MR IBENB BUM mm Today's News Follow world history In the mailing ; from day to day in th columns ol The Bulletin. Also read the local news items, some small, some large. Weather Forecast Scattered cloudiness today, to. night and Thursday. Little tem perature change, CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1945 NO. 72 Volume LIU T YANKS PIN REDS Roosevelt Returns From Yalta Parley Inspired By Progress Made By 'Big Three' in Talks President Believes Armament Reductions , Will Be Possible, But Adds That Germany, ' Japan Must Be Kept on Trial for Long Period Washington, Feb. 28 (UJ?) President Roosevelt returned, today from his historic Crimea conference so inspired by the "Big Three's" progress toward a durable peace that he could foresee ultimate armament reduction by the major allied fighting powers. Bujt he feels that Germany and Japan must be on trial for v perhaps 50 years or more before being re-admitted as equals $to the society of nations. Meantime, they must be restrained by force if necessary. His full report will be made to congress at 12:30 p.m., EWT, tomorrow! The president returned to American soil last night, land ing at an east coast port after a 10-day voyage from Algiers aboard a h e a v y American Leyte Veteran f'liuto Art tttuuio Visiting In Bend after 30 months of service in the Pacific is Sgt. Harold B. Smead, who was in charge of an anti-aircraft battery in the war against the Japanese. A graduate from Bend high school, Sgt. Smead is the son of Mrs. Lucille Smead. Churchill Given Confidence Vote J "London, Feb. 28 (IP) Prime Min ister Churchill in effect won a 396 to 25 vote of confidence in commons today when the house voted down an amendment by re bellious conservatives denounc ing the Crimea conference deci sion on Poland. Today's vote on the Polish amendment compared with the 340 to 7 vote of confidence the house gave the government after the last war debate. The balloting was a preliminary to the technical vote of continence which Churchill has demanded on his government's part in the Cri mea meeting of the "Big Three." That will come late tomorrow at the end of a three-day debate on foreign affairs. Churchill will take his case back to the house tomorrow in a sec ond speech expected to begin .foout 3 p.m. (noon EWT). Com-r-yns then will vote on a specific 'iuu approving ine uimea ae- The preliminary vote defeating the amendment followed a defense of the government's policy by Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden. PublicWelfare Figures Released A report 0n expenditures of the Deschutes county public welfare commission in January was made by Miss Olive Jameson, adminis trator, at a luncheon meeting of members held recently in the Pine "l em. i ne report follows General exnpnrtitnre.,. fi!) cases, S2.316.23- nirt .cdcti.nn. fii cases, S5.318-aid to the blind one! case, S70: air) tn rtenenriVnt ehil- i 111 dren, 10 cases S768' total expedi-ibpcn dren, 10 cases. S768; total expedi-1 tun for January. S8.51T.23. pnn,!..i . -".niiuMuii rnt-inutfrs uivwm 'l-e V. C. Cnvner rhnirman: B A. Stover, O. W. Grubb. County Judee C. L. Allen. County Com missioners E. E. Varco and A. E. Stevens. FORGE NEW TRAP IN BALTIC SEA cruiser which went within a few miles of enemy subma rines striking at allied ship ping off Gibraltar. He then proceeded to Washington by overnight train, arriving back in the White House early this morning. Long Report Beady He had ready for congress a lengthy report on the Crimea meeting which he will deliver in person on Capitol hill. In his message to congress which will be broadcast' simulta neously to, the nation, Roosevelt will tell how he, Prime Minister Winston Churchill, Premier Josef Stalin and their top advisers met in the old Livadia palace of Czar Nicolas II on the Black sea and developed plans for a three-way operation to squeeze the last life out of the German military ma chine. He will tell also how they built the foundation of an inter national organization which can squelch future wars before they start. In news conferences aboard his ship while coming back across the Atlantic, the president was openly buoyant about the achievements of the meeting at Yalta. He looked to the United Nations conference at San Francisco in April to pro duce a permanent international organization which will have un precedented success in keeping the world at peace. To Attend Parley The president plans to attend the San Francisco conference, either at the start or the close of the meeting to make what he de scribed as a speech of greetings in the role of host. And he expects another meeting with Churchill sometime after the United Nations conference. Roosevelt left Washington on the night of Jan. 22. During his 36 days away from the nation's capital, he covered about 14,000 miles which Included stops at Malta, Russia, Egypt and Algiers. In addition to his eight-day meet ing with Churchill and Stalin, he also conferred with King Farouk of Egypt, Emperor Haile Selassie of Ethiopia and King Ibn Saud of Saudi Arabia. He made most of the trip by cruiser, but flew from Malta to Yalta, and from Yalta to (Continued on Page 7) I Tokyo Reports U. S. Planes Again Operating From Clark Field; Nips Fall Back on Luzon By William B. Dlckenton (United PreM War Correspondent) . Manila, Feb. 28 tut Japanese forces fell back along a 10-mile front in the Marakina watershed east of Manila today under the impact of two divisions of Ameri can troops and swarms of bomb ers and fighters. Gen. Douglas MacArthur's mounting offensive also brought the complete destruction of Japa nese remnants on Verde island, off the southern tip of Luzon, elimination of all but several hundred enemy stragglers on Corregidor, and new heavy aerial blows on tne Japanese irom tor mosa to French Indo-China. (A Japanese uomi agency Patch said American oomDers naa taken lo Clark field on Lu-j boon taken ,to Clark field on lu-i n from Leyte and apparent y ; Uvoro nnerat nir from the biff air- " - " - " drome.) Units of the sixth Infantry di vision paced the drive toward Luzon's east coast and captured .4 1- i'wwwi - - Jittery Japs Demand Meeting Of Parliament; Situation Bad Protection of War Industries From Planes . Asked; Lower House Members Are Excited London, Feb. 28 (U.E) German reports from Tokyo said today that members of the Japanese lower house met Tuesday to demand a parliamentary session to consider the "present serious war situation." . "The lower house expects a statement by the government, in particular with regard to war measures which have been decided upon recently," a broadcast Transocean dispatch datelined Tokyo said. "In addition it was learned that the lower house will ask for immediate concrete meas State's Future Topic of Dean At Bend Dinner Oregon has a background for tremendous development, but whether such development will take place In the era just ahead will largely depend on individual factors and the ability of resi dents of this state to recapture and revitalize the spirit of the pioneers. Such was the prediction and warning of Dean Victor P. Mor ris of the University of Oregon school of business administration and chairman of the state com mittee on post-war readjustment and development, when speaking before the annual dinner meeting oi tne tie no cnamoeroi commerce last night In the Pine . Tavern. Present were approximately 75 persons, many of them chairmen or members of chamber commit tees who will direct Bend's des tinies in the months which Dean Morris predicted will be momen tous for the entire northwest. Problems Presented Dean Morris prefaced his talk with an outline of readjustment and development problems that will face Oregon and the north west in the peace era, lauded Bend on its transition program, then declared that Oregon not only has resources, soil, climate, timber, water and power that will make possible great development, but, like the other coast states, faces the awakening Pacific basin, bordering countries of which hold more than half the world's pop ulation. But to become a part of the awakening Pacific empire, Dean Morris wexned, people of Oregon must be prepared, after careful studies, to take risks necessary in development. He expressed a regret that this appears to be an era of "guarantees," and that on every hand there is a demand for security. That was not the spirit of the pioneers, who, he said, would never have gotten west of the Mississippi if they had de manded guarantees and security. Careful Study Suggested Dean Morris devoted the major part of his talk to readjustment problems that will face Oregon. He advised a careful analysis and study of the problems, and sug gested that plans be kept flexible, to meet changing conditions. He advised against "blueprints" that (Continued on Page 7) guarantees," and that on j of Manila, to knock a hole in the enemy's Kobayashi line. The southern and western slop es oi mi. rawagan also were se cured by the sixth division troops ,arBe quantities of enemy equip who drove to within two miles I ment and ordnance were captured of the east-west Montalban-Wawa lor destroyed in the lant 24 hnum highway, First cavalry division forces, however, encountered fierce en emy resistance ai Antipoio, eight miles south of Mt Mataba and 11 east of Manila. On the far northern Luzon The Japanese unloosed heavy j front, 25th division troops con artillery, mortar and machine gun tinue their drive northward to fire In a desperate defense of iward the Cagavan vallev and cao Antipolo, whose fall would give: tured Carranglan, 13 miles north the first division control of the east of Kan .Tnn highway running north from La- ais-iguna Bay to tne sixth Infantry iront in tne nortn. Swarms of American planes, Swarms of American planes, from fighters to heavy Liberator , homhors smart v siirirartoH h -- . - ...v.,.,, ciitriijjr jrnnanrs at ihp ground drive through the Marak-! ina watershed The Liberators j alone plastered the Japanese! troops positions with 155 tons of -"fa" wpwiuo, wiuic iiim-ia ures for the protection of Jap anese war industry and the population in view of the re cent large scale allied air at tacks." Since parliament adjourned on February 8 the Americans have attacked the Tokyo area heavily with Superfortresses and carrier- borne planes. .. New Party Duo "It also Is expected that the gov ernment will make clear its view as regards the formation of a new political unity party," Transocean said. Rumors of political unrest and uncertainties In government quar ters within Japan have been cir culating for some days. A reor ganization of the Japanese cabinet has been predicted freely on the basis of the reported strife and the failure of the Japanese to counter effectively the mounting American blows. Eight New Laws ;. On Statute Books Salem, Ore., Feb. 28 Ui Eight new laws were on the statute books today, after the governor signed house bills into law yester day. Included in the list of mostly unimportant bills were the follow ing: HB 21 outlawing the selling of alcoholic beverages during voting hours on election day. HB 37 defining the practice of optometry. HB 373 carrying deficiency ap propriations for institutions which had Insufficient money during the last biennium and money for cer tain purposes during the next two years. Melvin Monical Hurt in Action Pvt. Melvin D. Monical, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. V. Monical, 745 Portland avenue, has been wound ed In action in Germany, accord ing In a Iplmrrnm monlxjaA hr hta parents today from the war de partment. The telegram said that Pvt. Monical had "been injured in action" in enemy territory on Feb. 10, and that details would follow in a communication from the hoslptal. AIR TARGETS HIT London, Feb. 28 U Two great fleets of American and British bombers teamed in heavy attacks on rail and industrial targets in northwest Germany today, the 16th straight day of a record air offensive against the reich. and attack bombers raked enemy lines from low-level. A communique disclosed the that on tne Marakina front. They In cluded 29 artillery pieces or vari ous calibres, nine machine mm. ;39 caissons 1 hides. and 138 motor ve- bombers raided Echague airfield in ine vaney. destrnv no- build nes aronH ,i scven ! bU"nB.S.lr2un.'L,he alC?trlP- .. The campaign on Corregidor1 was reduced to a mopplnTup of ' k 1 '. . row eastern end of the Island A spokesman said the ' remaining Jananpse. irmH i less than one mile rnr.iH hL couniea in tne hundreds.' 2 Pomeranian Centers Seized By Red Armies f Hundreds of Thousands I Of Nazis May Be Held t In Reds' Steel Circle ; London, Feb. 28 HP) Marshal Konstantin K. Rokossovsky's second White. Russian army to day captured the central Pomer anian 'anchor base of Neustettin in a Baltic-bound drive that threat ened to trap hundreds of thous ands of German troops. Marshal Stalin issued a special order of the day announcing the capture of Neustettin and Freeh lau, 24 miles to the northeast, which he described as "Important communications centers and powerful strongholds In the Ger man defense of Pomeranla." IThe Berlin radio reported earli er, that the German army had evacuated Neustettin, which had been outflanked by the Soviet drive Into central Pomeranla. , In Sight Of Baltic (The British radio quoted an unofficial report from Moscow as saying that Russians leading the drive across Pomeranla now were In sight of the Baltic.) Rokossovsky's second White Russion army was reported driv ing within about 25 miles of the Baltic Sea, northwest of Neustet tin. A thrust to the sea would seal off eastern Pomerabia, the Danzig free state; and the northern-part of the old Polish cor ridor. Moscow dispatches said Rokos sovsky's tanks, tank-born infantry and self-propelled guns were pushing across the flooded plains or I'omerania lowara tne cauic and rapidly narrowing the Ger- .Soviet front dispatches said a spring thaw in Pomeranla had broken up the ice on many rivers and lakes. Great patches of the; German provinces were flooded, ' New Blow Feared (Lt. Gen. Kurt Dittmar, spokes man for the German high com. mand, said Germany must expect the Soviets to "try to strike a new great blow as soon as at all pos sible.") Only 20 miles ahead of the Sov iet vanguards lay the important' last escape railway out of the threatened area. Marshal Konstantin K. Rokos sovsky's second White Russian army already had cut two other railways between Danzig and the Berlin-Stettin area in the initial stages of its powerful thrust through Germany's Pomeranian defenses. Advancing up to 44 miles in the past four days, second army forces under 22 generals drove a wedge nine miles wide at Its tip and 24 miles wide toward the Baltic, Marshal Stalin disclosed in an order of the day late yester day. Red Cross Ready For Drive Start As campaign workers stood by today for the beginning of the an nual American Red Cross War Fund drive in Deschutes county tomorrow, Bruno Rath, county war fund chairman, made public some facts stressing the need for prompt and generous response to the call for "mercy dollars." And a preliminary step In the cam paign was taken when workers distributed cards to employers throughout the county, providing for the immediate solicitation of their employes. While active county-wide solici tation was not planned for until the first of the week, different chairmen were busy today organ izing their forces. Headquarters for the Bend drive, being spon sored bv the Junior chamber of commerce, will not be opened until Monday In the chamber of com- mnZ. n f f I. E. .2 5Sh w!l j Z. L, Z ?,h oooms will be installed there at booths will be installed there at that time, and thev will be staffed by members of the Jaycee auxil iary Towns Make Rady Irt' Redmond, members of the (Continued on Page 51 fleet Planes pJlKiUM fj pi' ... Jv2Si df Miar vr Mr 7. Immm... -M ml SM A" -.i-'v h in aw"" , ; . V ' , :, J S&W$o' ' W'A0AN - . TINIAH-' . HOW KONO MARIANAS 1$. JJJ HJUNAI Vt H WlHiUMINlS CAR0UNIIS, f ... ifl$MlDANA( - Striking from new bases In the Marianas and from a task force off shore, great fleets of U. S. planes have again blasted Tokyo, and reports from uuam touay revealed tnat zw diocks oi tne industrial heart of the city have been destroyed by fire. Not a bomber was lost In the most recent raid.- 240 Blocks in Heart of Tokyo Reported Blackened By Fire Photographs Reveal Big Railroad Yards Also"' Extensively Damaged By Great U. S. Air Forts Guam, Feb. 28 (UJ?) Superfortresses apparently knocked out Tokyo's biir Ueno railway yards in raids which left 240 the city destvoyed by fire, reconna ssance photographs showed today. I t Fire started in last Sunday's B-29 raid swept across the aiuuun. it was ueneveu me yarns were renaerea lnoperaoie, at least temporarily when the flames had died, The Ueno station handles approximately 300 elevated "trains daily. It is one of the 8 Cases Whisky .Assigned State Approximately eight cases of whlskVi se,zed from lwo Wash. lngton shipyard workers as they were Illegally transporting it through Bend from California, to day was in the hands of the Ore gon state liquor commission as a result of an order made yesterday by Municipal Judge H. C. Ellis, turning the contraband over. The whisky was given by Chief of Po lice Ken. C. Gulick to Vcrn L. Drager, supervisor of the law en forcement division of the liquor control board. Jack R. Leonard 25, of Renton, Wash., and Jack Fred Gerard, 24, of Kent, Wash., were arrested here early in the morning of Feb. 8 while driving In an erratic man ner on east Greenwood avenue. On Investigation the whisky was found In the car and the pair was charged with illegal transporta tion of alcoholic. liquor. Appear ing before Judge Ellis, Leonard and Gerard nleaded guilty and were fined $30 each. Not Confiscated Since the whisky had not been formally confiscated by the city at the time of the hearing the men were permitted to take what thev wanted as thev continued on their way to Washington, and thev selected four bottles, It de veloped todav. But police were still mystified by the absence of another pint bottle, which Dale McMeen. liquor control officer for this district, said was in the batch when he counted it the night of the seizure. Submarines Reoorted Lost Washlnpton, Feb. 28 (tPiTbo navy todav announced the loss of the American submarines Shark and Escolar. They have failed to return from war patrols, presum ably in the Pacific. A total of 39 U. S. submarines have been lost and a grand total of 267 naval vessels of all types. The submarines carried normnl complements of approximately 65 men. Next of kin have been notified. Raid Tokyo station and freight marshalling blocks of the industrial heart of three largest in Tokyo. ' The photographs showed that 240 blocks 29,074.000 square feet were burned over after the Sunday strike. It was the biggest raid of the war on the Japanese capital. Furnaces Blasted (A Chungking dispatch today quoted a student recently arrived from Anshan, Manchuria, as de claring nine out of 11 giant fur naces at the Anshan steel works were blasted to pieces by B-29's striking last August). The giant raiders blazed a trail of flaming destruction through Tokyo from northeast to south west, skirting east of Emperor Hlrohlto's palace and extending to the waterfront. Radio Tokyo Itself reported that some demolition and fire bombs fell "adjacent to" a building on the palace grounds, as well as near the palace of the emperor's moth er, a mile and a half to the south west. The burned-out area of approxi mately 667 acres was in the most congested industrial area of To kyo. A 21st bomber command an nouncement described results of the attack as "excellent." New Jet Propelled Fighter May Travel 800 Miles an Hour Washington, Feb. 28 UiThe army today unveiled a sensation a! new Jet-propelled fighter, the P-80 "Shooting Star," heralded as the fastest pursuit ship In the skies. The P-80 was developed by Lockheed Aircraft Corp. in coop - eratlon with army air force and Royal air force technicians. Lock heed engineers said it was faster than any Japanese or German plane, Including the tall-less Mes serschmitt 163 rocket interceptor. The exact speed was withheld for military reasons. But the army did permit disclosure that It was designed for speeds ap- proacnlng or surpassing the speed of sound around 800 miles an hour. The Shooting Star, which has neen streaking through the skies for more than a year In secret tests, is powered bv a new Gen. eral Electric turbo-jet engine de scribed as the world's most pow erful aircraft motor. AREA U. S. Divisions River Barrier Nazis Believed Moving Back Toward Rhine as Allied Columns Advance Paris, Feb. 28 (in Two Ameri can Infantry divisions broke through the Erft river line bare ly seven miles from the Rhine today and locked in a vicious bat tle with die-hard nazl troops man ning the outer works of Cologne. Soldiers of the U. S. First army's 104th and eighth divisions rammed across the Erft on both sides of the main Dueren-Cologne highway and won two solid bridgeheads on the east bank of that last water barrier west of the Rhine. Only weak opposition met the first assault troops who stormed the river under cover of darkness late last night, but the nazls stif fened as the advance carried into high ground east of the Erft. Germans In Flight The bulk of the German divis ions facing the First army was believed to have fled across the Rhine, but strong rear guard for mations were fighting back des-. perately on the approaches to Cologne from a maze oi lntenocK ing trenches and breastworks overlooking the Erft. , Field dispatches reported that the American advance was pro gressing steadily-although at -less spectacular rate than in the sweep (through the Roer-Erft cor ridor. . . A flood of tanks, guns and. troops was reported moving through the. twin bridgeheads in, the wake of the Infantrymen, and 155-millimeter Long Toms were pumping shellfire into Cologne. Khine Kiver near The dramatic breakthrough promised to plant the First army's battle flags on the Rhine in a matter of days at most. It came as Lt. Gen. William H. Simpson's U. S. Ninth -army to the north ripped into the western edge of the Ruhr valley and brought the arsenal city of Dues- scldorf within artillery range for. the first time. Operating under a security blackout ordered by Simpson when it became apparent that the Germans' communications had broken down completely, the Americans at last reports ad mittedly 24 hours behind the bat tle had outflanked Muenchen- Gladbach, westernmost of the Ruhr basin factory cities. Unconfirmed reports credited to German prisoners said Muenchen- Gradbach was being evacuated. ' Resistance Stiffens Other accounts from the front, however, said German resistance- was stiffening in the patn or Simpson's armored and motor ized infantry columns after sen sational advances oi 10 miles or more in the previous 24 hours. At the same time, the Canadian first army to the north won a major break-through In the Sieg fried line defenses guarding the upper roads to the Ruhr and slam med ahead to wit tun anout miles of a junction with the American Ninth army. . An Intensive production pro gram Is under way at the Lock heed factories at Burbank, Calif., to get the P-80 to the fighting fronts in quantity. It is the second jet plane an nounced by the army, the first 1 being the Bell P-59 Alracomet. , Gen. Henry H. Arnold, army air force chief, revealed that Jet de velopments have been so great that the P-59 has been relegated to the position of a trainer. The P-80 can be operated over ranges comparable with modern fighters and has thus overcome one of the principle handicaps in early jet designs. The airframe was designed by Lockheed's chief Research engineer, Clarence L Johnson. . The new Jet engine Is now helntr ! produced at the General Electric i works at Svracuao ...ni v manufactured by Allison division of General Motors. It was devel oped at the GE River works. Lynn, Mass. Sweep Across