ItalT of OwWfcWJ I BE BULI Save Tires To keep (he war program foiling on rubber, drive carefully, recap in time, maintain a car pool. Weather forecast Increasing cloudiness today. Cloudy tonight and Thursday with occasional rains. .Not much change in temperature. CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume Llll THE BEND BULLETIN', BEND. DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 4, 1945 NO. 102 TH RliCCWnc Amach Intn filltcl4c i iujjiuiij .JIIIUJII II II V VUlJlll I J Of Blazing Vienna as Rumors Of Civil War Reach Stockholm Swedes Hear of Revolt Against Germans; Two Red Army Forces Reported Pounding at Ancient Capital; Baden Also Under Attack ' London, April 4 (UP) The red army smashed into the outskirts of Vienna today and word reached Stockholm that civil war had broken out in the Austrian capital. Russian siege forces were storming the barricades 6f Vienna. The German high command conceded that other soviet flanking forces had pushed beyond Baden, 12 miles south of the capital, sealing off the city from the south. A German military spokesman said at least two strong soviet armies had been thrown into the offensive against ' ; Vienna and the Slovakian cap 50,000 Miners Reported Idle (By United Press) More than 50,000 miners in Pennsylvania ana Alabama re mained idle today as coal produc tion in other sections resumed on an almost normal basis. Fifty-three Pennsylvania mines employing 14,000 men were com pletely shufdown. Absenteeism in other mines was estimated at 14,000 men. Production loss was 116,000 tons of coal. In Pittsburgh, Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp. officials said 12 to 15 blast furnaces will be closed to morrow because of the work stop page, which also affected produc tion in Kentucky, Alabama and West Virginia. A battery of coke ovens at the firm's by-products works in Clairton, Pa. was shut down this morning. Company of ficials said production was down to 16 per cent of normal. Supply Is Low Jones and Laughlin reported that it had only a 14-day supply of coal. Bethelehem Steel's Johns town plant had a nine-day supply, Crucible Steel had emmgh for 14 days'' upeiartion 'and 1 riUbourgii Coke and Iron for six days. There were only scattered oper ations in Alabama fields, although miners were returning slowly. Most of the West Virginia min ers were back at work. William Blizzard, vice president of United Mine Workers District 17 in Charleston, said all but two mines in the Kanawha area were being worked. Vinson Approved By U. S. Senate Washington, April 4 iriThe senate by vote today unanimously approved the nomination of Fred M. Vinson to be director of war mobilization and reconversion. The nomination was approved on motion of senate democratic leader Alben W. Barkley, Ky. Vinson was nominated Monday at the same time that James F. Byrnes' resignation was an nounced. The senate finance committee unanimously approved the Vinson nomination an hour before the senate acted on it. Byrnes in resigning said V-E day was near and he thought the man who will have charge of re conversion should take office now. 1st Arrest Made Under Tieup Law Piqued by the fact that a number of Bend residents have ignored the city ordinance requir ing that dogs be tied up until July 31, local officers today be gan to arrest owners of animals allowed to stray. First resident to feel the ire of ' police was Albert Laco, 43, a mill worker residing at 603 Delaware avenue. He was arrested yes terday by Officer Walter Greis singer, and was required to post a $5 bond. His dog also was impounded. Police are still wondering whether dogs have suspected that the ordinance exists, because telephone calls continue to come into headquarters from persons i claiming that their dogs are miss lng. Some have even claimed that others with ulterior motives have released their pets. Roundup of stray dogs was con-1 tlnued by officers, who reported , that the city pound population Is: steadily growing i I ' BODY IS FOLMl ! t Salem, Ore., April 4 mi Salem police today reported that the body of John McCormack, 74, had been found last night near the railroad tracks In south Salem. His throat had been cut In what police thought was a suicide. ital of Bratislava, 30 miles to the east, Stockholm reports said fighting was going on in the heart of Vienna after a rebellion against the German garrison which now was being assaulted from both front and rear. The reports said the nazls were throw ing up barricades in the streets. Fires Spotted (A BBC broadcast said the Rus sians already can see fires burn ing in the center of Vienna. Ger man broadcasts said soviet bomb ers and fighters were flying over Vienna.) , The official Russian army or gan Red Star said Marshal Feodor I. Tolbukhin's Third Ukrainian ar my group punched into the outer city limits of Vienna from Velm six miles to the south. The Second Ukranian army group under Marshal Rodion Y. Malinovsky was approaching Bruck, 20 miles southeast of Vien na, after crashing through the Bratislava gap, in a companion advance, Red Star said Malinovsky'8 forces also were fighting in the outskirts or Bra tislava itself, capital of the Ger man puppet state of Slovakia and 30 miles east of Vienna. Army Closes In The Third army group closed In on Vienna from the 'south and southeast along a 25-mile front affef'fOpgiWgWWheJ : iNeustadf,' one of Germany's biggest aircraft manufacturing centers 23 miles below the Austrian capital. Driving on to the north without pause, Tolbukhin's forces yester day seized Moellersdorf, eight miles southeast of Vienna,, and then Velm for an over-all advance of 21 miles in two days. Velm lies three miles inside the greater Vienna district delineated by Ger many after the 1938 Anschluss. Glenn McCormick To Attend Parley Salem, Ore., April 4 (IP) The Oregon Broadcaster's association has named Glenn McCormick, manager of Salem radio station KSLM, to represent the group at the united nations' conference in San Francisco, it was announced here Tuesday. McCormick, president of the Oregon association, will leave here April 15 for Los Angeles, and will be in the bay city from April 23 to 27. TODAY IN GERMANY (By United Press) A German general said civil ians, trying to keep the war from their doors, were turning against German soldiers. There were in creasing reports of cities kept from surrendering at the first approach of American soldiers only by threats of German com manders. Gen. George S. Patton's Third American army had broken loose again and was driving through the Thuringian forests at a mile an hour clip toward a Juncture with the Russians. It was rumored that Marshal Karl von Rundstedt was executed in connection with a new plot on Adolf Hitler's life. Berlin was walloped by the RAF for the 40th night out of the last 42. 41st Division Veterans Make In Philippines, Only 30 Miles By H. D. Quigir (United Press War Correspondent) Manila, April 4 IP American I da&duil lUILXa uuiiianncu wicr ouiu I archipelago today with a 200-mile amphibious hop that felled two : air attacks for the past two weeks more islands and carried within land naval bombardment, were 30 miles of the great oil and rub-j made with little lops. There was ber center of Borneo. no serious opposition, Pushing out from the Zambo- Filipino guerillas already were anga beachhead on southwestern i operating on Sangasanga and Mindanao, units of Maj. Gen. Jens - Bongao when the American troops A. Doe's 41st division swept: landed and both islands were around the Sulu archipelago and , seized the southernmost islands of Sangasanga and Bongao. to gain control of the former Japa nese naval base in the Tawi Tawi group. The two Islands, off the south western tip of Tawi Tawi island, Lt. Blann Injured I A 1 . r. cy:-i u emit, tmi eeu ji A . v- ; : 5 W . W ' -7A First Lt. Cliff Blann, outstand ing Oregon skier and graduate from the Bend high school with the class of 1937 has been wounded in action in the Pacific theater of war, the office of war information announced today. In 1938, Blann was junior ski champ ion of Oregon. : Clifford Blann Hurt in Action Two Central Oregon soldiers, one of them noted for his prow ess as a skier, .have been wounded in action, according to a report today by the office of war in formation. One of the victims of an 'enemy bullet is 1st Lt.- Clifford L. Blann, paratrooper and son of Mrs. Leila, C. Gentry, 1221 Fresno street. Lt. Blann, in 1938, was awarded the Underdahl' trophy as the junior ski. champion of the state. The presentation was made by Berger Underdahl, of Portland, at a Ki wanis luncheon here on Oct. 10, 1938. Lt. Blann, a graduate of the Bend hjgh school, won skiing hon ors throughout the northwest in h)s .later days in school and after graduating became a member of the Bend Ski patrol. He enlisted in the army on Aug. 15, 1941, soon became a staff sergeant, and in early February, 1943 was gradu ated as a second lieutenant at the officers candidate school in Fort Benning, Ga. Blann Honored While attending high school, Blann was class vice president in his senior year, member of the Bend high school ski club, mem ber of the Bears Paw, class treas urer and winner in 1937 of the Cashman ski trophy. While at tending high school, Blann also served as a member of the local weather bureau staff. In presenting the trophy to Blan, Underdahl pointed out that it is given for "sportsmanship, improvement, achievement and leadership" in skiing. Lt. Blann, according to'the OWI, was wounded while fighting in the Pacific region. Extent of the young lieutenant's Injuries are not known. The other -midstate soldier to become wounded is Pfc. Clarence Shepherd, son of Mrs. Anna Shep herd of Prinevillo. He was wound ed while battling the Germans In Europe, the OWI reported. Reckless Gunmen Face Hunting Ban Salem, Ore., April 4 UP) A per son who has killed or injured an other with firearms used careless ly or recklessly may not legally bear firearms thereafter in Ore gon, Attorney General George Neuner held in a written opinion rooay. The opinion was given at the request of A. J. Moore, district at torney for Deschutes county. Neuner also held that the coun ty surveyor of Jefferson county j iiuuu nui ae a registered surveyor. mis ujuuuii was maue ai ine re quest of Boyd R. Overhulse. dis trict attorney of Jefferson county. were the 33rd and 34th In the Philippines invaded by Gen. Doug-1 las MacArthur's American forces, i itichi iiiui 9 lUIIlinuiuuue SaiO the landings, following saturation quickly secured, together with Sangasanga's 3.000-foot airstrip. ' The amphibious hop represent ed a 180-mile advance from Ba silan island, between Zamboanga and the northern tip of the Sulu archipelago In the southeastern Philippines. It also virtually cut AIM? n"3r n Columns Near Island Capital; Battle Looms Entire Foe Garrison Believed Concentrated Along Southern Bulge Guam, April 4 (IP) Tenth army columns pushed down the east and west coasts of Okinawa today within striking distance of two more Japanese airfields and only six miles or less from Naha, Capi tal of the island. ' r (A German DNB dispatch from Tokyo said American troops made a new landing on Okinawa Tues day south of the original beach head.) Resistance still was negligible as the greatest invasion of the Pacific war went into its fourth day only 362 miles southwest of Japan, but the enemy garrison of 60,000 may make its first stand in the next few hours alftig a line across the narrow Isthmus just north of the airfields. Coast Reached (A Japanese communique re corded by the FCC admitted that-' American forces had reached the east coast of Okinawa and claim ed that six more transports, a battleship and four cruisers had been sunk in the invasion armada. An additional destroyer and an unidentified ship were listed as damaged.) . . The seventh infantry division seizfed nearly- seven miles of the east coast in a drive along the Nakagusuku bay naval anchorage yesterday to Kuba, four miles north of the uncompleted Yona baru airfield. Another army division smash ing down the west coast against moderate opposition reached Chi yunna, four miles north of Machl nata airfield and six miles north of Naha, a city of 65,000. Two other airfields farther north were capiured by the Ameri cans on the first day of the in vasion and already were in opera tion. Speed Ordered Tho flPmu Inrnac tmm nnnn orders to advance at all possible . . r speed in an attempt to break through the narrow isthmus sep arating the south-central bulge of the island from the southern bulge in which Naha is situated. "Keep on driving ahead," Maj. Gen. John R. Hodge, commanding general of the 24th army corps, told his field commanders. "We can't kill Japs standing still." At the northern end of the front, Maj. Gen. Roy S. Geiger's third marine amphibious- corps also slashed across the island to the east coast in advances of up to three and a half miles. Death Fight Looms The marines reached the east coast near the Katchin peninsula, northern arm of Nakagusuku bay, and sealed off that narrow jut of land. The thrust completed a second steel band across the south ern third of the island. The entire Japanese garrison was believed 'concentrated in the southern bulge of Okinawa sur rounding Naha for a fight to the death, while a maioritv of tho island's 435,000 civilians probably moved to the more rugged north ern two-thirds of the island. FRENCH ENTER KARLSRUHE fans, April 4 UP) The French general staff announced tnriav mm ri-eucn lorces nave entered Karlsruhe. New Landing From Borneo off the Japanese main archinelaeo : position at Jolo. 100 miles north I east of Saneasanpa The landinc on the two lalamu the Americans poised the second direct threat at Rnmoo the richest of the snuthut p. cific Islands in vital oil anrl nih. ber resources. At the southern tip of the Sulus,! MacArthur's forces were only 490 miles north of the bie oil confer of Balik Papan, already the tar-; get for numerous American air attacks. Borneo also was threatened hv other U. S. troops which seized ' control of Palawan Island in I southwestern Philippines 1 8 Oj miles above the northwestern tip of the island. I :t ?:-:t'-:'''J'i S-:': :'3vJi :!': sSU?fi-1 SVj: itS.:..';; ftWU'M In the greatest operation of the tne newiy-iormea mtn army go ing only slight resistance, infantrymen quickly established beach several villages, u. a. navy raaio Red Cross Names Advisory Group ' Conferring with the home serv ice department of the Deschutes county chapter American Red Cross as to policies and proce dures, a newly-formed- advisory committee will '-coordinate the work of the department with ex isting needs throughout the coun ty, Mrs. Robert W. Hemingway, executive secretary, reported to day. Mrs. A. L. O. Schueler, home service department chairman, will also serve as chairman of the ad visory committee, Mrs. Heming way revealed. She will head the following committee members: Dr. Fred A. Lieuallen, H. A. Mil ler, Miss Adelia Gates, Mrs. Ev erett Hughes, Louis Helfrey, Rev. G. R. V. Bolster, Mrs. C. W. Heim of Redmond and Mrs. Heming way. Group meetings will be held ; regularly and members will also ho enhiniit tr mi 1 1 chniilrl in rim At. be subject to call should an emer gency conference prove neces sary, the secretary stated. State to Stress Cancer Control Salem, Ore., April 4 (lJ'i The last two weeks of April will be dedicated to the control of cancer In Oregon, Gov. Earl Snell said today. Citing the fact that cancer is the second greatest cause of death in the country, the governor said that 1698 lives were lost to the disease in Oi-egon alone last year. "It is evident that public health can be greatly benefited by a more general understanding of the edu cational, special soi-vice and re search campaigns in this field," Gov. Snell said. He . asked for full public co operation toward an increased awareness of cancer control pos slbilties. Shoe Shortage Called Critical "Barefoot boy with cheeks of tan", micht have been an lnter- ! csting and amusing piece of po- ptrv. hut Hnro d Car e. chair- man of the Bend war price andiscious objector camp at Laplne, 'ration board, today took a more i according to word received here gloomy view of tho situation today from Portland. Brown, when he pointed out that there ! former city planner of New is an actual shortage of footwear, j Haven, Conn., and a Yale gradu I "The situation is critical",! ate, was at liberty on $1500 bond ICarliln stat.il." "and our oeoule when he was hailed before Fed- should take extra good care oferal Judge Claude McCulloch In tht'ir shoes' having them repaired i before they are worn too badly." ; Extra coupons for shoes will be Issued only in definite emergen cies, Carlile said. STORM WARNINGS UP Small craft warnings were host- ed at 4 a. m. today from Newport o Tatoosh Island through the strait of Juan de Fuca and Inland waters to conttnue for 24 hours. Strong southerly winds expected. THIEVES GET "DOUGH" Pittsburgh. April 4 'Ui Thieves who broke into the office of Louis Kushner, a beer distributor, were literally "in the dough" today. They escaped with $1,500 which had been concealed In a flour bin. I Yanks Land on Okinawa Pacific war and the boldest American exploit of all time, Yanks of asnore on Okinawa, southern gateway teiepnoio irom Guam. Tokyo Reports British Fleet Massing for Blow at Malay Japs Say Number of Ships 'Unbelievable'; Foe Expects Action Soon in Peninsula Area fBv United Pi-nut ' Radio Tokyo said today that seven aircraft camera was massing in the Indian ocean for a simultaneous invasion of the Sumatra, Burma and South ture." "It has been reported that European water are already the Red sea, Tokyo said m Press in San Francisco. "The number of British recently cleared Port Said unbelievable. The broadcast said allied units had been observed "mak ing all preparation at many places for a simultaneous inva sion" of Andaman and Nicobar islands in the Indian ocean; Sa bang island off the northern tip of Sumatra; and Puket and Lang kawi just off the west coast of the Malay peninsula some 400 miles north of Singapore. In ad dition, the broadcast said, the Bntish were planning "forced landing operations" against south ern Burma and Thailand. Japs make Report Mainstay of the British fleet In the Indian ocean, the broadcast said, Is centered around the 23,000 ton carriers Illustrious, Victori ous, Formidable, Implacable and Indefatigable, and two older car riers, the Furious and the Eagle. "There are also signs," the broadcast said, that (Admiral Lord Louis) Mountbatten's Brit ish force will intensify Its activi ties in concert with Chungking's Yunnan expeditionary forces which are attempting to make a southward drive. "These enemy activities clearly Indicate a joint British and Ameri can scheme to attack Japan from two directions east and west." Conchie's Trial Is Postponed - Lack of an attorney halted the arraignment In federal court of Raymond Lester urown, Jr., in. an alleged deserter irom ine con- Portland. The judge decided to permit Brown to obtain employ- ment so that he could raise funds to hire a lawyer. 365,437 Prisoners Of War in U. S. Washington, April 4 tP There were 305,437 prisoners of war in the United States on April 1, an Increase of 6,189 during the last two months. An army breakdown snowed 311,030 Germans, 3,258 Japanese and 50,549 Italians. About -35.000 Italians were members of Italian service units, lirectly engaged In war work. rom tonawa to the Japanese homeland. Meet heads and drove inland to capture a large British fleet including lslandsr off the" Malay pttfinwula; Thailand "in the immediate fu scores of British war craft in heading for the Indian ocean via a broadcast' recorded by United heavy and light units that have is Japs Say Fires Rage Unchecked Guam, April 4 IP Japanese broadcasts said that fires burned out of control for several hours following raids by 300 or more Superfortresses early today on three war production centers with in 85 miles of Tokyo. Bombing with precision Instru ments through low clouds, the B-29s attacked Shizuoka, 85 miles south of Tokyo, Tachlkawa, 20 miles west, and Koizumi, 20 miles north. Returning pilots said they saw "a few fires," but were un able to observe detailed results. Radio Tokyo said the bombers set fires in munitions factory areas over a three-hour period from 1 to 4 a. m., but asserted the flames had been brought under control at all points by dawn. Some bombs also were dropped in the Tokyo-Yokohama district, causing fires which were extin guished quickly, Tokyo said. Other Japanese broadcasts said B-20s have begun dropping mag netic mines In shipping lanes off northern Kyushu island, southern most of tho enemy home islands, in an attempt to disrupt Japanese sea lanes. Land, Navy Artillery Big Aid To Yank Invaders of Okinawa By Edward L. Thorium (Unitd 1'ress War Corrinpondcnt) . On Army Front Okinawa, April 4 ill'' By Jeep, tank and afoot I followed army troops pushing southward today on one of the strangest fronts In the history of warfare. The enemy has been blasted off virtually every Inch of ground where he could have been firmly entrenched. These doughboys are moving forward behind flame -throwing tanks and are being supported by a terrific land and naval artillery bombardment which Maj. Prosser E. Clark, Portland, Ore., (10151 43rd St.), battalion commander, described as the "greatest" he's witnessed in any Pacific cam paign. "When we want something cov ered," he said, "we don't have to ask more than once. It's just like 0 pen Dim Nips Nazis Expected To Make Stand On Elbe River Patton Explodes Drive For Leipzig and Junction With Armies of Stalin Paris, . April 4 HP'. American' Third army troops burst through the German center little more than 130 miles from Berlin today and air pilots reported that nazi9 may be abandoning northwest Germany and falling back toward a death stand on the Elbe river, 43 miles from Berlin. Lt. Gen. George S. Patton's Third army exploded a new drive for Leipzig and tne west-DOuna Russian army, less than 180 miles beyond their speeding tanks. Late reports said the Yanks were clos ing on the Saxon stronghold of Erfurt, 130 miles southwest o Berlin, at a mlle-an-hour clip that already may have carried them. Into the city. Farther north, Berlin spokes men said American First and Ninth army troops were storming the Weser river line, last big wa ter barrier before the Elbe, at points. 161 miles southwest and 177 miles west of Berlin. May Trap 60,000 British and Canadian forces also were racing for the Dutch and German North sea coasta along a 90-mile front, threatening to en vclop -all Holland atv trp,, perhaps SO.OOOt-nazIs urthtf coast al areas. RAF fliers swarming over the. northern battleground reported a tremendous concentration of Ger man flak over the Bremen area, and signs that the evacuation of -western Holland was turning into a mass evacuation of all north western Germany. Returning fliers said the nazls appeared to be fleeing back be hind the Elbe river in the hope of forming a last-ditch line from Bremen southeastward to Magde burg Berlin's main outer fort ress In the west. The Elbe loops back within 43 miles of Berlin Just north of Mag deburg. There was no Immediate com ment from headquarters on the reported German evacuation. in nun iveurs weser Enemy spokesmen said the U. S. Ninth army was nearlng the Weser river in the Minden area, 33 miles west of Hannover and 177 miles from Berlin. Farther south, they added, the First army raced 27 miles east of Padcrborn to reach the Weser near Bevorungen, 161 miles south west of the capital. Tatton's rampaging tanks were far out In front of the Berlin drive, however. They cleared the last nazi snipers from Kassel, on a tributary of the Weser 40 miles southeast of Paderborn, and 68 miles farther to the southeast they broke out on the Frankfurt-Leipzig-Dresden superhighway within six miles of Erfurt. Snipers Cleared The Americans cleared all but a handful of nazi snipers from the big aircraft center of Gotha, 13 miles west of Erfurt, In a day-long gain of about 23 miles. Eisenach, a German hedgehog position 16 miles west of Gotha, was by passed in the advance. pressing a button. We are saving a lot of lives with that artillery." Clai'k's battalion scored the largest one-day total of this oper ation when It killed 214 Jap sol diers April 2. "The artillery got most of them," he said. Convoyed by Maj. George E. Bucklin. also of Portland, Ore., I worked my way to within 50 yards of the front today. I climbed up a hill near Nodake village, scrambling over rocks and through thick, foul-smelling un derbrush, ferns and pine needles slippery with dew. The hill had been taken a few minutes before by a company under the command of Lt. Col. Cyril Sterner of Santa Cruz, Calif. Only last night It had been in fested with Jap emplacements, but they were crushed by our ar tillery and we walked up without firing a shot. I?5.