THE BEND BUUETIN, BEND, OREGON, TUESDAY, MAY 8. 1945 PAGE SIX War-End Hope High in World In Late 1944 (By United rmai Allies made ready for victory during October and November, 1914. The war will be over by Christmas, was an often heard prediction. Freedom's hopes were high throughout tho world, as powerful forces drove for a show down battle on the broad Cologne plains, a battlefield which still lay covered with snow on Christ mas eve. On Oct. 11 Lt. Gen. Courtney II. Hodges' U. S. First army closed a vise around Aachen. Hodges gave the German commander his choice between surrender and comulete destruction. The Ger mans answered by attempting to break through American lines surrounding the embattled garrl son which had turned the rail' road Junction city Into a hedge- nog-barrier, nampering American advances on the Cologne plains. The defense of Aachen, like that of Metz, to the south, and the shores of the Schelde estuary guarding the approaches to Ant wero in the north, doomed thou- sands of German expendables, as part of the German general staff's plan to buy time. Aachen Surrenders By Oct. 12 Aachen was 85 per cent ruined by air raids and artll lery bombardment. Lean, deter mined veterans fought their way Into the ruined town, first Ger man city entered by allied forces. Aachen had become a macabre caricature of a modern city. Five counterattacks on Crucifix hill failed to break the allied grip, and Aachen surrendered. In the Meuse river bend, the British Second army was advanc ing its right flank. The Canadian First strove for the big strategic prize, the Schelde river estuary, American Seventh and French First armies fought for passage through the densely wooded Vosges mountains. During October, too, the driv ing Kussian forces stood for the first time on German soil, at Eydtkau, East Prussia, hurling nazi defenders back on a 200-mile front. They isolated the lower Balkans from Germany by ad vancing through the Carpathians more than half-way across the Balkan peninsula, and cutting off 150,000 German troops on a west ern -Lithuania front by taking Riga, Latvian capital. By the middle of October, the powerful red offensive had taken from Germany her last satellite ally In Europe. Hungary had asked for an armistice. Belgrade and Debrecen, Hungary's third city, had been liberated, and Rus sians were advancing Into fight ing at Budapest on the Danube. Civil war raged within Hungary as fascists sought to obtain con trol. Hitler Calls Men 16 to CO The Russian drive spread out like the fingers on a gigantic hand, reaching for Norway, and liberating the important port city, Kirkenes, on the Barents sea, near the northern Finland border. A hard-pressed German govern ment, with Helnrich Himmler In charge, by Hitler's order, ordered all men between 16 and 60 for a last-ditch defense of the roich. The people's resistance was stif fened by Himmler's Schutz Staf- fel ISS) guard. The German people needed more than Himmler's form of morale-building. They had lost their last battleship, the Tlrpitz, sunk in its hiding place off Nor way, and their military hero. Field Marshal Erwln Rommel, the desert fox. Berlin announced that he had died from injuries received In an automobile accident. Allies were certain that his car was strafed by an American pilot and the general fatally wounded. Reich leaders gave their people a shot In the arm with a new secret weapon, V-2. The huge rocket weapon, traveling more than 1,000 miles per hour, with a range of 2,000 to 3,000 miles, crashed indiscriminately over London and southern England, destroying with Its one-ton ex plosive charge homes, schools and people. The secret weapon, which resembled an airplane, was be tween 30 and 50 feet long and equipped with tail fins. Because it traveled faster than sound and descended with a sudden swoosh, it was more frightening than the smaller robot bomb, V-l; which hit Its targets while moving only 300 miles per hour and was more easily intercepted. Fully Equipped For Modern Drugloss Treatment Spinal Adjustment Physio Therapy Tox Eliminator DlagnoNls, X-Kny and Heart Graphing Dr. R. D. Ketchum Chiropractlo Physlolnn 124 Minnesota Avo. Phone 791 Chinese Official HORIZONTAL 1 Pictured Chi nese Minister of Finance, O. K. 4 Vouchsafe 10 Head covering 13 Girl's name 14 Edit 15 Collection of sayings 16 Arachnid 2 Distinct part 3 Resident physician in hospital 4 Pair (ab.) 5 Cotton fabric 6 Dutch city 7 Swiss river 8 Flat-bottomed boat 9 And (Latin) 10 Ingenuous 11 Poker stake 12 Couple 17 Goddess of discord 18 Roman emperor 19 Against 20 Solid (comb, form) 22 Roam 24 River (ab.) 19 Shortly 25 Hawaiian food?' fjrst, womal 26 Taut 28 Enrich 31 Symbol for . iridium 32 Of the tiling 33 Peels 37 Send In payment 40 Self 41 Individual 42 Imps 45 Redactor 48 Friends (Fr.) 49 Solicitude 52 Pedestal part 53 Sesame 54 Easy 56 Youth 57 Before 58 Lubricant 59 Compass point VERTICAL 1 Sweet pota toes 14 ivjjjiut: 26 Point I I? U I I I' b It Id ft I pit li & s f ' 5 iiL a r rf-' -p :ppp QjpppiF TTi n iSTT h5 S5?T5r'5i miT m pi ST !S a I I I I I I I I I I I I I t Greece Liberated Despite desperate nazl secret weapons and equally desperate threats, allied forces moved for ward. Only in Italy were allied armies bogged down, as they fought along the muddy, bloody banks of the Fo river. See-saw fighting resulted in small gains I and small losses. Field Marshal Sir Harold R. L. G. Alexander ad mitted that the campaign was rather stuck." . In another sector of the Medit- teranean theater, the coming of winter brought liberation. As a consequence of Romania's surren der, the capitulation of Bulgaria and Russian passage Inio Yugo slavia, the Germans were com pelled to evacuate Greece. British and Greek troops occupied Ath ens. By Nov. 1, the British had reached Salonika, and on Nov. 4, Greece was officially liberated. The nazl star sank lower, and German power waned as both Great Britain and the United States resumed diplomatic rela tions with Italy, having already recognized the French govern ment of Gen. 'Charles jde Gaulle. By November, the ' Russians were preparing for their final drive on the reich. A heavy ted force laid siege to Budapest, cap ital of Hungary. Striking across the flat Hungarian plain, the Russians apparently aimed to take the prize by storm rather than to reduce It slowly by bom bardment. . Ited Army 'Month' November was traditionally the month when the red army began its winter offensive. In 1941, the Russians ended their long retreat, throwing the Germans back from Moscow. In November, 1942, they began the counteroffensive at Stalingrad which marked the turnlne Doint of the war. In 1943. thev smashed the Dnepr barrier, carrying their offensive 250 miles west by spring through the pre-war borders ofj Poland and Romania. British, American and French1 armies, too, were preparing for the final winter offensive. Their armies were ranged along the 500-mile length of the western i front from the Netherlanda to the ' Swiss border. Six great armies: drove into nazl lines und two more were available. i Lt. Gen. George S. Fatfbn's1 Third army forces, which had spearheaded the assault berln. ' ning in August in tho Avranehcs breakthrough, had taken Metz, fortress city since the time of At- tilu the Hun, entered Germany, reaching Sehndorf, near the Junc tion of the German-Luxembourg border; then moving on to the Saar river. Finally Patton's troops had broken Into burning Saarlnutein and were holding a 14-mlle stretch along the Saar river. 1 The French First army had ; reached tho Rhine river near Kembs and taken Belfort after passing through the Belfort gap in the Vosges. By the middle of November, French forces moved into Strasbourg. The U. S. Sev enth army dug in on the German frontier along a 17-mlle front from the Vosges to tho Rhine and crossed the border in two places in the Palatinate. 1 The massing of six allied ar-j mios aiming for the heart of For. I i tress (Jermania was nhase thnv. iof the offensive against the reich. I 'Phase one was the June 6 inva i sion and the establishment of a : permanent bridgehead. Phase two j had been the burst out of the I Avranehcs peninsula, setting In Women with PILES Get DOCTORS' Tip! You Vimw, without nsklnir, that tin formula (or iiuma of pil.- MUST be. 1 XUfi lit. It's ttit name uno uaed y ' i DOCTOHS. ddiunctlvtly for men and women patient at noll Thornton A I Minor Clinic. Surprising QUICK pnllia- livo relief of pain. Hell, aorenc. Helps aoften and tends to shrink swelling- i;t ' tune Thornton & Minor's Kectal Oint- ment or Thornton A Minor Kectal Sup positories. If not thrilled at quirk re sults, the low cost refunded on request. ' At all good dn:g store everywhere. I Anxvrr I Prlaa Pal 27 Age 39 Metallic 29 Boundary substances (comb, form) 42 Palm fruit 30 Moist 43 Prince 34 Subject to 44 Wound marK abuse 45 Lampreys 35 Shield (var.) 46 Harem rooms 36 Sun 37 Measure of length 38 Wife of Ceraint In Arthurian 47 Was carried 50 High card 51 Narrow inlet 54 Ffne grain (ab.) 55 Early Eng lish (ab.) legend motion the multiple attack which smashed the wehrmacht in France, driving Its remnants back to the reich frontier and through the Siegfried line. This was the lineup of troops at five gateways to Germany: British Second army in the Neth- erlands, at the Westphallan gate in the lower Rhine valley, the best approach to Berlin; the U. S. First and Ninth armies at the Cologne plain gate, between Bel gium and the Rhine; the U. S. Third army, striking from Metz at the Moselle gate; the Seventh U. S. army at the Lorraine gate; and to the south, the French First army at the Belfort gap. Churches Arrange V-E Day Services In accordance with the procla mation of the president of the United States that Sunday, May 13, be set aside as a day of prayer, the Bend Ministerial alliance has announced a union service Sun day at 2:30 p.m. at the Methodist church. Rev. Kenneth Tobias will be the speaker, and the public Is In vited, Rev. W. I. Palmer, president of the alliance, reported this morn ing. THREE BABIES BORN Three recent births were report ed by the St. Charles hospital, In cluding two boys who were born today, and a girl born yesterday. Boys were born to Mr. and Mrs. L, D. Bruch, 435 Riverside, and to Mr. and Mrs. (ilen Pangburn, Route 1. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ward, 1220 Hill, are the parents of the girl. Germany Quits Oh boy! Two down and one to go. So let's set 'em up in the other alley and get the thing over, so we can again enjoy a life of peace. Let' s praise the Lord and pass our boys the ammunition to finish off the yellow "Sons of Heaven!" Jack Halbrook Halbrook Meury &58h' Lincoln Bond and Minnesota Four Million Men ... As Army Reserves Wanted By Chiefs Washington, May 8 fliwrhe war department wants a postwar peacetime standing army of 500, 000 regulars backed up by 4,000,- 000 active .reserves, it was dis closed today. The army's postwar plans were outlined at a closed session of the house military affairs committee by Brig. Gen. Edward A. Evans of the army general staff com mittee for reserve policy. Committee members said army plans, based on the assumption that congress, will approve com pulsory peacetime training, would give the nation a total of 4,500, 000 trained men who could be thrown into the field In approxi mately 120 days. Flans Indefinite What congress will do about compujsory training program re mains to be seen, Dut cnairman Clifton A. Woodrun, D., Va., of the house postwar military policy committee has announced " that his group will begin open hearings on the subject next month. The total of 4,500,000 asked by the army would include the 500, 000 regulars, 400,000 to 500,000 mpn who would be in the com pulsory training program at a given time, active reserves' who had completed their training and probably the national guard, com mittee members said. Under compulsory training bills before congress, a trainee would be listed as an "active reserve" for a period of several years after completing his training. Army Was Small In comparison to the size of this force, the army had 302,968 enlisted men and 23,192 officers on Aug. 31, 1940, a year and a half before the Pearl Harbor attack. Committee members were pre sented a memorandum dated Aug. 25, 1944 by chief of staff Gen. George C. Marshall who said the nation could choose between two types of military establishments after the war: 1. A large standing army. 2. A standing army "no larger than necessary to meet normal peace-time requirements, but backed up ,by "competent citizen soldiers" who had acquired ex perience through temporary train ing. Out Of Place Marshall said the large standing army system Is the type used by Germany and Japan and "has no place among the institutions of a modern democratic state based upon the conception of govern ment by the people." Meanwhile, Rep. Walter G. An drews, R., N. Y ranking republi can on the house military affairs committee, has accepted "full res ponsibility" for the disclosure that the army plans to discharge 2,000,000 men in the first 12 months after V-E day. The war department originally Intended to make public its de mobilization plans on or after V-E day. However, last Saturday lt confirmed demobilization stories which quoted "congressional members" as their source. Motors Phone 680 Additional Society China Benefit To Take Form Of Card Party Arranged as a benefit for Chi nese nurses, a card party is plan ned for Friday, May 18, at 8:15 p. m. at Trinity Episcopal parish house by members-of the Busi ness and Professional Women's club of Bend, an affiliate of the national federation which has as one of its projects the financing of training for nurses in Asia's most thickly populated country. In addition to aiding a gallant ally in -its great struggle,, the project will also help promote a closer friendship between profes sional women of the United States and China, federation leaders ooint out. The Chinese theater is especially important now that the European struggle Is over and American troops will be transfer red to the stand against Japan, it is stressed. The Bend club, organized a year ago, gained prominence during the sixth war loan drive, when they made dolls which were given with bond purchases. Very - attractive prizes ' have been donated by members for the party next week, it is said. A bas ket of groceries topped with a pound of butter, a carton of cig arets and a pair of coveted 61 gauge hose are mentioned as spe ciail incentives to buy tickets, which are available at the City Drug or from members of the or ganization. Tomorrow night the club will hold a dinner meeting at 8 p. m. in the Pine Tavern, when Dr. A. L. Strand, president of Oregon State ! college, will speak on "Peace Proposals." Mothers Invited Job's Daugh ters will hold a meeting at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Masonic temple, wnen tneir mothers will be special guests. There will be refresh ments and entertainment for the meeting, it has been announced. DRUNK CHARGE FACED Harold Neeters, 22, of 1490 New port avenue, today was held in the city jail on a drunk charge, as a result of his arrest last night in a Bond street hotel. Neeters faced hearing in municipal court this evening. . thought Ensign Whisenand On Ocean Voyage A Bend boy was aboard a tank landing craft which recently made a historic 4,000-mile overseas trip, it became known here today. He is Ensign Ben Whisenand, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Whisenand, 954 4i Broadway. For the feat in taking the small craft sucli . a distance, the com manding officer sent the follosv ing. message to the crew: 'your arrival today was watch ed with great interest and pride. By successfully completing this long overseas passage you have added another milestone to am phibious warfare. Well done to you and your group. I dare say all of you feel like Columbus." Reference to the long trip was made in a recent NBC news broadcast. Bend Boys Meet In Pacific Zone Two Bend boys now serving in the South Pacific recently got together-for a few hands of pi nochle and a talk about old times, according to Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Welch, 1225 Albany, whose son, Pvt. Homer Welch, wrote that he had seen Slc Melvin Sauers and enjoyed a two-day visit with his former chum. Both boys arrived only recently in the South Pacific theater. In the same mail with the letter about their chance encounter, Homer's parents received a letter for Americans us news comes of Europe's OD of our fathers, Lord of our far - Beneath whose awful Hand we hold Dominion over palm and pine Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget, lest we forget! The tumult and the shouting dies . . . i The captains and the kings depart . . . Still stands Thine ancient sacrifice, An humble and a contrite heart. Lord God of Hosts, be with us yet, Lest we forget, lest we forget! This rxarpifrvm Rudiard Kipling's famous pom 'Rtcissicnal" is publishtd as a Iribuu to the men, women and children of the United .Vations uhe have sacrificed much to bring victory to the cause of freedom, A reproduction of this message in color (sise 10 W) suitable for framing, n-ith no company signature will be sent free on nauot. Wnle Standard of California, S,w &..-, as Bush Street, San Francisco so STANDARD OF from their son asking for Melvin's address. 'The young seaman is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Sauers, 425 Riverside boulevard. Soldier Honored With Citation - I Clarence E. Saeer. who lost his i life In Luxembourg' in the battle of the Belgian bulge, has been posmumousiy awarded the pur pie neart and the presidential ci tation, according to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Duryee, 1363 Harmon, who recently received tne decorations. Pvt. Sager was killed in ac tion in an advance near Berle, Luxembourg, Jan. 5. Memorial services were held Palm Sunday at the Methodist church here. In addition to his parents, he is survived by his wife, the for mer Mary Elizabeth Esson, and one brother, Wallace Duryee. CARS ARE TAGGED Four more cars have been tagged for parking violations', ac cording to city police records to day. The cars were registered to ' Ed Culberson, 4 Franklin avenue; P. S. Olson, 138 St. Helens place; 1 A. Mayfield, Bend, for overtime parking, and Charles Boardman, ' 413 East Greenwood avenue, for parking in a loading zone. HOSTILITIES TERMINATE London, May 8 UH The parti san-controlled Czech radio said to day that hostilities have ended by I agreement in Prague, one of the I last nazl pockets of resistance in known of old . . . flung battle-line ... CALIFORNIA MOURNING UNCHANGED Washington, May 8 UrWn mnnlh's nprinri nf mournino- t rankiin u. nooseveii win run its full length until next Monday despite the victory in Europe. RINSO'S FRIDAY NlfiRT KUDLINEBS-v say: "De Kingfish don', win no arguments wid us since we been listemn' to de Richfield Reporter. We fades all his points wid a world of facts from de Richfield Reporter. 7 IV DIAMONDS 7th War Loan Buy Double an EXTRA War Bond A. T. NIEBERGALL Jeweler Nut to Capital Theater Phone 148-B WATCHES liberation