tJulT of Or Ithrtir E BENB BULL Weather Forecast . Scattered light showers today, . partly cloudy tonight and Thurs-- day, except rain In northwest por- tlon Thursday. r. , Society Notices The deadline for society newt on days of publication, Tuesday, Thurs. day and Saturdays, is 10 a. m. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER : Volume Lill THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY. OREGON, WEDNESDAY. MAR. 28, 1945 NO: 96 IA roymid 'Mulhir Sector TO II A JjL JJLJL Bite REDS j ill. S.-Russian Junction Goal, Moscow Hints ! Stalin's Men Drive to Point Only 21 Miles From Austria Border I London, March 28 IT -The red army drove within 21 miles of the Austrian frontier and about J65 miles of Vienna today with a Jightnlng thrust to Sarvar on the 3laba river, 26 miles west of Papa, f Other soviet columns wore push ing toward Csorna, 75 miles south east of Vienna and were reported already across the Raba river just east of Csorna. t Moscow dispatches for the first ime spoke of the drive as aimed at an ultimate junction with the forces of Lt. Gen. George S. Pat Ion which already have ' spear headed halfway to the Czech bor er across southern Germany. Oder Line Blazes At the same time malnr flcht. ng was reported on the Oder line svhere the Hazis claimed they were frying to drive a corridor through to German elements which they Maimed were still resisting inside Kuestrin, 38 miles east of Berlin. I German reports admitted the Jed army had crossed the Marcal Canal lying just east of the Raba nd Moscow reports said that it was believed the Raba also had J German accounts said the Rus aians were attacking in great - strength, apparently in an effort to by-pass and neutralize the nazi garrisons at Komaron and Gyor ; which guard the Lake Balaton ap- 1 nrnafhoc tn Aiictt-in :i Kuestrin Is Center J The Vienna-bound drive coin cided with new and extremely utixvy auviei uuauits uii tnt? wuei nver line, centering arouna Kues- r n, 38 miles east of Berlin. Nazi accounts admitted soviet penentrations at Kuestrin where they claimed an encircled garri son still was hclding out. it The Russians were mopoing up hi Gdynia and Ranzig and expect ed to complete occupation of the Baltic cities today or tomorrow. Russian accounts said that the re gaining defenders largely were poorly trained marine battalions, including many boys and elderly ,men. l It was estimated that the red .llhtiu hnrl fnntnrnsl nhmir Iflnnnn prisoners in the past week's fight ing, principally around Koenigs berg and in northwestern Hun Kfry. , 4 Reds Near Austria rTTo the south, the Soviets drove W within 20 miles of Austria and 58 of Vienna as a Fourth Ukraini an army group joined an offen sive crumbling Germany's south ern defenses along a 350-mile front. Still another army group to the northeast battled through the streets of the twin Baltic Dorts t unu uuyiua. ana meir liberation appeared near. The Rus sians had reached the center of ancient Danzig. A German infantry general speaking over the Berlin radio said Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov i of jthe First White Russian army f group was assembling huge ar t mored and infantry forces In the JjXMer bridgehead beyond Kuestrin, ptermiles east of Berlin. Allied Prisoners, Under Air Fjre, Signal With Bare Backs J Bj By John B. McDermort ted Press War Correspondent) Brill. 41 If r- TIn nM.r tn JVilll Hie U. O. rill ttinu tii.im; oieiioj mat. no Jiaaiicu i Germany, March 28 iU" A thous- and American and British soldiers wno had been captured oy tne uermansstoodlnthesuniigniioriKiiiea ana some, including me , si hours with their naked backs lieutenant whose name I cannot spelling out in eiant letters P O W, , prisoners of war. They were attempting to save themselves from their friends t flilots of P47s who were diving ;na strafing under the mistaken i" " tBsiuii uidL wee sMuui - ung. at uermans. - Eheard the story today of one " nv strangest ineiuenis 01 ine r from an American lieutenant fcho talked from a stretcher in a Miospitai. 'me ou ck thinking oi iuw omcers who ordered tne men Eto strip off their shirts and get into formation to spell out the' EXPECTED TO LINK WITH Navy Planes Wing Over Burning Jap Homeland A pair of U. S. Navy carrier-based Helldivers wing their way over burning hangars and other air installations at Omura during the Navy's devastating strike at Kyushu in the Japanese home islands on March 18. U. 8 Navy photo. Fires, Out Raging in Cebu Capital Manila, March 28(U.E) American invasion forces swept over Cebu today to within two and a half miles of burning Cebu city, capital of the central Philippines island. Elements of the American division, which landed on the mine-strewn beach at Talisay on the east coast Monday, were battling the Japanes garrison at Pardo just south of the capi tal. Cebu city is the second largest port in the Philippines. . Huge fires were reported out of control in, Cebu city and. the Japanese apparently were following their theme of de More Snow Falls asses Snow again fell along the crest of the Cascades today, causing highway department maintenance crews to press plows into use to keep the two Santiams, the Wil lamette, W a p i n 1 1 1 a and The Dalles-California highways open to traffic. The forecast was for occasional precipitation through out the day and night. Highway conditions were re ported as follows: Santiam snowing; tempera ture 30 degrees; Willamette packed snow east of the summit, a half-inch of new snow making a total depth of 70 inches with the temperature standing at 23 degrees; The Dalles-California snowing, with packed snow in the vicinity of Sun mountain, temper ature 30 degrees, and the Wapini tia snowing, packed snow on the higher levels, total depth 54 inches, and temperature 20 grees. de- OPA Prices Rule Sale by Sheriffs Salem, Ore., March 28 IP Farm machinery may not be sold at an execution sale by a sheriff at a price in .excess of OPA ceil ings, Attorney General George Neuncr ruled today. The sheriff is constrained by state law to accept the highest bid for items up for auction, he said, but if this provision conflicts with federal law it is the local law which must yield. letters POW saved many lives. Eventually the Allied pilots got (kn ctnnot thi, liiqn Kninn f1i(-linrt, j to them from the naked backs : down below. But they didn't got I it until some oi ine prisoners were t reveal now, were wounded. Two men wandered out of the , formation occasionally. One was 'an American catholic chaplain ana tne otner was a tsruisn cnap- lain. All tnrougn captivity tney ; ....fi...s ...y. jconsuiaiiun tn reunion ana in mis ; grim hour they were performing j i- i-o "n- ".i"b. i I "Those red-nosed P-47s were I diving right at us," the lieutenant saia. iou just prayea to Loa,cierK at tne u. s. Dureau or Stan- iinai yuu woman i get it. t The ordeal by fire took place last sunaay auernoon. ft Tfir -sV - , - of Control, struction, which devastated Manila and other island capi tals in the archipelago. A naval bombardment from cruisers and destroyers cov ered the landing by Maj. Gen. W. H. Arnold's veterans of Guadalcanal and Bougainville-Beaches Mined Although the Japanese were caught off guard by the Invasion, the shallow beaches were mined and the assault troops ran Into mortar fire from the Talisay area, five miles south of Cebu- city. Bombers and fighters of the 13tl air force joined the drive and blasted a path for the ground forces as they cut across the nar row gauge rail line and moved onto the hard-surface road paral leling the coast. Five small villages were swept up and a stubborn Japanese pock et was knocked out nearly two miles north of Talisay in the drive which carried to the town of Pardo, two and a half miles south of Cebu city. lias Fine Harbor The capital, with its three large piers and airfields, was a prime target for Gen. Douglas MacAr thur's forces. The city, which had a pre-war population of 150,000 has a harbor second only to Ma nila in the entire Phillipines. Cebu city is just across a nar row strait from historic Mactan island, where Magellan died in the 16th century from a poisoned arrow. It is only 75 miles from Ormoc on American-held Leyte and approximately 350 miles southeast of Manila. Eisenhower May Signal War's End (Br United Presl) The end of the war in Europe probably will become known through a formal announcement by Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower' that German resistance on the! western front has been broken. In response to a question by Boyd Lewis, United Press Europe an news manager, Eisenhower said in Paris yesterday that he J . f nnnnri tn mnUn cnrh an an. nouncement when the proper time arrived Tne plans 0f the Allied supreme commander were made known ' vesterdav while erroneous renorts ' mat tne uermans naa surrenaerea 1 or were about to surrender spread ; through the United States. FIVE GIRLS DIE Washington, March 28 U The ""-.last ox a. eel oi quiniupieis oom t0 a negro mother here last night; feet In the Wickiup reservoir and died early today. 131,920 acre feet, In the Crane Airs. Anua turner, Mi, was the mother of the five eirls. Thei father, Harold Turner, 36, is a; oaras nere. ine coupie nas six . other children, Inclining four- year-old twins. w r i INEA Telephoto) ' Japs Say Ships Open Sea Battle Guam, Thursday, March 29 u? Japan today claimed naval sur face and air battles have been joined in waters of the Ryukyu chain and reported, wholly with out allied confirmation, that "grim" fighting was raging be tween reinforced American inva sion troops and Japanese garri- J i i ...wu . rr ' awa. ' ' Tokyo radio said that Japanese "air and. surface vessels are now unleashing fierce counterattacks" against the American naval task groups which have pounded the strategic Okinawas, 380 miles south of Japan proper for five consecutive days. , Claims Not Barked There was no evidence from an allied source to support Japanese claims of surface and toaval ac tions or American invasions on Tokoshika or Aka islands in the Kerama group guarding the west ern approaches to Okinawa, larg est and most strategically impor. tant island of the Ryukyus chain. If the Japanese fleet has ven tured forth to challenge Vice Ad miral Marc A. Mitscher's Fifth fleet carrier task forces, it would be the first time the enemy's navy has risked battle since its great defeat in the Philippines battle of Oct. 23-24, 1944. The U. S. navy had announced bluntly that the purpose of its carrier strikes against Japan's in land sea a week ago was to seek out and destroy sequestered units of the enemy's navy in home wa ters. The navy's top admirals all have said they would welcome a final, decisive engagement with whatever remains of the Japanese fleet. Farrell Speaker At Lodge Session In one of the liveliest meetings ever held by the Bend Elks lodge. 91 new members were initiated Into the order last night. Partici pating in the ceremony were 50 Elks and their musicians from Salem. One of the principal speakers of the evening was Secretary of State Robert S. Farrell, Jr., who accompanied Clarence Ellis, an other state official, to Bend. Following the ceremony, the visiting Elks, members of the local lodge and the new members were treated to a dutch lunch. Reservoir Water Is To Be Released Water from the Wickiup and Crane Prairie reservoirs will be released into the Deschutes for diversion into the four irrigation canals in Central Orecmn nn Anrii 1, ana win continue to flow through the canals until Novem ber 1, announces Aubrey E. Perry, county watermaster. Following a trip into the upper 'Deschutes country vesterdav the watermaster reported 65,920 acre l'rairio reservoir 17 PERSONS KII.I FD Mex cor tv. Mar on npiti,,. teen persons were killed and 18 in- Jured last night when a locomo 'tive rammed a passenger bus. w , w . w.. Front Reports Indicate Nazis Heading to Mountain Region For Final Do or-Die Struggle PatWs Movements Blacked Out, But Belief Is Held His Troopers Have Raced 100 Miles ' East From Rhine; British Forces Also Lash Out " Paris. March 28 (U.P) American and British forces to day joined in a northern tank corner of the Ruhr at a 20-mile spearhead was reported 210 miles or less southwest ol Uerlin. A front report from the Third army said that the Germans were making a "general movement to the east and southeast" in front of the pulverizing jabs of the First and Third Ameri can armies possibly toward Bavaria and the mountain re gion for a final do-or-die stand. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's advanced armored columns were still blacked-out for security reasons but at least one German report said they had driven almost 100 miles east of the Rhine and had swung north in the region of Graefendorf, a scant 210 miles from Berlin. ' ' , Armlea On Move . But the 'blitz was not confined to the First and Third American armies. Both the British Second and the American Ninth armies had shaken loose from the bitter resistance the nazis wore putting up in defense of their Ruhr cities of Duisburg and Essen. . In parallel columns of heavy, armor the British Second and American Ninth severed the Ruhr and headed east. ' They crossed the Dortmund-Ems canal and slashed the Duisburg-Hamm military highway, shifting the main bulk of t.hpir Wiaitrhi: annf tnurntr1 Tlot.lin ltkua than OAt tviilaa oMrnir Cunningham with the Ninth army said it appeared "the Ninth army is on the verge of breaking into a wide open race to join tne f irst ana rnird armies." British The. Ninth army kickoff was aided by the British Sixth guards armored brigade which crashed along the northern bank ot the Lippe canal and river and entered Dorsten to re lieve pressure on the Ninth from the crack 116lh German panzer division. American fliers who swarmed out by the thousands to bomb and strafe the fleeing enemy reported that the allied tide was sweeping eastward with tremendous speed and power. ' Except for, a few stubborn pockets of resistance in the by-passed Ruhr valley, German opposition was melting every where from the Karlsruhe corner to the Dutch border. Berlin said British tanks had advanced 33 miles beyond the Rhine crossing at Wescl to the Dortmund-Ems canal, al most 20 miles' past their kick-off point this morning. There the Tommies were past the main arsenal centers of the Ruhr and only 245 miles due west of Berlin. Returning pilots said the battle lines were moving ahead so rapidly that new bombing zones had to be established every 20 minutes- Contact Broken At some points the pursuing British were completely out of contact with the fleeing enemy. Troops of the American Ninth army on their right fllunk charged into the Ruhr itself and cut the Duisburg-Hamm military highway. Radio. Luxembourg said they captured the factory city of Sterkrade, nine miles northwest of Duisburg The Germans were in the midst of a general retreat that had broken into a disorderly rout at many points, with hun dreds of allied tanks riding hard on their heels. The allied tank armies, shaken loose for the first time on a major scale, were hurdling their own infantry lines and racing almost unopposed across the burning reich anywhere from 30 to 90 miles beyond the Rhine. IllKader Faced ' , Into a few blazing hours that threatened Germany with her greatest military disaster of the war were packed these developments: , , Tl?e American First army swept 60 miles or more beyond the middle Rhine to the outskirts of Giessen, 230 miles south west of Berlin, splitting through the center of the wehrmacht front and outflanking Frankfurt-On-Main. (Continued on Page 6) Tokyo Reports Of Japan, in Support of Kerama Invasion Guam, March 28 lii Tokyo said that American carrier planes raided southern Japan today in support of the reported invasion of the Kerama Islands, 280 miles to the southwest. A broadcast Domel news agen cy said that approximately 90 car rier planes raided Kyushu, south ernmost of the Japanese home Is lands, this afternoon (Japanese time.) The raid was centered on the Miyazakl and Kagoshima pre fectures In the southern part of the island, Dome! said. An early Tokyo radio broadcast reported that American reinforce ments had landed in the Kerma islands, southwest of Kyushu, and said "savage battles" were under way. ports of landings in the Keramas, part of the Okinawa group, is only a prelude to imminent land - ft- ft ft w P ATTGN ARMY blitz that swept around the day pace and one I hird army the northern communications of Lash Out American Raid ings on Okinawa island Itself, site of an important naval base and several airfields in Japan's Inner Jefense belt, radio Tokyo said. Supporting American warships, including at least 11 battleships and 15 aircraft carriers, shelled and bombed Okinawa and other Islands to the west and south for the sixth straight day today, Tokyo said. Pacific fleet headquarters re mained silent on the enemy re ports of landings in the Keremas, but confirmed that warships and carrier planes continued to attack "enemy forces and land defence installations" in the Ryukyu chain, of which the Okinawa group is a part. A delayed dispatch from United Press War Correspondent Lloyd Tupling aboard Vice Admiral Marc A. Mitscher's flagship off Secretary Visits . IL Is A 1"" J Robert S. Farrell, Jr., Oregon's secretary of state, visited In Bend today and conferred with local officials, and Bend residents. He was accompanied by Clarence Ellis, head of the state's financial responsibility division. Farrell and Ellis returned to Salem to day, over the Santiam pass. iiiiiiimtmiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiin BULLETINS lliiiimiiiiiliiiniiiiliiiiiiiimitii(iiuittiiiiHilttiiiiiilimttlitltliilllilit(illiilll (By United P rent) V. S. 1st Army GHQ, March 28 lll'K-A partial blackout on news of V. S. First army ad vances, tt was said tonight, may Indicate that sensational gains are In the making. The situa " tlon was described' as "the mont fluid Imaginable." London, March 28 -IIPI The red army cracked the last nazi defense lines protecting south east Austria today and swept up to within 12 ml It of the bor der and 55 miles of Vienna. (Ily United l're) Atlantic radio said that the German battleship Gneisenau, anchored at Gdynia, was blown up by the nu.in shortly liefore the garrison surrendered to the Russian army today. London, March 28 till A spe cial order of the day by Marshal Stalin tonight announced the capture of Gyyor and Koma roni, the nazi keystones to tbo defense of the Lake Ballaton approach to Austria. V. 8. First Army GHQ, March 28"W A strong First army col umn Is driving southward to re inforce the V. S. Third army. It was said tonight but nothing mire regarding (Ills may lie re vealed. London, March 28 (111 Radio Berlin reiiorted tonight that American tanks have reached llummellMirg, 204 miles from Berlin anil 22 miles north of Wuerzburg. With V. S. Fourth Armored. Division, March 28 Ul'i I,t. Gen. George S. I'atton's famous Fourth armored division Is on the loose tonight and Is striking north on the roads that lead to ward KasKcl and the heart of the greater rolch. (lly United l'rcsii) A Tokyo newspaper professed to bring the Pacific war to a decision within the next month. on Mainland Okinawa said battleships, cruisers and destroyers pounded the main Island of the Ryukyus group with more than 1,000 tons of explosives Saturday. Surface forces attached to Mitcher's famed carriers paraded for four hours along a 10-mile stretch of the southeastern coast of Okinawa, Tupling said. The big guns of the battleships, cruisers and destroyers blasted at Japanese gun emplacements, pill boxes and other shore installa tions. Tokyo said the task force was gradually being reinforced and was now estimated at 100 vessels. "At present the enemy's move ment is believed an attempt to cover its landed force on Kera ma," Tokyo said, adding: "There are signs that the ene my is aiming at a major attempt to land on the Island of Okinawa." German Arms Production Is Fliers' Target Big Air Armada Strikes At Berlin, Hannover in ' Move to Hasten War End London, March 28 (Ul More than 1,300 American bombers and fighters attacked German arms plants in Berlin and Hannover -today in twin blows calculated to hasten the end of the war In' Europe. - Well over 950 Flying fortresses rained nearly 3,000 tons of demoll-' tlon and fire bombs on the two cities between 10 and 11:15 a. m. -BST, an American communique announced. The bombers were escorted by more than 350 Mus tang fighters. The raid? were, designated .to cripple two of Germany's arms ; plants outside the great Ruhr valley, already threatened by ad-1 vancing American ana tsmisn, armies. To Evacuate Berllners . A German DNB dispatch broad- nnQt tiiQt nftor tha rnirt nnnnnncerl that arrangements had been made to evacuate Berliners, particularly women and children, to less-exposed areas because of the "air terror." ... . . kaf Mosquitos nazi Broad cast said a 75-mile procession of them had hit Berlin less than 12 hours previously-for the 36th straight night. They dropped two-ton block busters and show-, era of fire bombs. Little more than a smoking shell remained of the Berlin that once was the world's fourth largest city. It has been the target of a greater weight ot bombs than any other city in the Fires of various sizes have burned almost ceaselessly In Ber lin since the RAF began its cur rent series of nightly Mosquito raids supplemented by occasional American daylight attacks. German Morale Low Today's daylight raid came at a time when German morale was at Its lowest ebb. British and American armies were driving al most at will through Germany's western defenses and an all-out offensive aguinst the capital it self by the Red army appeared imminent. Neutral sources have reported that hundreds of thousands ot Berliners have fled the city, clogg ing railways and highways in their haste to escape the rain ot bombs. Those who remained be hind, these sources said, were driven almost to madness by the constant attacks. Most governrrfent offices have been evacuated, Swedish and Swiss dispatches said, but key of- iicicti!) sun were in ine city. To Start Sunday Bend dog owners have only' three days in which to license their animals and make prepara tions for the annual summer tie up, according to a warning is sued at the city hall today. On April 1, all dogs must either be tied up or be placed in pens, or they face being impounded and their owners fined In the period enuing juiy di. Not only should owners be get ting out their leashes and ready ing their pens, but they should also tukc advantage of the city's license "bargain," George Slmer ville, city recorder, said. Licenses which are now $1 for males and $1.50 for females, go up an addi tional 50 cents after next Satur day, Slmerville stated. Many Dogs Unlicensed According to the city recorder there are approximately 250 dogs In the city yet unlicensed. Li censes are sold at the county clerk's office, city police head quarters and at the city hall, Slm erville explained. The city's ticup ordinance was adopted as a protection for Vic tory gardens and nesting water fowl along the Deschutes river, it was reported.