UuW of Ore flbrerg CallBefore7 The Bulletin circulation office re mains open until 7 o'clock each eve ning to terve subscribers. Cell 56 before 7 p. m. if you fail to receive your paper. -. , . BUM HI. Weather Forecast , Pertly cloudy today, tonight and Sunday. Not much change In tm , perature. . rr CENTRAL .OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume LIU THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, SATURDAY, FEB. 24, 1945 NO. 69 Death, Debris Line Bloody Road to Jap Pillbox on Iwo Jima Allies Press Toward Cologne THE BEM) 'it it ft , ft ft . ft ft ft ft . ft ft ft farsKips Blast Iwo Airfield .. ' T- r , ' - Xi, (Vt i'efeohoto; American Marines proved this Jap pillbox on Iwo Jima wasn't impregnable but they paid heavily with their, lives to irrove It. Tholt- 'dcdlef iprawl in the volcanic sand amidst live Marines who have dug In lor shelter against heavy Jap artillery, mortar and rocket ftre. Pacts, cloth ... . Ing, gas masks and toilet articles, many of them ripped by shrapnel, are scattered across the sand. Rifles a blown In hall. Even letter! are strewn among th debris as though the war Insisted on prying Into a man's personal life. Yanks, Striking by Air, Sea, Land, Free 2,146 From Jap Prison Camp Nippon Guards Quickly Killed In Dawn Blow MacArthur Reports Low Loss of Life in Raid On Los Banos Quarters ' By H. D. Qulgg (United Press War Correspondent) Gen. MacArthur's Headquar ters, Manila Area, Feb. 24 (IB American land, sea and air units in a daring coordinated strike have freed 2,146 American and other allied prisoners from the Los Banos internment camp, 25 miles behind the Japanese lines, Gen. Douglas MacArthur an nounced today. U. S. Airborne troops and Fili pino guerillas struck Friday morning at the Internment camp in the hills above the southern shores of land-locked Laguna bay south of Manila. The 243-man Japanese garrison was taken com pletely by surprise at morning setting up exercises. All were kill ed, including the camp command- left burning. 1 p 'Chutists Land W A ntrknrl amiln nf II S nara- troopers landed directly on the prison camp. They were support ed in a coordinated attack by other troops from amphibious tractors who began mowing down the Japanese guards with ma chine gun fire. A cordon of troops immediately surrounded the prisoners to pro tect them from harm. A total of 1,589 Americans, in cluding 12 army nurses, priests, nuns and Manila businessmen were liberated. Also among the prioners were 329 British citizens. 33 Australians, 56 Canadians, 89 Netherlanders, 22 Poles, 10 Nor wegians, 15 Italians and one Nica raguan. "Nothing could be more satis fying to a soldier's heart than this rescue," MacArthur said in a spe cial communique. Mac Thankful I am deeply grateful. God was Mainly with us today." MacArthur reDorted that cas ualties anions the raiders , were only two killed and two wounded. Two of the internees suffered slight injuries during the dra matic rescue, he added. The carefully coordinated raid was carried out by the 11th Air borne division of the 14th corps and the Luzon guerillas under the overall command of Col. Robert H. Soulo. The main liberation force em barked in amphibious tractors from Canlubang in the predawn darkness and proceeded down La Kuna bay to Los Banos which is a' the southern end of the bay 40 '"ues from Manila. , Precisely at 7 a. m. guerilla '"rces and other elements of the J"h Airborne division who had ' urroumled the camp under covr "I .darkness, attacked with rifles, V"nes and grenades. Troops Bail Out -"iiiuuttneousiy a reinioiicu Paratroop company of the 511th ?Siment bailed out directly over 'be camp, as amphibious tractors h the shore. (Continued on Page 3) Big Bombers Hit Singapore In Heavy Raid on Japanese Incendiary and Demolition Explosives Rain Down on Nippon Dock Facilities in City Washington, Feb. 24 (EE) The biggest fleet of Super- iortresses ever to take off from India today bombed Singa pore, crossroads of war traffic between Japan and her stolen southern empire. Hundreds, perhaps thousands, of demolition and incendi ary bombs were rained on Singapore's extensive and well eatabfishsd dock and harbor facilities fri the fourth B-2& day- ngnt attack or tne war on the naval stronghold. A Singapore broadcast recored by the FCC said the giant bombers caused "some damage" to harbor facilities and the city itself during an hour and a half-long raid beginning at 10 :30 a.m. Singapore time. The bombers attacked in a dozen waves, Singapore said. At least nine planes were dam aged, the broadcast said. Raid Is Large The 20th air force, in announc ing the raid, for the first time de scribed a Superfortress raiding armada from India as "large," an indication that it totaled well over 100 bombers. A Tokyo broadcast heard by the FCC said 130 B-29's participated. Results will be announced after operation reports have been re ceived from Rl-lor Hon Rnooi: Ramsey's 20th bomber command, : pressed lear tnat tneir continued 8,900 Workers Continue Strike Detroit, Feb. 24 (IB Production ol a-3 parts, rockets, guns, tanks, and trucks was paralyzed today at the Chrysler corpora tion's Dodge main plant as 8,900 ol 9.4UU lirst-sniit worKers con tinued a strike started yesterday. A company spokesman 'said that 82 of the Chrysler corpora tion's 100 interplant truck drivers had joined the walkout and ex- the 20th air force said. Drydock Destroyed In the last previous raid on Singapore Feb. 1, B-29's sank a naval drydock, largest of its type in the world, and damaged other harbor installations. The Superfortresses may have caught part of the elusive Japa nese fleet at Singapore, largest na val base south of Japan 'Itself. One of the Japanese naval forces whieh participated in the sea bat tle In the Philippines last October came from Singapore. Liquor Also Hit In Curfew Ban Washington, Feb. 24 IT The war manpower commission, In an order defining the entertainment idleness would affect production at other Chrysler plants, which depend on the drivers fo"r parts supplies. United Auto Workers (CIO) pickets ringed the plant this morning, the company said, dis couraging employes who wished to enter the factory. The walkout started yesterday in the B-29 en gine parts division as a protest against discharge of seven men whom the company accused of loafing and insubordination. Management said the strike was "well-planned" by the UAW-CIO. International union officers ig nored this charge and ordered officers of local 3 to get their members back on the Job or face action by the international execu tive board. On both shifts yester day, 11,200 of the 13,000 employes were on strike. v Circled Poznari Deschutes Bills curfew, today Danneu tne serving q J L lI In all establishments ra55ea DV nOUSG narh nltrht. The! . ' . . of liauor after midnight each night. The ban becomes effective at midnight Monday. The WMC also ordered the ban to be applied to gambling and the playing of juke boxes. Restaurants customarily open after midnight may continue serv ing food after the curfew hour, but may not sell beer or other al coholic beverages. Midnight Is Deadline The curfew hour in each place will be midnight, official local time. Sole exception will be enter tainment supplied for military personnel by authorized agencies such as the USO. The curfew was ordered last Monday by War Mobilizer James F. Byrnes to save coal, transporta tion and manpower. The WMC was Riven the Job of enforcing It. Local police and ,ne 300 VVMC area directors will enforce the curfew request. EGYPT DECLARES WAR Cairo, Feb. 24 IP Egypt de claivd war on Germany and Japan today. Salem. Ore.. Feb. 24 W A bill (HB 224, Irrigation committee) which prohibits the pollution of irrigation canals and ditches car rying the waters of the Deschutes river, passed the house today without opposition. Red Hot Stove Stolen From Railroad Station Chicago, Feb. 24 U Thieves stole a red hot stove from the For est Glen station of the Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific railroad, po lice reported today. Police said the thieves left some of the hot coals on the floor as they carried the stove from the building. BULLETIN TakenByReds; Breslau Target . Paris Reports Assert .j Koenigsberg. Abandoned By Beaten Nazi Army London, Feb. 24 IR The Paris radio broadcast an unconfirmed report of doubtful authenticity to. day that the German army had evacuated Koenigsberg, capital of East Prussia. A Paris broadcast saM the gar rison of beleaguered Koenigsberg had pulled out, "leaving the popu Iation to their fate." Two days ago Moscow said the Germans had opened a corridor through the Soviet siege lines to the Baltic port of Pillau. The fall of Koenigsberg would mean the near completion of the red army campaign in East Prus sia, where it trapped an estimated 200,000 German troops. foznan Captured The fall of encircled Poznan. last enemy-held city in Poland, was expected to speed a Soviet smash across the Oder river on a broad front toward the doomed nazi capital, 30-odd miles to the west. The reduction of Poznan not onlv released troops under 24 gen erals for the drive on Berlin, but cleared the Moscow-Warsaw-Ber lin trunk railway and highway as far as the Oder for the movement of reinforcements and supplies. The last organized German re sistance in Poznan, Poland's fourth largest citv with a pre-war population of 272.000 was smash ed yesterday after a month-long siege during which Marshal Greg ory K. Zhukov's First White Rus sian army raced on 110 miles farther west toward Berlin. ZB OOO Killed Some 25.000 Germans were kill ed and 23.000 captured during the prolonged and bitter battle for Poznan. Adolf Hitler ordered the city held at all cost, but Malor General Mattern, the nazi com mander, was among the prisoners taken. Zhukov's forces also cleared an other encircled German city yes terday. Arnswalde, 39 miles south east of the Baltic port of Stettin and junction of the Danzig-Berlin and Poznan Stettin railways. Marshal Ivan S. Konev's First Ukrainian army, meantime, broke into the streets of a third encircled German city, the Sllesian capital us miics southeast of Marines Reach Island Plateau In Grim Fight Nippons Reported Using Half-Ton Rocket Shells In Battle Against Yanks I Guam, Feb. 24 IIP) Tank-led U. marines renewed the assault Qh Iwo's central air field from a springboard on its lower edge today and at noon were hammer ing out slow gains against viol ent resistance. I Admiral Chester W. Nlmitz an nounced that the marines charged Japanese positions on the Iwo airfield from a line on the south western rim of the base and south of Its center. With tank support the marines struck this morning after Ameri can planes, artillery, and war ships had plastered the field with a great weight of explosives. . . V "By noon, our forces were re- j JAPS USE ROCKETS I Aboard Admiral Turners' flag ship off Iwo Jima, Feb. 24 (IP) The Japanese on Iwo are using half-ton rocket-mortar shells for the first time in the Paclflo war. Marines believed they were launched by rocket-mortar propulsion from platforms on northern Iwo. ported to be gaining eroiind slow- ri" Nirnltz said In a convmunio.ua. -enemy resistance is heavy." Patrols Reach Crater On the southern tip of Iwo, patrols entered the crater of the extinct Surlbachi volcano, atop which the stars and stripes flew, and were mopping up remnants of the Japanese forces defending the natural fortress. " "Conditions on the beaches are generally Improved, and the un loading of general cargo is pro ceeding," the communique reported. (A BBC broadcast reported by CBS quoted radio Tokyo as say ing that the Americans have es tablished two new beachheads on the southeast coast of Iwo.) Casualties mounted steadily on both sides In the bloodiest fight ing of the Pacific war. While American losses have not been announced beyond 5,372 casualties for the first 58 hours of the six- day battle, the finding of another 717 Japanese bodies jumped the number of enemy dead to at least 1,939. Big Toll Claimed (A Japanese broadcast claimed that American losses on Iwo were "well over 17,000" up to Friday night. Eight more American war ships, including two battleships, have been sunk or damaged off the island, Tokyo said.) Elements of the third marine division fought onto the 300-foot-southern tip of the southwest northeast runway of Motoyama airfield No. 2 by dusk. The fourth and fifth marine division still were attempting to clamber up the slopes of the pla teau from the east and west under almost polntblank artillery, ma chine-gun and rocket fire from an Intricate system of pillboxes, blockhouses and fortified caves. Eisenhower Says Rhine Goal Of Allies in All-Oul Drive General Hopes to Destroy All German Power West of River; Russian Leaders Are Lauded . By Jack Fleischer (United PrM War Oonssinmdtnt) Paris, F.eb. 24 (UJR) Gen. Dwiarht D. Eisenhower said to day that the aim of his new Rhineland offensive is to destroy German power west of the Rhine in that sector, strike east as last as weather and terrain permit, and meet the red army in central Germany. "There is sroinsr to be no cessation of atrirressive action on this front," Eisenhower said. He said that we are going to fight as violently and aggressively as we are able from now on. Thus the allied supreme commander gave his tacit con firmation of the impression that this is ltr-the grand scale offensive looking to the show down battle of Germany. , "Given conditions I can see now.". Elsenhower said, "a reasonable weather break I don't ask for a July In Kansas the attack just started should mark the destruction of the Ger man forces west of the Rhine." In all history, he observed, a river line never has been defend ed successfully. Rhine Is Goal Elsenhower, at a press confer ence of more than 90 minutes. said the battle which began yester day promised to bring the allies to the Rhine. Given the breaks in weather .and terrain, he said, the German force In the northern bat tle area can be eliminated without unreasonable losses in American troops. He paid glowing tribute to the Russians. They have given him all the information he wanted, cheer fully and willingly, he said, and "I am completely satisfied." "Our liaison with Russia al-ways- naa been as -close and Inti mate as necessary to meet any situation at any particular mo ment," Elsenhower declared. Brazil May Bid For Council Seat Mexico City, Feb. 24 HP) It ap peared probable today that Brazil might establish diplomatic rela tions with Russia and receive a permanent seat on the world se curity council. Unofficial discussions at the Inter American conference here were highlighted by speculation about Brazil's moves to enter the good graces of all the big powers, and emerge as the leading South American nation. Brazil has long been a strong rival of Argentina for such recognition. Brazil's delegates have stated strongly that the world council "cannot dispense with the con stant cooperation of Latin Amer ica," and that Brazil "considers it indispensible that a ' pcrmament place be assigned to them." Seven Oregon Counties Are Free of Fatalities Salem, Ore., Feb. 24 Ml Only seven of Oregon's 36 counties had no traffic fatalities during 1944, secretary of state Robert S. Fsr rell, Jr., reported today. Only Sherman county has had no fatalities for two consecutive years. The seven counties with clear records are Baker, Gilliam, Harn ey, Morrow, Sherman, Wallowa, Dairy Committee Endorses Bills Milk legislation now pending in the Btate legislature, and which has won the approval of the Des chutes county Dairy Industry committee, today also had the en dorsement of the board of direc tors ol the Bend Chamber of com merce. The directors voted to en dorse the legislation as listed by the committee, and advised Rep. William Niskanen of their stand. The dairy committee approved the following: HB 369, requiring compulsory testings of dairy cattle for Bang's disease and tuberculosis; HB 370. eliminating the state Grade A law; HB 371, which sets up a standard milk ordinance; HB 372, licensing establishments handling live virus aru) safeguards vaccina tion; HB 234, requiring pasteuriza tion of all milk for human con sumption except that from dis ease-free herds; SB 128, providing enforcement of regulatory legis lation applying to sanitation of establishments where food or drink are consumed, and SB 177, which implements the manner in which the state board of health may regulate eating establish menrs. The dairy committee report was signed by the following producers and creamery operators: H. P. Eby, D. M. Lay, H. H. Kil gore, Marvin Davidson, Earl Hal lock, M. E. Taylor, J. L. Jones, Del- mer Davis, Ole Olausen, Dick Min son, Carl Livesley, Peter Hohn- stein and John Bradetich. and Wheeler, Farrell said. County Treasurer Gets Tax Turnover A tax turn-over totaling $1. 225.31 was made this morning by R. I. Hamby, Deschutes county deputy sheriff m charge of tax collections,- to R. A. Ferguson, county treasurer. The sum Is from taxes collected for the year 1942 43. A much larger turn-over, ex pected to total about $15,000, will be made by Hamby this afternoon or on Monday morning, it was reported. Today's turn -over total com prised $1,103.66 In tax collections plus $121.65. In interest collected. The money was apportioned ns follows: school district fund, $376.- 76; county general fund, $304.34; courthouse building, $8.14; fire pa I trol, $13.32: county library, $10.07; ' city of Bend, $87.61; city of Red mond, $32.89; Terrebonne water distrclt, $.89; Deschutes county I municipal Irrigation district, $240. of Breslau Berlin. Battle for Manila in Final Phase; Big Guns Blast City's Aged Walls Manila, Feb. 24 mi The battle, Inside the walled city, was ex-1 than 3,000 American civilian In- for Manila virtually ended today Ipected quickly to end organized as American troops captured all Japanese resistance In Manila, but three of the enemy-held -although It may be several days buildings In the devastated an-1 before the last fanatical enemy cieni wan city, alter anacKing tne is mopped up. Cairo, Feb. 24 'IP) Premier Ahmed Maher Pasha was aH sasslnated tonight during par liamentary debate preceding an Egyptian declaration of war against Germany and Japan. liist Japanese positions in a church and small section on the west and south sides of the In tramuros area. The final assault on the Jap anese in Manila followed a com bined land and amphibious at tack by the 37th division which Shotqun Blasts Kill 'Big Boss' Cleveland, Fob. 24 'IP Nathan v, eisennerg, "big boss" of Cleve land's slot machine racket, was found shot to death in his parked car early today. Police said Welsenberg ap- k.--..i wa Kiuea Dy two blasts; the medieval wall from the east irom a snotgun as he sat in the and across the wide Pasig river driver s seat of his coupe not far 'on the north. from his Cleveland heights home. The double attack, which Joined "The destruction of the final remnants of the enemy's trapped garrison in south Manila Is in its final phases," Gen. Douglas MacArthur said in his communi que. He also announced that other American, forces had seized Blrl breached the ancient wall around Island at the eastern end of San Intramuros. 1 Bernardino strait to complete U. Following In the wake of aS. domination of the water pas thunderous artillery bar ra g e, isagewav at the southeastern end which virtually -flattened the old Intramuros section, the American troops stormed through and over of Luzon. The Americans first opened the strait with the occupa tion of Capul island at the west ern end of the waterway. Reports of Japanese brutality In Manila reached a new mark ternees at Santo Tomas were sub jected to several days of heavy artillery fire. The frenzied enemy deliberately shelled the face of the main build ing at Santo Tomas and the front entrance. Despite their weakened and emaciated condition, the In ternees were forced to spend hours a day In the protected parts of the institution during the bombardment. Although the number of dead and wounded among the civilians was not announced, the communi que said the casualties "fortunate ly were very light." The shelling occurred several days after Santo Tomas was occupied by the first cavalry division. The final drive to wipe out the pocket of bitterly resisting Japa nese In southern Manila was with the disclosure that more 'launched yesterday morning, Tanks, Troops Break Through Yielding Lines Nazis Reel Back Before One of Heaviest Blows Of War on West Front Paris, Feb. 24 nPi American tanks and infantrymen drove two to 3V4 miles beyond the shattered Roer river line on a 22-mile front today in a driving offensive that rocked the Germans back within 19 miles of Cologne and the Rhine., Everywhere the Germans ,were reeling back before one of the mightiest assaults of the western war. A dozen fortified towns on the west end of the Cologne plain , and more than 1,200 stunned prisoners fell into American hands in the first 24 hours ot the attack. Six German divisions were over whelmed in the first Yank surge across the Roer, as Gen. Dwlght D. Elsenhower hurled armored and Infantry divisions of the U. S., First and Ninth armies into the narrow offensive front. . Nazis Give Data German spokesmen said the Americans had 20 divisions, in cluding six armored divisions, totaling perhaps 300,000 men on the attack front. . Field dispatches said yank en gineers were working feverishly to throw additional bridges across the still-swollen Roer. The bat tle appeared to be developing Into, a race to' get the Americans' full armored power across the river before the arrival of the Germans' main reserves. , Official reports said enemy re sistance, softened by a continu ous drumfire of bombs and shells, was relatively light and that American casualties were small. There was still no evidence that the nazi retreat had become disorganized, however, and it was expected that the opposition would stiffen within the next few hours as the advance drilled into their main defenses behind the Roer. Juellch Captured Juellch, 22 miles west of Col ogne and probably the toughest German stronghold on the Roer, fell to the Ninth army alter a fierce street battle. Remnants of the enemy garrison still were holding out inside the town's walled, moated citadel this morn ing, but the tide of battle already had swept out beyond them and their elimination was only a mat ter of time. Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson's Ninth army spearheads also cap tured Glimbach, Gevenich, Ruhr ich, Boslar, Slegerdorf, Hambach, Korrenzig and Baal on the east side of the Roer above and below Juellch, At Baal, the Yanks are 3V4 miles northwest of Llnnlch and the same distance southwest of the nazi base at Erkelenz. At Ham- bach, they were on the edge or the Staats forest and barely 19 miles west of Cologne. Iwo Fight Grim, Marines Assert Somewhere In the Marianas, Feb. 24 (U' (Via Navy Radio) A shipload of more than 600 bat tle torn marines arrived here to day for hospitalization. They were the first battle casualties to be evacuated from the hellfire of Iwo Jima. Unloading of the wounded, about two-thirds of whom were stretcher cases, was delayed sev eral hours when a hospital ship rammed an obstruction while nearing a dock here. Veterans of the Bougainville, Guadalcanal and Saipan invasions among the wounded described the Iwo battlefield as "worse than the worst of them." Battle Is Grim Wounded marines interviewed aboard ship suld Japanese mines took a heavy toll of tanks, half tracks and other combat vehicles. Wreckage of shattered landing craft, vehicles and the broken bodies of men clogged the beach es and made subsequent landings difficult -"You could find any part of the human body there on that beach," a 4th marine private said.