t"ir of Oi m,rrt J sips fl2 s n o rwo See Story Columns 1 and TEDS BEND BUM Today's News ; Follow world history in the malcinq from day to day in the columns of The Bulletin. Also read the local news items, some small, some large. Weather Forecast Intermittent rain weat of Cas cades and snow east portion to day, tonight and Sunday. Not much temperature chance. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume Llll THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEB. 17, 1945 NO. 63 Jo inn. MEM Yanks Troopers On Island 750 Miles From Foe Capital as Planes Bomb Tokyo Sky Raiders Continue Blows at Burning City On Mainland-as American Task Force Defies Hirohito's Navy; Air Bases Would Be Vital v i By William F. Tyree (United Proa War Corrapondcnt) - . Admiral Nimitz's Headquarters, Guam, Feb. 17 (TIP) American troops stormed ashore early today on Iwo island, only 750 miles south of Tokyo, enemy broadcasts reported, while carrier planes hit the burning Japanese capital itself for the second straight day of diversionary assault. Invasion forces swarmed over the southwest and southeast beaches of Iwo in twin landings only 10 minutes apart, a Tokyo Domei broadcast said. It added the customary claim that the troops had been "repulsed" after fierce fighting. The report of the invasion came on the second day of an Yanks on Move tDO JAPAN '-NANPO . 'SHOTO BONIN ISLANDS (OGASAWARA CUNTOJ VOLCANO IS. IWO J IMA ASUNCION MARIANAS . ISLANDS PAGAN SAfUCUAN SAIPANV ' ROTA GUAM Tokyo broadcasts today report ed that American troops had stormed ashore on Iwo island, only 750 miles south of Tokyo. Snow Blankets Central States (By United Freai) Missouri, southwestern Ohio, and southern Indiana were cov ered today with a blanket of snow from one to 10 inches thick. ' The snowfall hit the southern fringe of the central states last night. It continued today along the Ohio river and in Missouri. Columbia, Mo., had 12 inches of snow. St. Louis had six inches and southern Indiana, four. The U. S. Weather bureau at Chicago reported thunderstorms and rainfall from Kentucky south west into Texas. Temperatures in the Missouri river valley, the upper Mississippi region, Ohio, Oklahoma, and Tex as dropped 30 degrees overnight. It was unusually warm weather, however, in most southern cities. New Orleans, La., and Jackson ville, Fla., registered tempera tures of 81 and Tallahassee and Tampa, Fla., recorded 82. Chicago Hit The fringe of a cold wave sweeping from Canada into the United States hit Chicago, where the mercury dropped to five above "to. tsemiaji, Minn., was the cold est spot in the country. It was 31 below. Minneapolis reported a temp erature of nine below and Mil waukee four below zero. The weatherman forecast that cold would spread into the east by tomorrow morning. Temperatures along tne northeastern coast were j in the 3Cs, today. Heavy clouds in- wated snow or rain would hit the - v m. ' Dkw!' i, ? J' 17 iiPi Thfi'll i wT'.n.Sn nn tho i Dam- nno if hiii iVHmAi in 1 r . al The bill introduced vesterdav limits conversations on barty phone lines to five minutes. f&Aomorf 11 . yTfliaata yyTskonome ! eartn-snaking bombardment of Iwo by more than 30 Ameri can warships ranging from battleships- to destroyers and scores of carrier and land based bombers. Most shore batteries were knocked out yesterday. . ' Big- Jump Made A landing on Iwo represents an amphibious jump of 750 miles nan way to Tokyo from the Mar ianas for the Americans and would give them at least three strategic air bases within Flying Fortress, Liberator and fighter plane range of the enemy capital. Wave alter wave of American carrier planes sent hundreds' of tons of bombs crashing down on smoking Tokyo today. A Japanese communique said the second day tth'ijnpr3cederited assaulfg'ot unaer way at 7 a.m. (3 p.m. tm day PWT) and the raid still was continuing eight and a half hours later. The enemy communique ad mitted that 61 Japanese planes had been lost in yesterday's nine to 10-hour attack, but claimed 147 American planes were shot down and more than 50 damaged. Japa nese planes counter-attacking the American task force "heavily damaged and set afire" a large warship, believed an aircraft car rier, the communique said. Called Diversionary Tokyo broadcasts freely Inter preted the assault as a diver sionary attack to cover an inva sion of Iwo and one said an Ameri can landing on Japan itself may be near. Another warned witnout elaboration that American forces may "attempt to come near the homeland at two points, one of them the Boso peninsula," western arm of Tokyo bay and site of tne Yokosuka naval base. Domei said American forces be gan landing operations on Futat- sune beach in southwest Iwo (Continued on Page 3) Allies Called Big Bullies by Nazis London, Feb. 17 U German Prooaeanda Minister Paul Jo seph Goebbels now is picturing the allies as big bullies ganging up on Germany. "Instead of plaving at being superior our enemies should be ashamed of themselves for' at tacking us at odds of 10 to 1 in his war." the Berlin home radio quoted him today from an article in Das Reich. "What would happen to the Brit ish, Americans, or Soviets if we could deal with them one by one? We would chase them to the ends of the world . . ." Storm Ashore Nazi Troops Driven Out of Rhineland Forts By Tremendous Paris. Feb. 17 IF The Canad-1 Ian first army drive on the Ruhr! rolled forward today against stun- ned German troops shaken out of j their Rhineland torts ano pin - boxes by a tremendous Allied aer - iial bambardment. Stalled for almost 48 hours by flaming wall of German guns thrown across the 17-mile cor- of Goch at a point near Asperden. I Canadian, English and Scots in Iridor between the Maas (Meuse) More than 3,500 American and , fantrymen moved out of thpir and Rhine rivers, Gen. H. D. G. . crerar's troops were on the move agaln all along the front. ; Hammering uui imns u, a nnc- lor morPi the British drove armor-: je(j spearheads to within about two ! miles of the fortress town of Goch and Calcar, barely miles norm-, Iwest of the Ruhr valley. trioid tlisnatches said nazl re- 'sistance was softening under the I tele-'shattering ground and air assault and the battle of the Rhineland i nn ovoet u rooDs prea Scores Feared Lost in Tdcoma Fire; Bodies of Three Located Blaze Called Most Disastrous in History Of Washington City; Ten Believed Trapped ; Tacoma, Wash., Feb. 17 still unaccounted for, the official death toll rose to three in the fire that razed the 40-room Maefair apartment in downtown Tacoma today. ' . SCORES FEARED LOST Tacoma, Wash., Feb. 17 UP Estimates of the missing In the Tacoma, apartment house fire ranged from 35 to 85 this afternoon, as firemen waited for ruins to cool. Only three bodies have been removed. Fire department, police and hospital telephone lines were jammed with calls from frantic persons seeking to locate missinir friends and relatives. As firemen sought to battle their way into the still- smouldering ruins the body of one victim drooped gro tesquely from a fourth story window where he was trapped in a futile effort to escape.' Firemen said another body had been spotted in the gutted apartment, but falling debris barred the search party. A woman died at a local hospital after plunging from the third story of the building. None of the dead has been identified. . Onlv the -walls of the buildine remain, threatening to fad at any moment. Officials were unable, to. deter mine how many persons were in Jhe apartment at the time of the fire. Names Not Available Attempts to compile a list of the missing were complicated by the fact that Joseph Arras, mana ger of the apartment, was criti cally burned and is unable to furnish investigators with infor mation. "The fire is the most disastrous In Tacoma's history," Fire Chief Eisenbacher said. "It's safe to say that at least 10 persons were trapped in the building, and that's a conservative estimate. Red Cross and civilian defense officials have set up utility sta tions to accommodate the scores of homeless persons. Soldier Trapped In Wrecked Car Lancaster, Pa., Feb. 17 IP An east bou mi Pennsylvania railroad passenger train from St. Louis to New York crashed into derailed cars of a 28-car express and mail train at Leamon place, 12 miles east of here today. State police reported that five persons were injured and removed to the Lancaster general hosiptal. Police said all the Injured were from the passenger train "Amer ican." Pennsylvania railroad officials revealed that a soldier was trapped in a compartment. They said he was uninjured and that efforts were being made to re lease him. BICYCLE STOLEN Theft of a bicycle from the yard of their home today was re ported to Bend police by Mrs. Wil liam Baer, 974 Riverside drive. Allied Aerial appeared to be merging swiftly i into the battle of the Ruhr. Late reports from the front said the Canadian first army gains j 1 were exienoeo to as mucn as iour ous bombardment. 1 miles early today as the nazi lines Other bombers ranged 20 miles (began to buckle under the attack.least and 12 miles north of Goch ; vanguards of tne attacking force 'were reported within l'A miles British warplanes set the of fen-j sive rolling yesterday afternoon, laying a terrible pattern of bombs j f a mm kuhhi . i .. "- iinnfi'imiiii: ; bottleneck. Elements of eight 'nazi divisions were caught In the path of the aerial scythe and i nunea in ine wreckage oi iorti:iea villages ana neia wrtin- cations. Every German strongpolnt and i battery in a five mile arc around Goch and Calcar was blasted with I Fo rcis S to r m i 'ft g -it ft V ' ft ft ft ft . ft (EE) With scores of tenants Murray Opposes i Ickes Basin Plans .Washington. Feb. 17 U t- Sen. James E. Murray,! D., Mons, sai4wts greatest campaigns of the war tbday he has a Vvery high' re gard" for Secretary of the Interior Harold Ickes. But, he added, he does not like the way Ickes wanls to develop the nation's river ba sins. Murray said In an interview that he believes Ickes wants to "exert control" from Washington over regional river programs. But he Murray believes they should be worked out "by the people in the area, who have a right to de termine their own development." He is author of a bill to create a Missouri Valley authority. He says his measure is based on the "grass-roots theory" as already ap plied on the Tennessee Valley au thority. It provides complete re gional autonomy, he said. Draft Presented Ickes has proposed to a group of western senators a rough draft of legislation to create both a Mis souri Valley authority and a Co lumbia Valley authority. His meas ure also would set up a co-ordinat ing river basin development board charged with long-range, national planning. One of the board's mem bers would be Ickes. . Regional river basin authority plans would be screened for con gress by the river basin develop ment board. Ex-Jap Official Dies, Says Tokyo (Br United Pre) Lt. Gen. Harushigc Ninomlya, who was relieved of his post as minister of education in the Japa nese cabinet a week ago, died to day at the age of 67, Tokyo radio radio reported in a broadcast heard by United Press in San Francisco. Ninomlya was succeeded by Count Hideo Kodama in the Kolso cabinet shakeup. He had been re cuperating from a gall stone Ill ness, Tokyo said. Bombardment rockets, bombs and cannon-fire, land the nearby villages of Weeze, iHassum and Asperden rocked for hours under an almost continu- to pound the Rhine crossing at iWesel and Rpes. muddy foxholes while the bombs -were still falling up ahead and began rooting dazed nazl troopers ; uui ui imr wiin.-Kngc oi nouses ana earthworks all along the attack front. On their left flank, Crerar"s tneir-troops captured Huisberden, four miles northwest of Calcar, while other un ts nushlncr rinwn th, main road from Kleve were re- ported barely two miles north of Calcar. m Berlin Admits Loss of Sagan, II Ci 10,000 Sorties Daily Flown "by Russians in Blasting Hitler Troops London, Feb. 17 (IPl The Ger man high command said today that a Russian siege army had broken into Breslau, encircled cap ital of Selisia. A Berlin communique acknowl edged Soviet penetrations in at tacks on the fortress of Breslau. Other reports indicated that the industrial city or more tnan bou,' 000 on the Oder was doomed. The nazl command admitted the loss of Sagan, key city on the Ber-lin-Brcslau railway and on the Bobcr river, to the First Ukrain ian army driving west toward Dresden and northwest toward Berlin. Moscow dispatches said the red air lorce was carrying out one oi over the Oder, Neisse, and Spree valleys. Air Fields Blasted Fighting off German planes shifted from the western front, Soviet reports said, the Russian airmen blasted German air fields, spread havoc through their com munications, and scattered troop concentrations along and behind the front. Red Star, the Soviet military Journal, said that for three suc cessive days the Russians flew 70, 000 sorties a day. A front dispatch to the com munist party organ Pravda said Russian mobile forces had broken through to the Neisse river on a broad front reaching within 12 miles of Cottbus, major base In the southeastern defenses of Ber lin. The 12-mile advance crumbled German defense positions on the lower reaches of the Luebst river river, a tributary of the Neisse, and put the Russians within easy artillery range of Cottbus, a big railway hub on the Spree river 47 miles southeast of Berlin. Konev on Move other Northeast of Cottbus, nit. r.t viu-,noi T.,n- KTxWa Key Rail City First Ukrainian army sweeping highway department hnadquar along the west bank of the Oder ers here at 8 o clock th s morn- river reached the outskirts or Crossen, 63 miles southeast of Berlin. This column was 17 miles from the first of the Oder bridge heads which the Germans said the red army has established east of the capital. The southern wing of Konev's army, meantime, began a battle of annihilation against the encircled German garrison of Breslau, cap ital of Silesia. The encirclement was completed yesterday with the capture of Klettendorf, only a mile southwest of Breslau. More than 200 other Sllesian towns and villages were captured as the Soviets closed the ring about Breslau, the Soviet high command announced. Northeast of Berlin, the Second White Russian army drove for ward on a 30-mile front to within 51 miles southwest of Danzig. Library, Church Windows Broken Rock-throwing vandals have again broken window panes fromi the Trinity Episcopal church and The British admiralty only yes the Deschutes county library, Rev terday said a convoy had made a G. R. V. Bolster, 515 Congress . round-trip voyage from Britain to avenue, rector of the church in- northern Russia without the loss formed Bend police today. Rev. 0f a ship. The admiralty acknowl Bolster said that one window edged that one British plane was fh"la7J5 fnrav anV thrie n the 51 ' pane was Dronen in xne cnurcn in Mr)jTe than a dozen window panes were broken In both struc tures about a month ago, police reports revealed. 700 PLANES IN ACTION London. Feb. 17 un Lt. Gen. iam. k nnniitiin u.ni nhnni 7nn planes of his United States Eighth' air force against the rail network . I at Frankfurt-on-thc-Main today, k B Bataan Reported Reconquered South n. X?&& X2xwrP I - China Vr Vl JCbc.fc. Sea ffoVrtmivJ rf W;rtrtoilil Point ft. Mllli r rrr. 1 Cochlnm Joint .,,M1" .. monjai. WL. u i 1 5I ' CORREGIDOR mr' Mu9h, : Vi?TJt&Mti '"Vfi&s" i,v rouud is. ' ! rfWfS- ' ie UmrtJSb i An'tenlo! V h r Boy. BATAANf COCHINOSf CORREGIDOR I.' General MacArlhur today reported the reconquest of Balaan by American troops, and from Tokyo camo word that Americans are storming rock-ribbed Corregidor, New Snow Falls " ;,0n High Divides Snow fell to varied depths along the Cascades and Central Oregon during the night, and additional snow flurries throughout the day and night were forecast for the area. Kcporis reacning me siaie Ing, gave the following informa tion on the storm: Lapine inch and still snow ing; Mllllcan 1 inch and still snow ing; Snntlam highway, 5 Inches of new snow with it snowing hard at that time, and plows were operat ing; The Dalles-California high way In the vicinity of Sun moun tain, snowing hard, with packed snow along the mountain area; Waplnitla 4 Inches of new snow racking a total of 22 Inches, with packed conditions prevailing and snow plows operating, and on the Willamette, snowing hard with 3 Inches of new snow (8 a.m.), with a total depth of 30 Inches and plows operating. Germans Asserf 11 Vessels Sunk London, Feb. 17 HP" A broad cast German communique claimed today that nazi torpedo-planes and U-boats sank at least 11 allied merchant vessels and seven war ships from a convoy en route to Murmansk recently. i iost m the operation, but said that four German U-boats and three planes were stroyed. probably de- 1H OFFICIALS FINED Trenton, N. J., Feb. 17 U"'i Eighteen steel companies and six of their officers were fined a total of $240,000 today after pleading nolo contendere to a federal charge of conspiracy to fix prices on stainless steel products. Corregidoir ' ft ft ft :.;. ft ft ft '' in to fl IITAki; -. mm w Mm w I v a E MANILA i Mlltt 30 Just off the southern Up of Human. Flash of Fire On Two Fronts Seen by Fliers (Ily United Pro.) Allied airmen flying over the heart of Germany at night can now sec the flash of gunfire along tho eastern and western fronts at the same time. A Canadian . flight sergeant broadcasting over tho London radio early today reported that on a recent night raid on Dresden he was able to see both fronts from his miles-high vantage point. "The Russian front was a chain of vast flashes, switching the length of tho night horizon," he said. "I then thought I could see small flashes reflected in the sky over tne western nonzon . . . The broadcast was recorded by CPS monitors In New York. Allied Invasion Sr Oto Vj Manila J' OS May Come Soon, Fear Nips (By Unltnl Proa) Tlie Tokyo newspaper Malnichl predicted "possible" allied Inva sion of the Japanese homeland in commenting today on the carrier plane assault on the city, Tokyo radio reported. Both Mainichl and tho Asahl Shlmbun agreed thnt the "latest air attack on the homeland were dlverslonal operations to cover the enemy's Invasion of Iwo Jlma," according to the broadcast which was heard by the United Press In San Francisco. Olhor newspapers viewed ap pearance of the mighty U. S. naval task force as a "golden opportu nity for the Japanese to finish off the main strength of the Ameri can fleet at one stroke," the broad cast said. The Homurl Hochl was quoted as declaring Tve must try and and the grasp this opportunity Tokyo Shlmbun "welcomed the res lay Mackmen Get New Foothold On Isle Rock Bataan Is Reconquered, Yanks General Reports; Fierce Battle Is Raging (Br United Pm) American troops poured onto Corregidor Saturday from the air and sea, once more gaining a foot hold on the fortress Island where other American' soldiers were! forced to surrender nearly three years ago, Japanese broadcasts re ported. Radio Tokyo in a broadcast re corded by United Press in San Francisco said allied troops, pre ceded by a naval bombardment swarmed onto Corregidor in scores of landing craft alter para troops dropped down from trans- port pianes.- ' t "A furious battle IsViow raging between, our garrisons and the enemy invaders," -Tokyo radio said. The landing on the fortress Is land that guards the entrance to Manila bay came "alter repeated intensive shelling' by (American) surface craft and bombing by air forces," the broadcast said. Would Open Bay . If confirmed, the landing would open the final phase of an often-1 sive to unlock Manila bay to American shipping and to avenge the bloody defeats of 1941 and 1942. The reported combined opera tion followed by only a few hours Gen. Douglas MacArthur's an nouncement of the re-conquest of Bataan In an amphibious landing Thursday on the tip of the penin sula, five miles north of Corregi dor. No further details of the Cor regidor fighting were given in the broadcast, which was recorded by the FCC. Papers in Italy Get Print Supply liiy untud itch) Three dally newspapers In Na pies, stopped two days for lack of newsprint, resumed publication today with allied stocks rushed from Rome, a dispatch to the of fice of war information reported. The new supply was sufficient for one week and an additional week's stock was expected from allied warehouses in Rome. , When the newspapers ran out of newsprint on Wednesday, Na-' pies newspaper publishers Issued a Joint statement charging that "an orgy of new publications" in Rome was monopolizing the meager supplies of newsprint nec essary for the whole of liberated Italy. of Homeland enemy action as offering a chance for Japan to deal the enemy a le thal blow." The broadcast continued with the Asahl Shimbun's report of "breathless scenes" witnessed at the Japanese army and. naval bases in the Kanto district. The newspaper said U .S. planes skimmed over one Japanese army base and then contradicted itself bv declaring "our air defenses did not allow a single enemy raider to approach our base." In one "daring chase when one enemy plane was shot down In a single stroke, a chorus of hand clapping was heard from the many interested spectators," Asa hl said. "Naval air bases were also very busy," the newspaper added. "Over Hamamatsu many naval planes gave a hot reception to 30 1 carrier bombers and in a half hour combat shot down 16 and damaged I another."