors were landed at Atlantic ports. Many of them required hos pital treatment for wounds and exposure. ACCIDENT DELAYS TRAIN Breaking of a flange on a freight car, causing the derailing of the car, today resulted in a lour hour delay of the Oregon Trunk train bringing mall to Bend. The accident occured approximately 25 miles south of Wlshram. The mall train was behind the freight.