tiut of On aurnry m- BULLEHN Weather Forecast Partly cloudy today and tonight, with light showers northeast por tion; Thursday, cloudy with few scattered showers east portion. Warmer tonight, cooler . Thurs day, " , ' - - ' CENTRAL OREGON'S DAILY NEWSPAPER Volume LIU THE BEND BULLETIN. BEND, DESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON, WEDNESDAY. APRIL 181945 NO. 114 May Save Life Paper male flare pert,, helmet hnings, blood plasma containers. Save yours. J ...... Em SpBofe Iim Tw by Pate mi Tirs ii RED ARMIES IN SIGHT OF FLAMING BERLIN Russians Link 45-Mile Front On Oder River Germans Assert Stalin Men Only 17 Miles From Capital of Third Reich London, April 18 cipi The of ficial soviet newspaper Red Fleet said today that the Russians were fighting within sight of burning Berlin. The dispatch made no di rect reference to the big Berlin bound offensive nor did it locate advance soviet positions, but the nazis admitted the Russians were only 17 miles northeast of the capital. A German DNB dispatch said me onensive had reached its "cli mactic phase" with nine attack ing soviet armies scoring new pen etrations west of Kuestrin on the Warsaw-Berlin highway and north of Wriezen, 23 miles northeast of the capital. Lone Front Formed Berlin earlier revealed that the red army also had linked up all of its Oder river bridgeheads to form a solid 45-mile front east of Berlin and had all but isolated Frankfurt, the capital's main out er defense bastion. To the south, the Germans said, other Russian forces stormed nine miles beyond the Neisse river, a tributary of the Oder, to the Neisky area, 45 miles northeast of Dresden and possibly .65 miles from a junction with the Ameri can Third army. The Russians threw operational reserves into battle beyond the Neisse in an attempt to force a quick decision, the DNB agency said. Two Million On Move Altogether, perhaps 2,000,000 soviet troops were on the march to the west along a 180-mile front from the Baltic port of Stettin to Goerlitz in the Sudeten foothills, the nazis said. Arnim Schoenberg, German Transocean agency commentator, said Marshal Gregory K. Zhukov's First White Russian army had made "deep penetrations" of the German defenses between Frank furt, Oder river stronghold 33 miles east of Berlin, and the Oder-Spree canal. Another German broadcast said the fighting had spread to the Oder plain above Beeskow, 27 miles southeast of Berlin an in dication snearheads along the ca nal had reached a point almost due west of Frankfurt, tnreaien ing, If not cutting the Berlin Frankfurt superhighway. Rmla Near Junction Schoenberg reported other "deep penetrations" by soviet forces in the hills on either side of Seelow, 26 miles east of Ber lin, and in the Altfriedland area, 24 miles northeast of Berlin. The Russians in the Seelow area were roughly 15 miles or less from a junction with those along the Oder-Spree canal that would encircle Frankfurt. Berlin said the Russians had linked up their bridgeheads across the Oder river along a solid front all the way from Eberswalde to Lebus, 34 miles east of Berlin on the northern edge of Frankfurt's fortifications. I roops on Battle Fields Hear Truman9 s Address Washington, April 18 (U.E) President Truman's reports to congress and the armed services outlined a cautious pattern today for the crucial 100 first days of an administration he promised to conduct in "the American tradition." Plans were being made, as he broadcast last night, for a meeting of the "big three" foreign ministers here preliminary to the ban Francisco conference. China and France may also be represented. In his broadcast to the millions of uniformed Americans. tne new president told of his VV ine Rvrrfre C rr fiw VI WlliC WlUf 1st Lt. Marcus Corwin, former Bend resident and son of Mrs. Wil liam Smith, Prlneville, has been awarded the bronze star lor merit orious services against .'the Jap anese forces in the British Solo mon islands. . Big Rubber Plant Seized by Yanks With U. S. First Army Before Leipzig, April 15 (Delayed) un American troops have captured the I. G. Farben company's great est synthetic rubber plant and its chief chemist, army oniciais re vealed today. The ereat. sprawling, modern istic plant which until three days ago produced rubber at a rate of 6,000 tons a month was taken un damaged yesterday. Todav. Dr. William Hahn, mild- mannered industrial chemist for 'he concern, fell into American hands. . To Pacific Starts Washington, April 18 PThe army already has begun the job of shifting men and equipment from Europe to the Far East. Authoritative quarters dis closed today that the original schedule for deploying U. S. mili tary might from Europe against Japan has been advanced about four months due to the rapid crumbling of German strength. Key service forces personnel are being sent to the Pacific to build and care for bases that will be needed when full army strength is transferred to the east. V-K Day Awaited , The announcement that stra tegic aerial warfare against Ger many has been completed was expected to mean a sharp stepup in reassignment oi air lorees, shock at Franklin Delano Roosevelt s death. "He never faltered," he said, "nor shall we." Truman spoke to the troops as a veteran who knows the mud, muck and danger of battle. -, "I have done as" you do in the field, when a commander .falls," he said. "My duties and responsi bilities are clear. I have assumed them. These duties will be carried on in keeping with the American tradition. Is War Veteran "I know the strain, the mud, the misery, the utter weariness of the soldier in the field. And I know, too, his courage, his stam ina and his faith in his comrades, his country and himself. "We are depending on every one of you." ' The five-minute broadcast was beamed from 32 short wave sta tions in this country. It was re broadcast by army and navy sta tions. Amplified transcriptions reached those forward elements which couldn't get it otherwise. Some 8,000,000 armed Americans overseas heard the report to th services. ine president ended with a paragraph from Lincoln's second Inaugural address: . Lincoln Quoted "With malice toward none: with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right, let us strive on to fin ish the work we are in: to bind up the nation's wounds; to care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orpnan to. do all which mav achieve and cherish a just and lasting peace among ourselves. and with all nations." Truman demonstrated sound ra dio technique on the air last night. His text, delivered to newspaper offices some hours before deliv ery, was a model of short-sen tence composition. That is tho punchiest and simplest method oi transmitting idea. The first day of Truman ad ministration routine left report ers gasping, ine new president was a country boy. He goes to work around 8 a.m. U.S. Troopers Storm Baguio; Guerillas Aid Over 7,000 Civilians I Rescued; Four Filipinos To Face War Charges Most of the troops in Europe , OX L A,. ., C e expected to go directly to the I OTn rOTCeS Neanng Bologna are Pacific, probably through the ! Suez canal. Some will be returned to the United States for furloughs. LEO POTTER DEAD Eugene, Ore., April 18 JIP Funeral services were held today for Leo.A. Potter, 50, vice presi dent of the Potter Manufacturing company of Eugene. Potter died Monday after an extended illness. He was born in Eugtne, served in the first world war and was active in Masonic activities. Rome, April 18 IP Eiehth ar my forces drove within ten miles of Bologna from the southeast to day and another, column out flanked the city from the north east. American Fifth army units pre viously had driven within eight miles of Bologna, due south of the city. In new gains they cleared the rugged peaks of Mt. Moscoso and Mt. Davigo, 12 miles southwest of the city. By Don Caswell (United Preu War Correspontlent) Manila, April 18 (IP --.U. S. troops today stormed the out skirts of Baguio, Japanese cita del from which Filipino guerillas have rescued more than 7,000 ci vilians In the last three weeks. . I The civilians, who were brougtit to the American lines, included a number of U. S. citizens, President Sergio Osmena's daughter, Mila gros, and Brig.- Gen. Manuel Rox as, former speaker of the Philip pines assembly. ..i Four members of the Filipino collaborationist government also were captured by the daring Igo rot natives who stole into Baguio at night and brought out the c vilians in groups ranging from two to 1800 persons. 1 Collaborationists Held Gen. Douglas MacArthur said the four collaborationists would be held for the duration of the war and then turned over to the Philip pines government "for trial and judgment." The men and their positions in the Japanese-controlled puppet re gime were: Jose Yulo, chief jus tice of the supreme court; Antonio ae iafl-Aias, minister of finance; Teofilo Sison, minister of interior. and Quinton Paredes, minister of justice. MacArthur also announced that troops of the 33rd division had reached the northwestern out skirts of Baguio, former Japanese headquarters in the Philippines and one-time summer capital for. ine islands, two other American columns at the same time reached points less than three miles from the southwestern and southeast ern limits of the northern Luzon city. China Sea Blockaded Philippines-based bombers con tinued the firm blockade of China sea shipping and sank or de stroyed at least 21 enemy vessels, including a destrover and sub chaser. A single navy Liberator ac counted for two of the ships, an 8,000-ton transport and a 2,000-ton freighter, in a raid on Singapore Saturday night. It was the first time that a Philippines based plane hit Singapore, big enemy held port at the southern tip of the Malay peninsula. Most of the rescued civilians from Baguio were in good physi cal condition. They had been aid ed Dy tne Jgorites who ma ntained communications with the 33rd di vision by what the Americans dubbed the "G-string telegraph 'I'll Support F.D.R. Ideals" Truman President Harry S. Truman, In his first appearance before the Congress, assures the nation and the'woridthnt he will support and defend the Ideals of President Roosevelt "with all my strength and wM, aU luyheart- Land Office Approves Timber Exchange Plan CETS $118 AND KISS Seattle, April 18 (U'i Pretty Frances Keller reported to police today that a burglar rifled her apartment of $118 last night and that just before he left he awak ened her with a kiss, affection ate and lingering. Big Forts Blast Nippon Air Bases Guam, April 18 (Ul More than 100 Superfortresses ripped Ja pan's six main suicide-plane bases in southern Kyushu before dawn today for the second time in less than 12 hours. The Superfortresses' fastest one-two punch yet against Japan was designed to knock out air fields from which enemy sulcicd pilots have been taking off to crash their explosive-laden planes against American warships off Okinawa. Today's raid marked the third anniversary of Lt. Gen. James H. Doolittle's historic carrier-based raid on Tokyo, now nearly one- tenth destroyed as result of B-29 lire raids In the past six weeks. A Japanese broadcast said American troops have landed on tiny Menna island, Just south of nearly-conquered Ie island and three miles off Okinawa's em battled Motobu peninsula. The Invasion, like that of Ie, was designed to gain additional airfields for the Americans, the broadcast said. It Indicated the landing occurred simultaneously wiin inai on ie Monday. Klamath Falls, Ore., April 18 OLE) County courts of Lake and Klamath counties today studied a decision by the general land office dismissing county protests against a pro posed land exchange between the National forest service and The Shevlin-Hixon Compariy of Bend. L. .An appeals, permitted. '' . ; ... '., , a lie laiiu unite opinion waa vusea on grounus ine exchange was in the public interest, that the consent of the county or umDer conservation commission is not legally required, and require the 25 per cent pay ment in the case of land ex changes. The courts had contended that the counties will not receive 25 per cent of the value of the Na tional forest timber to be cut, as would be the case in a cash sale of National forest timber. They also argued that the exchange ma terially affects the tax bases of the two counties, and the counties and the stale timber conservation commission had not given con sent. Proposal Outlined The proposal calls for the com pany to offer to the government k,sm acres or land in Lake and Klamath counties, for the right to cut and remove National forest timber worth $172,183 from about 16,600 acres In the two counties. The land office contention was based on the opinion of the chief forester that the exchange will result in a National forest inven tory of thrifty, younger trees. He was quoted that the county will not be deprived of returns from the sale of the timber but such return will merely be postponed in the interest of greater uniform ity and stability of timber supply. Repeal of Milk Bills Is Sought Ernie Pyle, America's No. 1 War Reporter, Dies in Action Washington, April 18 un Ernie .doing in the Pacific. i He was m mimh f u TI., Pyle, the greatest front-line re- He landed on Okinawa on what was no loneer vniina-im VjJ?, r n r a f ftf thic war had hopn thou i-o11oH "T Mra rliti" Vi .riU. . v v i v -j uo; uic uu imvti ueen ho on A UP. li BULLETIN With U. 8. Ninth Army, Ger many, April 18 IIP) Troops of the 80th division found a vault at Magdeburg containing silver and currency worth $20,000,000 and s number of stored art treasures. killed in action. of the first assault. The skinny, little Scripps How- The news of Pyle's death sad ard war correspondent beloved i dened an already bereaved White of U. S. fighting men the world! House. A few moments after the over was killed by a Japanese I report got out, the president said: machine gun bullet on a little is-1 "The nation is quickly saddened land off Okinawa. j again by the death of Ernie Pyle. He had come close to death: No man in this war has so well told the story of the American fighting man as American fight ing men wanted it told." "He wrote about people In arms as people still, but a people mov ing in a aetermination which did not need pretensions as a part of countless times before in North Africa, Sicily, Italy, and France. It was on the little island of Ie, near Okinawa, that Pyle was killed. Pyle started covering the war In England and North Africa. He staved with it, except for a brief ; power." furlough home, until the Ameri- Pyle was a fox-hole reporter, cans were sweeping the Germans; He said he knew nothing about out of range. j strategy of tactics. What inter- Then he came home again, leav- ested him was the G.I. in the dust ing the front, he explained, simply ! and the muck. So that is what he because he couldn't stand the, wrote about. sight and smell of death any I He had spent the years before longer. j the war writing a rambling col- He didn't want to go to war j umn about places he had seen and again, but he felt he owed it to people he had met. America's soldiers and sailors andi He lacked the physique for war. marines to report what they were He was slight, weatherbeaten. But he liked people. When he went to war, he kept on writing about people. The people he wrote about were in fox-holes, so Ernie spent a lot of time in f ox-holes. Once In North Africa some Ger man Stukas began dive-bombing anu nuajing me place where he was. He dived Into a ditch behind a soldier. When the raid was over, he ""dged the soldier and said Whew, that was close, eh?" The soldier didn't answer. He was dead. Pyle, saying over and over again that he was constantly afraid, went from near-miss to near-miss, from North Africa to Ie. In France. Pvle fin;iliv uu all the death he coulri utanH tr, a while. He wrote candidly that he could no longer take It. He had to come home. Soldiers wrote him letters tell ing him they knew just how he felt, and t$cy didn't blame him. But Pyle couldn't stay away from a war that he felt was his as much as it was the Joes fighting ir. o ne went to UKlnawa. isaiem, Ore., April 18 (IP) Pre liminary referendum petitions de signed to repeal the so-called "milk control" laws of the recent legislature, were filed with th secretary of state here today. The petitions were signed by acvcu iimnoers pi ine dairy-' in dustry, most of them affiliated wirn tne uregon dairy alliance, of Portland. The laws (house bills 234-370- Jtii, provide lor the compulsory jju.iicuiiiuuon oi an mine except that from certified disease-free ncras, lor the grading of food products and for the fixlnc nf aiuiiuuius ior iiuiu milk and cream ny tne department of agri- cuu uie. The preliminary petitions now go to me attorney general who has 10 days In which to prepare Full petitions, henrtnor 14 di- signatures, must be filed by June iu put' me measures on the i3it general election ballot. Henry Frutlger, president of the dairy group, indicated last week that the petitions would be filed. He was one of the signers. Others were: Frances L. Frutlger, secretary-treasurer of the group: Ernest F. Gourley, Albany; A. L. uucner, uorvallls; C. Stuy, New berg; L, H. McKee. Perrvtlnlp. nnl n. u. ijenny, ucaverton. (By United Prow) Ernie Pyle was "singled out" by a Japanese machine gunner and was killed instantly while he was talking with an officer In a com mand post on Ie Shlma, Larry Tighe, Blue network -correspond ent, reported from Guam today. (The famed correspondent was shot three times through the tem ple while under Japanese machine gun fire. Blue network correspond ent jack Hooley broadcast from ie snima. (Pyle was headed for the front line fighting with Lt. Col. Joseph Coolldge of Arkansas when a sud den burst of fire sent them scram bling from their teen Into a ditch beside a narrow coral road, Hooley said. i (After a few minutes they peered over the edge of the ditch and the gun rattled again. Cool ldge ducked back to find Pyle dead beside him). G.O.P. Senators Visit President Washington, April 18 Uii Eight republican senators called on President Truman today to ex press their good wishes and offer to confer with him at any time as his "loyal opposition." The dflegation was headed by Sen. Robert A. Taft, R., O., who said the group went to the White House "to tender our regards and j good wishes and express our will-1 ingness to have him call us in at any time on any subject." Taft said the republicans of fered President Truman the op portunity to deal with them di rectly through their senate leader ship as a means of avoiding as many legislative battles between the two parties as possible. Taft Im Stranger Taft said It was the first time he had been In the office of a president since the days of for mer President Hoover, the last republican to hold the presidency. Others In the group were Wal lace H. White, Me.; Kenneth S. Wherry, Neb.; Warren R. Austin, Vt.; Harlan J. Bushfleld. S. D.: Eugene D. Milllkln, Colo.; Styles Bridges, N. H.j and C. Wayland Brooks, 111. Sprinkling Rules Reported Broken With the advent of snrlna weather and general lawn sjirin kllng throughout the city, City Manager C. G. Reiter todav warned that the city ordinance governing sprinkling must be ob served. He reported that residents on both sides of the street have been sprinkling at the same time, and that firemen have reported that sprinkling was being con tinued while fire calls are being made. Manager Reiter explained that the ordinance requires persons with even house numbers to sprinkle on even days, while those 1 with odd numbers sprinkle on odd days. The ordinance also requires mat an spnnKling he stopped during a fire. Berlin Admits Western Line Is Destroyed U. S. Forces Dash East: To Czechoslovakia in Move to Join Soviets Paris, April 18 tun American armies rolled into Czechoslovakia and stormed the five keystone cities of Hitler's crumbling third reich today In a general offensive that nai spokesmen admitted had swept away their western front.- rlylng columns oi lx. uen. George S. Patton's American Third army broke across the Ger man frontier Into Czechoslovakia early today on the final lap of a 2uu-mlle dash from the Khtne that spilt the relch In two. The Dreak-througn was maae at an undisclosed point near the northwestern tip of the enslaved Czechoslovak republic, barely 100 miles from Prague. . Patton's Third army troops also fought their way Into Chemnitz, about 50 miles northeast of their crossing point, and 80-odd miles ' west o the advancing red army. Cornerstones Stormed Powerful tank and Infantry forces of the American First, Sev enth and Ninth armies, mean while, were storming the remain, ing four cornerstones of Ger many's western line Leipzig, Halle, Nurenbcrg and Magdeburg. r The Americans already had' swept for beyond all five nazl citadels t points as. close as 70 miles front the Russians on the Berlin front and their fall ap peared only a matter of days at most. Die-hard German garrisons. most of them held in the fight only by the guns of nazl elite guards, were battling desperately to hold the five strongholds and prevent a general break-through that might finish off the Euro pean war. Censored field dispatches indi cated that the fanatical German resistance around these key fort resses and supply difficulties had slowed the armored sweep of the American armies into eastern Germany. Nazi spokesmen admitted som berly, however, that the stiffen ing had come too late to prevent the break-up of their western de fenses Into a patchwork of dis organized islands of resistance, many of them out of contact with the German high command. Infantrymen and flame-throwing tanks of the U. S. Ninth army ran Into ferocious resistance from nazl elite guards and some 1,400 members of the Hitler youth or ganization in the streets of Mag deburg, but they were reported making steady progress toward the city's four Elbe river bridges. Late dispatches said the Ninth army's 30th infantry division and units or the becond armored divi sion had cleared all of Magde-1 burg's southern and southwestern districts, except for two streets In wnicn tne teen-aged Hitler youths were dug In for a death battle. Pyle Killed Makers of Peace Get Papal Advice Rome, April 18 HJ'i Pope Plus XII, acting on the eve of the San Francisco conference, todav Ik. sued a special encyclical epistle warning the makers of the peace that victors and vanquished will face a new war unless a fair anil Just peace Is established. The Pope addressed his mes sage to the episcopacy through out the world, inviting all to In crease their prayers In order that God may grant peace. He had a particular word for "tne men who will have to decide the destiny of all peoples." They, said the Pone, "should carefully consider before God that anything surpassing the limits of Justice and fairness certainly sooner or later would enormously damage both the victors and the vanquished because this would carry the seed of new wars." I Ernie Pyle, ace war correspond ent, has been killed in action on a small island near Okinawa, offi cials announced today. .