Unit of Ore HhrMJ Ji BULLET Society Notices The deadline for society newt on days of publication, Tuesday, Thurs day and Saturdays, is 10 a. m. Weather Forecast Mostly 'clear today, tonight and Wednesday, except partly cloudy northwest portion. Little temper alure change CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume LIU THE BEND BULLETIN, BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, TUESDAY, APRIL 17. 1945 NO. 113 THE BEND Foe Airforce Dealt Crippling Blow By Allies 1,305 Planes Bagged In Single Day; U. S. Airmen Ruling Skies London, April 17 (IPi American war planes roared over Germany again today, .following up the crippling blows which yesterday shattered the dwindling Luft waffe by destroying or damaging" at least 1,305 German planes. The U. S. strategic air forces having officially completed their strategic bombing mission, sent the 8th air force Into action over Germany again, presumably fol lowing up yesterday's devastating smash at German planes on the ground and other tactical targets. 933 Planes Bagged They administered the coup de grace to the German air force yesterday by destroying at least 932 German fighter planes, and damaging at least 373 more for a total of 1,305 the biggest day's bag of the war. The eighth air force share of this was 724 planes destroyed on the ground, three destroyed in the air and 373 damaged. Eighth airforce losses were 19 fighters and three bonlb ers. Most were destroyed on the ground in raids from Munich to Prague. Hundreds of RAF planes open ed the new all-tactical phase of the air war. last night and early today with a series of raids on German targets all the way from the Baltic to the Czechoslovak border. Naval Units Hit RAF Lancasters with an es cort of Mustangs attacked Ger man naval units at Swinemuende at the Baltic entrance to Stettin bay in support of the Red army. Other bombers hit railway targ ets on either side of the German Czechoslovak border in support of the American First and Third armies. Still a third British force hit Berlin itself, caught in an American-British pincers. RAF . Mus tangs shot down six German night fighters near Berlin. Only one Lancaster was lost in all the night raids. Gen. Carl Spaatz, commander of the strategic American air forces in Europe, announced the victorious conclusion of the stra tegic bombardment of Germany. Snyder Is Sought As Loan Official Washington, April 17 IIP) John W. Snyder, St. Louis banker, was nominated by President Truman today to be federal loan adminis trator. This was the first major ap pointment, made by Truman since he became president last Thurs day evening. Snyder, vice-president of the First National bank of St. Louis, has been a friend of the president for more than 25 years. As head of the multi-billion-dollar reconstruction finance corp. and other lending agencies, Sny der will fill the place left vacant by Fred M. Vinson's transfer to the post of war mobilization di rector. Vinson served as loan adminis trator for a few weeks after presi dent Roosevelt removed Jesse H. Jones from the dual posts of loan administrator and commerce sec retary. Henry A. Wallace was put in the commerce post. Long In Business Snyder has been in the banking business since the last war. From 1930 to 1937 he acted as liquidator of national banks in the insolvent division of the United States com ptroller o the currency. From 1937 to 1940 he was mana ger of the St. Louis agency of the reconstruction finance corp. and in 1940 became executive vice president and director of the de fense plant corp. and assistant to the directors of the RFC. He went back to private bank ing in St. Louis on Jan. 1, 1943. President Walks To His New Job Washington, April 17 (in This limousine-infested capital saw something today it hadn't seen for a great many years the presi dent of the United States walking to work. President Truman walked to work this morning, striding at a rapid pace from Blair house where he and his family moved last night across Pennsylvania avenue and down the long, broad drive way to the executive wing of the White House. Super forts Blast Japan Airfields Near Okinawa Guam, April 17 (U.E) A large force of American Super fortresses blasted six airfields throughout Kyushu today in an attempt to knock out the staging bases for Japanese aerial attacks on U. S! forces around Okinawa. In hitting Kyushu, southernmost of the enemy home is lands, the B-29's sent the rapidly mounting aerial offensive against Japan into the sixth straight day. Splitting into six groups, the Marianas-based Superfor tresses plastered a half dozen airfields in northern and south . Die's in Action 9- i , Lt. Leonard C. McCauley, son of Shcrilf and Mrs. Claude L. Mc Cauley, Bend, has been killed in action in the European theater ol war. Lt. McCauley, a graduate from he Bend high school with the class of 1939, was serving with the infantry.. Lt. McCauley, 23, Killed in Action First Lt. Leonard C. McCauley, 23, son of Sheriff and Mrs. Claude L. McCauley, Bend, was killed in action while serving with General George S. Patton's forces In Ger many, his wife,. Betty, a resident of Colorado Springs, Colo., has been notified by the war depart ment. The telegram was relayed here yesterday from the Colorado city by Mrs. McCauley's parents. Mr. and Mrs. McCauley last heard from their son about a month ago, and at that time he indicated he had been in some tough engagements, including the Battle of the Bulge. The young lieutenant, a native of Bend and a graduate from the local high school with the class of 1939, was serving with an armored infantry division. Son Also Survives Lt. McCauley, who last visited his parents here about a year ago, was married in Colorado Springs on Nov. 9, 1942, to Miss Betty Woodward, at a military wedding in the Colorado city. A son, Michael Lee, was born to Lt. and Mrs. McCauley last November 18, at Colorado Springs. Lt. McCauley went overseas last June. No details of his death were contained in the telegram received here. Aside from his parents, Lt. Mc Cauley is survived by a brother, Don McCauley, Bend high school junior. Mattress Plant Razed by Fire Portland, Ore., April 17 (in A spectacular two-alarm fire de stroyed the Western Mattress company of Portland late Mon day, causing approximately $25, 000 worth of damage, according to fire investigators. Paul Byland, foreman on duty, said the fire started in an over heated carding machine and that it spread quickly to the highly inflammable mattress material. Harry S. Truman, Poised, Confident, Gives Firsf Interview, With 348 Reporters Present Washington, April 17 U poised and confident Harry Truman told his first presidential , news conference todaya jam-1 ""-" packed session that he would , was asked. run the government for the time! 2. Said he would not lift the being from his desk here. ! horse racing ban and that the mid- He said he would not attend night curfew and the brownout the San Francisco security con-i"ad been Rod for the nations ference, because this country had morale. Asked if he would lift a competent delegation at the con-1 ,hese restrictions on V-E day, he ference. He said he would back' 531(1 : Iet s walt tlU V-E day. up its members from Washington j 3. Asserted he would try to where he belongs. Head of the i carry out Mr. Roosevelt's public delegation Is secretary of state power programs and intentions Edward R. Stettinlus, Jr., whose , wherever possible and necessary, ultimate Dlace in the new admin-1 Truman stood throughout the istration has been in some doubt, i The new president faced a rec-! ord number o: reporters in the same circular room where Franklin D. Roosevelt met the press twice weekly. He took their, questions as fast as they came, answered promptly, pithily, and twice drew applause a rarity at White House press conferences. Truman: ern Kyushu with demolition bombs rather than incenddi aries which were heaped on Tokyo twice in the last 72 hours. The targets were the airfields at Kanoya, East Kanoya, Izumi, Ko- kubu and Nittaoahara, all in southern Kyushu, and Tachiarai in the northwestern section of the island. Airfields Blasted Kanoya airfield also was hit yesterday by P-51 Mustangs of the seventh fighter command from newly-won bases on Iwo is land. Tachiarai was bombed twice previously by B-29's during the past month and East Kanoya was raided only 10 days ago. All the airfields were known to have held planes which have been hitting at the U. S. sea, land and air forces in the Okinawa area, some of them in suicide attacks. The raid, which was carried out at about 4:30 p.m., today, was the third in 72 hours levelled against the Japanese homeland by the huge bombers. Tokyo reported that approxi mately 80 Superfortresses took part in the hour and a half raid, concentrated on Kyushus air fields. -The heavy blow came as Amerl can infantrymen were cleaning up tiny Ie island, three miles west of Okinawa, where they landed yesterday and seized another base for the Increasing aerial cam paign. MaJ. Gen. Curtis E. Lemay's big Superfortresses took over the pounding on Kyushu after Admir al Chester W. Nimitz' carrier planes and land - based fighters from Iwo lashed the island for five days. Cover n Pioneer Is Dead A covered wagon brought Mrs. Viola Arnold, 86, west from Iowa to Oregon country in 186G and her death sealed the memories of one of the oldest pioneers in Des chutes county, when she died yes terday at the home of her daugh ter, Mrs. Elva Kline, of Bend. Born Oct. 28, 1858 in Iowa, Viola Healy, her parents, 4 brothers and 2 sisters boarded a well equipped covered wagon and joined a train so long that when the individual wagons formed a corral the diam eter was M mile across. The pioneers, unmolested by Indians, traveled through Grande Ronde valley and The Dalles to Portland where they stayed one winter. Later they resided briefly in Leb anon. In 1866 the family moved to Linn county and in 1897 to the Sisters district. They migrated to Shasta county in 1910 where they lived for 7 years, returning to Sis ters in 1917. Bend had been Mrs. Arnold's home for the past 9 i years. Viola Healy married Thomas Arnold in 1877 at Sodaville, Ore gon. Survivors Include two sons, Leo Arnold of MacArthur, Calif., W. F. Arnold of Sisters, one daughter, Mrs. Elva Kline of Bend, six grandchildren, and five great grandchildren. Final rites will be held tomor row at 2 p.m. in the Niswonger & Winslow funeral chapel with burl- al to follow beside her husband at Greenwood cemetery. 1. Wholeheartedly endorsed all items of Roosevelt foreign and .,,, . ,,, ,,,ulriU u press conference. The crowd over-1 flowed from the conference room out mi sme terrace, i ne room became almost unbearable hot, ' but the present played his role with complete ease and good, numor. i aatied, he should. He preserved Mr. Roosevelt's) The president would not dis news conference rules such as no cuss any official appointments In direct quotations unless especially volvlng the cabinet or other top authorized but announced he I government personnel. Reds Rip Def ft ft - : ft ft ft u. Yank Fighters i Launch 3-Way Drive to East ; Field Dispatches Say Germans in Wild Race ; To Bavarian Redoubt V Paris, April 17 IP American troops stormed Leipzig, Nuern hers and Berlin's other fortress of Magdeburg today in a triple-. threat drive, to DreaK inrougn io the nazi cap'ital, link up with the red army and seal off Hitler's Ba-i varian redoubt. North and south of embattled Berlin the German front was dlsi integrating under the converging blows of the Amerlcan and Rus sian armies. Field dispatches revealed that tens of thousands ol Germans were fleeing southward through the Oder Elbe corridor toward Bavaria, with thousands more in full flight northward toward tne Baltic coast in a last-minute race to escape the closing trap. Garrisons Hold Out Strong nazi garrisons still were holding out before Berlin, Leipzig, Chemnitz and other strongpoints along the central German front. Far to the west, American First and Ninth army infantrymen combed through the ruined cities of the Ruhr to complete the de struction of two German field ar mies trapped there. More . than 200,000 of the pocketed Germans already were' prisoners' antr'Only" about 30,000 remained to be elim inated. Unauthenticated but possibly correct reports said Field Marshal Walter von Model, German com mander on the western front, com mitted suicide inside the Ruhr pocket in despair over the course of the two-week battle that al ready had swept more than 750,- 000 of his troops into allied prison cages. lleiu-h Magdeburg Fresh disaster was shaping up for the Germans along the Elbe before Berlin, where the U. S. Ninth army's 30th infantry and units of the second armored divi sion stormed into Magdeburg, 61 miles southwest of the capital's city limits. The attack kicked off in the wake of a four-hour aerial and ar tillery bombardment that brought hundreds of buildings inside Mag deburg tumbling down around the heads of 2,000 to 4,000 elite guards and Hitler youth fighters. Field dispatches said the Ameri cans had broken into the city, the last Important German foothold on the west bank of the Elbe in the Berlin sector. FORGETS TO PAY A new method of thwarting the gasoline ration stamp require ments was revealed to Bend po lice today by the proprietor of the Century Drive service station, who reported that he had been bilked by a motorcycle rider. The cyclist, it was said, came to the station and ordered two gallons of gasoline and a quart of oil. The gasoline was put into the ma chine, and while the station oper ator was getting the oil, the rider took off without either navine for the fuel or giving ration stamps. would hold only one conference each week, whereas the late pres ident normally held two. Truman was questioned exten sively about foreign policy. He endorsed the Bretton Woods international monetary program that had been sent to congress by the late President Roosevelt for approval. He also voiced full support for the reciprocal trade program, with its accompanying export-import bank. He disclosed that he planned to see Soviet foreign commissar v. m. Molotov while the Russian leader is en route to the United Nations meeting in San Francisco. Mr. Truman said Molotov was so- ing to stop in Washington to pay ' his respects to the president of: the United States. Ami. Tn,m.ni s. nr roopers Storm L Last Resting Place of Franklin D. Roosevelt New York state troopers guard the last resting place of Franklin D. Roosevelt. His grave Is banked high with flowers after funeral rites of sad splendor in the garden of his Hyde Park, N. Y. home. Mourned by the nation and honored by the world, his coffin was lowered as the simple Episcopal com mitment service was read. Vote on Dog Tieup "Again Looms Here -Efforts on thertlo!fTarfbu) Bend dog owners to have the city ordinance requiring four months tie-up of the animals in the sum mer repealed, today appeared to be meeting some opposition as reports were circulated that vict ory gardeners and others may appear before-tho city commission tomorrow night and voice pro tests. Petitions were being cir culated in the city seeking to have the ordinance placed on the spec ial budget election ballot. Date of this election has not yet been set. Some city officials,, who de clined to be directly quoted today, said that they had heard that those opposed to stray dogs would sponsor a movement to have the animals tied up year around such as is the case in several other Oregon cities. Dog owners last summer had their inning when they moved the city commission to reduce the tie-up period by one month. But indications today were that the opposing group would make them selves heard at this time, seek a year-round tie-up regulation. General to Delay Time of V-E Day Paris. April 17 mi Gen. Uwlght D. Eisenhower will proclaim V-E day only after the last important German pockets on the western front have been wiped out. He served notice to this effect yesterday at an interview at his field headquarters with a group of visiting American radio cor respondents. The war in Europe is not likely to end unlil Allied troops have occupied Germany completely, he said. He doubted there ever would bo a formal nazi surrender. .int; Fight l':xM'ct'd 'Nazi units, including divisions, corps, armies and finally army groups will give up separately as they exhaust ammunition and gasoline or find themselves hope lessly encircled," he said. (Military and government sour ces in London warned there prob ably would be serious fighting in Germany "for many weeks" after Berlin has been captured. The announcement of V-E day even may be hold up until German res istance has been racked in Nor way and Denmark, it was said.) Truman to Speak To Armed Forces Washington, April 17 HIi Presi-! dent Truman s special message tonight to the U. S. armed forces hrouchout thf ' world will be ,3a "t by 32 shoT wave s . .1 ",y-J ',. .u ...... tlons in the United States, the war department announced. The message at 7 p.m., PWT, will bo picked up In all war thea ters and rebroadcast by armed forces radio stations. enses ft ft ft Japi on Luzon Make Intense Night Attacks on U. S. Forces Drive Against Former ;Nip Headquarters Is "Slowecl By' Terrain and Enemy Resistance Manila, April 17 (U.E) today heavily counterattacking American forces closing in on Bagnio, former enemy headquarters in the Philippines. The desperate Japanese assaults were concentrated mostly in the rugged mountains around the Monglo-Mt. Bilbil area, eight miles northwest of Baguio. Gen. Douglas Mat-Arthur's communique snid the enemy forces were making repeated counterattacks at night before Baguio and front reports described the attacks as "intense." Truman Signs Lend-Lease Bill Washington, April 17 U't Pres ident Truman today signed the lend-lease extension act. He said the lend-lease program "will be carried on until the unconditional surrender or complete defeat of Germany and Japan." . The president signed the legis lation shortly after he had con ferred briefly with members ol the American delegation to the United Nations conference at San Francisco. "Lend-lease," he said In a state ment, "has been an effective in strument to help assure a com plete United Nations victory with the least cost in American and allied lives." The signing produced a histori cal novelty Truman's name ap- .lpeared on the bill twice. He SIKIIKU 11- Ul llllillljr .- i officer of the senate, and then again today as president. Truman in his senate rolo broke a tie vote to kill an amendment to the extension act that woulri have tightened restrictions on post-war use of lend-lease goods. The legislation extends the lend lease program until June 30, 1946. Sgt. Anderson On Casualty List Staff Sgt. Donald W. Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. N. O. Ander son, Bend, has been wounded In action while serving with a para troop unit in Germany, it wa3 learned here today. Sgt. Anderson is now in a Paris hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Anderson were first notified by the war depart ment that their son was seriously Injured, but a letter received from the young sky trooper yesterday said that his Injuries were con fined to one foot. The Injury was suffered on March 30. Sgt. Anderson, In the service for the past five years, was originally in the air corps, but transferred to the paratroop- ers. OIL CENTER CAPTURED (Rr UnlMI Pran) Marshal Stalin In an order of the day announced the Red army has captured Zistersdorf, Austrian oil producing center. Zistersdorf Is 29 miles north cast of Vienna. kn uear ft ft Japanese troops were reported Stubborn resistance and tne I tough terrain also was report ed slowing the drive of two other American columns ap proaching Baguio, lormer Philippines summer capital, from the southwest and south east. Air Support Given . Tactical air forces continued steady support of the American and Filipino forces throughout the Philippines. Headquarters dis closed that more than 700 tons of bombs and incendiaries were dumped on Japanese positions in at least 800 sorties Saturday and Sunday. In central Luzon other Ameri can troops eliminated several more strong Japanese pockets in the Novaliches-Marikina water shed northeast of Manila. Long range bombers and fight ers from the Philippines main tained a firm blockade of China sea shipping, raked the Asia coast from Shanghai to Saigon, and dropped another 200 tons of bombs on the Davao area of Min danao. NAVY PLANS WOKK Washington, April 17 mi The navy plans to spend $2,593,000 re furnishing air facilities in the Pa cific northwest, It was announced today. Plans for Huge G 7 iven Congress By Officials Washington, April 17 mt A tentative navy plan for a postwar fleet of 1,11)1 combat ships al most three times the size of the prewar fighting fleet was pre sented to congress today. The public was given Its first glimpse of the navy's postwar blueprint as the house appropria tions committee recommended a $24,879,510,150 (B) navy depart ment budget for the 194 fiscal year starting next July 1. This was a slash of $452,(155,104 from estimates previously approved by the budget bureau Vice Adm. Frederic J. Home, vice chief of naval operations was revealed to have told the appro priations committee that the navy expects to end the war with 1,528 combat ships, ranging down in size to destroyer escorts and sub marines. Of these, 337 obsolescent craft would be scrapped or used as target vessels Of the combat ships remaining In the postwar fleet, 482 will be the number of each within essen on active status and 709 in anltial bounds." Benin ft O ft ft eipzig T . . - . . Nazis Assert Soviet Armies 17 Miles Away Moscow Is Silent on Newest Developments; Penetrations Admitted London, April 17 iipi Red ar mies perhaps 2,000,000 strong tore new holes in the eastern defenses of Berlin along a 150-mlle front . today and one column was re ported only 17 miles from the nazi , capital. While armored forces fought near Eberswalde, 17 miles north east of Berlin, two more tank supported soviet divisions plunged through the nazi line east of Letschin, 26 miles to the southeast and 30 miles from the capital, the Germans said. - Another German broadcast said the soviet attack at the southern end of the new assault front had assumed the character ol a large- scale offensive" In Itself, apparent ly aimed at linking up with the American Tnira army tsu ouu miles to the west. ' Paratroopers Used Soviet paratroops dropped even closer to Berlin, but were encir cled and wiped out, nazi broad casts said. i i . A Paris report said the red army already had linked up with the Americans in the Elbe valley southeast of Dresden, but latest officials dispatches placed the Soviets nearly 50 miles and the Americans 40 miles from the pur ported Junction point. Berlin said Premier Marshal Stalin had thrown nine infantry, five tanks and two air armies Into tne lasi great pusn jrum ira.-i, now in its second day. Nazi broadcasts listed penetra tion after penetration in the Ger man line all the way from Schwedt, 45 miles northeast of Berlin, lo Muskau, nearly i j nines southeast, despite Adolf Hitler's order to hold fast and drown the offensive in a "sea of blood." The soviet high command, as was ils custom, remained silent on the offensive, but soviet historian Eugene Tarle said in a talk over the Moscow radio that the attack on Berlin had begun "from the cast and west." Small Girl Hurt In Car Accident Caroline Cook, 4 - y t? a r-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Cook, 441 Riverside drive, was seriously injured shortly after noon today wnen sne was au by an automobile while playing i,nh anniher small Eirl In the street near her home. The victim was rushed to St. cnaries nospuai where arrangements were made to take X-rays to determine whether she is suffering from a fractured skull. nrHtnir tn Bend officers, the automobile was driven by Joe Bal- lantyno, employe of a Beno ciom ing establishment. He told officers that he was driving north on Riverside drive at about 20 miles an hour when the victim ran Into the side of the automobile. Postwar Fleet Inactive state. Skeleton crews would be retained on the inactive ships to maintain them and keep them In immediate readiness for service. It was also understood that the navy would follow a ro tation plan In its use of available ships. The contemplated post-war fleet of 1,191 combat ships compared with a force of 364 comparable craft In service on June 30, 1939. While the committee recom mended approval of most of the navy's requests, it sharply cri ticized personnel policy and ex pressed the belief that there was "entirely too much" commissioned and enlisted personnel jobs nor mally filled by civilians, both tn Washington and throughout the country. It urged Secretary of the Navy James Forrestal to "take Immedi ate measures to effect such cur tailment both of white-collar and service personnel as would bring