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ai Served By Leased Wire* ft CENTS | ftlFlife ASSOCIATED PRESS ^EVERYWHERE "Nh iflf ^ uimpress ■ V S V With Complete Coverage of _ - _ — ___ — - - ■ , ^ ™ State and National New* ^7 - ^tixie ip©isir eaTVliFre@®tangs amb> g>iugA8yeiE^ ---- viiL- 17.—NO. »0._ Jps^MINOTON. N. C.. SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9. 1945. st pines irauv FINAL EDITION Nazis Heard P.R., Churchill phone Talks Gen. Marshall Discloses Enemy Intercepted Pre War Conversations HE SHUNNED PHONE May Have Been One Reason Why He Did Not Call Hawaii Dec. 7,1941 By RAYMOND LAHR WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.— (U.R) — Gen. George C. Marshall disclosed today that the Germans intercepted Ire-war telephone conversations be the late President Roosevelt and former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill. He told the Pearl Harbor investi .-tin. committee that knowledge the German interceptions may have been one reason why he did "0, telephone a war warning to Hawaii on the morning of Dec. 7.. The message was dispatched by Western Union and commercial cable and did not reach Lt. Gen. Walter C. Short, Hawaiian Army commander, until hours after the Japanese sneak attack Under questioning by committee members. Marshall took on his own shoulders a share in Wr Deprtment responsibility for not relizing in late November that Short’s com mand was not properly alterted for a surprise attack. In response 'to a warning from Washington of possi ble hostilities, Short sent a reply in dicating his command was alerted for sabotage only. Last week Lt. Gen. Leonard T. Gerow, iGrmer chief of the Army’s war plans division, told the com mittee he would take whatever blame there was for not noting that Short's reply was inadequate. Sen. Humer Ferguson, R., Mich asked Marshall if he agreed that it was Gerow’s “full responsibility.” "I would not say that was his full responsibility,” Marshall replied. “It was his direct responsibility. But I had a responsibility as Chief of Staff, too.” Marshall's first war warning, the one to which Short replied, was sent Nov. 27, 1941. The second, which arrived too late, was sent a short time before the Dec. 7 attack. Asked why he did not call Short directly by telephone to deliver the \ (Continued on Page Three; Col. 1) SHIP DISCHARGES SMALL CARGO HERE S. S. Pompero of American Hawaiian Lines Calls From Pacific Coast The Steamship Pompero, first War Shipping administration ves sel to berth in Wilmington since V I Day, docked at the Wilmington Terminal warehouse yesterday morning. The ship discharged its cargo and left at 1 o’clock p. m., tor Norfolk, its next port of call. The ship came to Wilmington from the West coast. Its local cargo consisted of canned goods. American-Hawaiian ship lines, acting as agent for the WAS, has scheduled a second boat, the S. S. New Rochelle Victory, for the local Port on Jan. 16. The Pompero was tour days ahead of schedule yes terday. A second ship is due into 'the Wilmington Port within the next week to pick up a cargo of steel, clothing, food and portable houses consigned to the French govern Blei'u- It will be the first such cargo to be loaded here since the end of lend-lease. The cargo will e handled by the Cape Fear Ship Pmg company. WEATHER i v,„, „ forecast and ™l.CaroJ’na—Increasing cloudiness •older* «■ ‘-“nday followed by rain and dav Portions Sunday night. Mon Mion r preceded by rains in east i Helen™5! £ S- Weath»r Bureau) •ndine -°lnglcal data for the 24 hours 8 ‘"l0 P-m. yesterday. i.i(i Temperatures 7:30 P-mm49 4 : 7:30 a-m' 38' i1:3° P-m- 57: N°main5on 6i: Minimum 5"7; Mean 47; i.in , Humidity 538 7:S° a'm' 83i 1:30 p'm' 30; ,,3»°pam!' 80; 7:30 a m' 63; 1:30 p-m' 30; Total < Precipitation 0. 0t incil°sr 24 hours ending 7:30 p.m.— i9i inches'6 the £irst o£ £il* month— 1. CoS and ^/fble'Tpublished by U. ana Geodetic Survey) "'iimington Hi*h Low gton - 12:32 a.m. 7:27 a.m. Hasonbn™ , ■ 1:14 P.m. 8:32 p.m. °r° lnl«t - 10:36 a.m. 4:10 a.m. Sunrise i .nR. I*:58 P-m. 5:05 p.m. ‘1:05am- at ’ SunEet 5:03; Moonrise i River c™Moonset 9:34 p.m. S^!ey^fca«e.eN- C. at 8 c°ntmued <,a Page Two; Col. 1 -— ' . - 4? ®* Marshall In Thoughtful Pos' J? 4* ^ ----- AAf'Ar . Gen. George C. Marshall, former chief of staff, holds his chin throughtfully as he listens to a question asked him by a member of the joint House-Senate committee investigating the Pearl Harbor dis aster in Washington, D. C British Given Wide Authority In Java - ORDER NEW DRIVE Sweeping Power To Re store Order Granted To Gen. Christison By JOHN BOWER United Press Staff Correspondent BATAVIA, Java, 'Dec. 8—(U.R)— The British have received sweep ing new authority to restore order in Java, it was reported today as British troops opened a new of fensive in the summer capital of Bandoeng. The powers were granted to British Lt. Gen. Sir Philip Chris tison, Allied commander in the Netherlands Indies, at a confer ence Thursday at the Singapore headquarters of Adm. Lord Louis Mountbatten, Allied commander for southeast Asia. May Direct Troops The report came after reliable sources had said another Britisn division and 30,000 Dutch troops might be diverted to Java to crush Indonesian Extremists fighting a gainst a return of Netherlands rule to the East Indies. The British have two divisions in Java. tt _i_ T 'XT r1\T /xrtlr nnt i^JL. 1XUUU11UO w . " '*** “ “ — * * ing governor-general of the Indies who headed the Netherlands dele gation at the Singapore meeting, said the door was still open to dis cussions with Indonesian leaders. He saw a much greater possibility than in recent days for a resump tion of meetings with the Indone sians. The British spokesman said Christison would take all neces sary action to carry out his man date because he believed the DutcH and “all moderate and enlightened Indonesian leaders will welcome the action about to be undertaken." Word to that effect has been com municated to Premier Sutan Sjah rir of the self-proclaimed Indone sian republic. Lacks Power The British source said the Al lied viewpoint was that Sjahrir’s government lacked sufficient abili ty, power and personnel to tackle such problems as the grave econo mic conditions. On the fighting front, dispatches reported that British troops, back ed by heavy mortar fire, opened an offensive in Bandoeng early to day. The British began driving into the northernmost part of the town to oust Indonesians who were warned to evacuate. At Semarang, in central Java, six Thunderbolt fighter-bombers (Continued on Page Two; Col. 4) Trial of Yamashita Pleases Wainwright PHOENIX, Ariz., Dec. 8 — UP)—Gen. Jonathan M. Wain wright, wlur surrendered at Corregidor to the Japanese in 1942, was asked today what he thought of the result of Yama shita’s trial. "I am delighted,” was the grim response. He added, in a milder tone, “I hope it (the death sentence by hanging) is put into effect.” Gen. Wainwright is spend ing a few days resting here be fore continuing to New York to assume command of the east ern defense command on Jan. 15. RUSSIANS MAKE CHINESE GRANTS Give Regulars Permission To Occupy Important Manchurian Cities CHUNGKING, Dec. 8—Ml—Rus sia was reported today to have granted Chinese government troops permission to occupy three cities forming the backbone of Man churia, including the free P°rt of Dairen. The government Army news paper Ho.Ping Pao said the other cities were the capital, Changchun, 390 miles northeast of Dairen, and Harbin, 150 miles north of Chang chun. It added that all would be occupied soon. Mukden, Manchuria’s largest city, was not mentioned. It also lies along the main nqrth-south railway running up the spine of the vast territory and Chungking troops were last reported on its outskirts waiting for a Russian signal be fore entering. Ho Ping Pao quoted as its authority Chiang Chung-Kuo, son of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek and Chungking’s principal negotia tor at Changchun. The newspaper— said young Chiang, who is Commissioner ol Foreign Affairs for Manchuria, would return to Chungking in a few days to report. The asserted agreement covering the great port of Dairen was oui of line with previous accounts, which said the Russians had ban (Continued on Page 3; Column 3) ked Support Of Atom Plan To Be Sought Byrnes and Bevin Want To Give Little Fellows Voice In Control PREPARE FOR PARLEY British and Americans Op timistic Over Forthcom ing Moscow Meet By JOHN M. HIGHTOWER WASHINGTON, Dec. 8—(A*)—Sec retary of State Byrnes and Foreign Minister Bevin almost certainly will seek Russian support for - a formula to give th| little fellows a voice in control of atomic energy when they meet Foreign Commis sar Molotov in Moscow next week. Diplomatic officials said today that preliminary agreement on some sort of atomic control formu la will be an important step toward building closer relations among the great powers. The problem is to come up formally as the United Nations assembly meeting in Jan uary. Prefers Assembly Byrnes reportedly wants the as sembly of the United Nations rather than the security council to handle it because (1) 31 nations rather than 11 would play some part, and (2) the big-power veto would not apply. Authorities here believe the British share these views. Byrnes moved into a busy week end today in preparation for flying to Moscow as early as he can get away. Officials said he must leave Wednesday at the latest in order to reach the Soviet capital by next Saturday, when the big-three for eign ministers conference opens. Here are high spots of the days developments building up to the Moscow talks: 1. The State Department mad public the text of the Russian note rejecting an American proposal that Soviet and British troops as well as American be pulled out ol Iran by January 1. Russia blamed uprising in Iran on “reactionary elements’’ seeking to deny national rights to the population of northerr Iran. The Jan. 1 deadline was re jected in favor of an earlier agree ment to get out by March 2. 2. Byrnes received a voluminous first-hand report from publisher Mark Ethridge on the status of po litical freedoms in Russian-domin. ated Romania and Bulgaria. Eth eridge’s findings support Americar refusal to recognize the presenl governments in those countries, bm do not close the door to steps by which recognition would be pos sible. 3. Byrnes spent considerable time going over testimony to be presented next week to the Senate Foreign Relations committee inves tigating charges against State De (Continued on Page ,Two; Col. 4) COMMUNITY TREE LOCATION CHANCED Postoffice Site Selected Foi Annual Affair; Caroling Program Planned Although Wilmington’s communi ty Christmas tree this year will be more elaborate than during 'the war years navoidable circum stances have prevented the city from resuming its pre-war practice of decorating a magnificent tree in Hilton park in holiday garb. In its stead, members of the Ju nior Chamber of Commerce wil. work with the city and a tree wil be placed on the postoffice lawr and decked in festive lights and or naments. * The lights will be turned on by Santa Claus, following his arriva on a special Atlantic Coast Line train at 4 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 18. Not only will the holiday celebra tion appeal to the eyes, but the ear! a S' well. Visitors to tree will hear (Continued on Page Three; Col. 4' New Type Bomber Crosses Continent In 5 Hours, 17 Minutes To Set Mark WASHINGTON, Dec. 8.— (U.R) — An odd-looking airplane with two engines in its belly and twin pro pellers in its tail, the Army’s Douglas XB-42 “Mixmaster,” flew here nonstop from Long Beach, Calif, in five hours, 17 minutes, and 34 seconds today for a new cross-continent speed record. The Mixmaster, a medium bomber in wartime and a 48-pas senger transport in peace, left Long Beach at 1:22 p. m. EST and buzzed the Army’s Bolling Field here at 6:39.34 after a 2,295-mile flight on which it averaged 432 miles an hour. In so doing it broke the unofficial record of six hours and three mitt utes set by a Boeing C-97 transporl in a recent flight from Seattle tc Washington. The new record, too, is unoffic ial, inasmuch as the Mixmaster’s route was not plotted by the Nat ional Aeronautical association. Pushed most of the way by a tail wind provided by nature in addi tion to the generated by its owr counter-rotating propellers, th« Mixmaster made the cross-countrj dash two minutes faster than its pilots expected it to. The plane was piloted by Lt. Col. H. E. Warden, chief of the Ail Transport Command’s Bombard ment branch. His co-pilot anc the only other occupant of the craf was Capt. Glen W. Edwards. As ! medium bomber the XB-42 woulc carry three crewmembers. After buzzing the field and beinf clocked in, the Mixmaster landed— and immediately developed me chanical trouble. It was supposec to taxi to where a large group o photographers, Army officials, anc Douglas Aircraft Corp. official! were waiting to greet the pilots (Continued on Page Two;* Col. 3] STRIKERS REJECT TRUMAN’S PLEA TO END GM WALKOUT; PLAN TO FIGHT LABOR BILLS • - ; ; i GM, Union Talks Progressing Despite Rejection Of Appeal WASHINGTON, Dec. 8—(IP)— Secretary of Labor Schwellen bach said today that negotia tions between General Motors and the CIO-Auto Workers still are progressing hopefully de site rejection of President Tru man’s back-to-work plea. He said he was “not sur prised’’ by the decision of the union council. The White House said there would be no comment from the President, now. Schwellenbach indicated a belief that the President may hold off appointment of a fact finding commission to study the General Motors dispute so long as the' negotiations be tween the company and the union are in progress. What other action the govern ment may take, if any, was not disclosed by the Secretary of Labor. ■ Schwellenbach will go to Detroit Monday to address a lawyers’ guild dinner, by ar rangement made months ago. He empahsized that his visit in the automotive center is not prompted by the General Mo tors strike. He will spend Monday in Detroit and return to Washing ton Tuesday morning. He is due to testify in behalf of President Truman’s proposed legislation for establishing fact-finding procedures for ma jor disputes in basic industries before a Senate committee on Wednesday, and House com mittee on Thursday. John L. Lewis, of The United Mine Workers will lead off the House committee’s testimony Monday. Chairman Ramspeck (D-Ga.) said William Green of the AFL will be heard Wednes day. Mr. Truman, in his message to Congress last Monday, said he would not wait for enact ment for such legislation to deal with the General Motors and U. S. steel disputes, which (Continued on Page Three; Col. 3) Labor, Employment Bills May Upset Solonsf Holiday Plans -—— x _ MIST HIDES CLUES IN PLANE SEARCH Darkness Forces Rescue Parties Back In Hunt For Navy Bombers MIAMI, Fla., Dec. 8. — <U.R) — lleavy ground mists shrouded pos able clues in the search for five missing Navy bombers today, and darkness forced rescue aircraft and a land party back to their bases after a third day of fruitless hunt ing. The ^day failed to develop any hope from the spark lit early in the morning when planes sighted fires —possibly flares—and men in the marshlands of the east-central Flo rida coast. Weary pilots and crewmen brought their planes back from long sweeps over the Atlantic. More than 200 planes had blanket ed a tremendous area in the great est search the Navy has launched from American shores. - There was no assurance thaf .1_ _u TVir* TMnvv was intent, however, on pursuing every possible hint that might lead to discovery of the 14 men whose flight of torpedo bombers vanished without trace late Wednesday. It was believed that 13 others, missing in a mariner patrol bom ber which was hunting for the five, were dead in a mid-air explosion over the sea. The first sign of hope—and it was described by a high navy officer here as “maybe a clue and prob ably not one”—came early today from the pilot of an Eastern Air Lines plane. Capt. J. D. Morrison, flying from Miami to New York, radioed back that he saw what appeared to be a flare near Melbourne, Fla. A few minutes later, he said, he saw What happened to be a fire and a man. Navy organizers of the search said that they were being investigated, but held out little hope that the blazes had been set by irvivors. It was pointed out th.'f no such flares or lights had been seen on Wednesday or Thursday nights, when there was more chance that survivors might have been active. COUNTY FAR SHORT ON ‘E’ BOND QUOTA Campaign Chairmen »D i s dose Sales Are Less Than Half Fulfilled Emsley A. Laney and J. G. Thornton, co-chairmen of the War Finance committee of New Han over county,, announced yesterday that the county was still far short of its “E” bond quota for the Vic . tory Loan drive. Sales of $521,775 had been made through Dec. 4 against, a county quota of $1,487,000, they said. : Bonds purchased through Dec. 31 will be applied against this quota, I they explained. In stating these figures the co ; chairmen said, “We wish to thank the Star-News for its cooperation • in informing the public from time I to time of the drive. The officials further explained [ that New Hanover county has i never fallen down on a War Loan quota, and it is their hope the county will retain its 100 per cent record. LOG-JAM LOOMS Plan To Penalize Unions For Wildcat Strikes Comes Up Tuesday By WILLIAM F. ARBOGAST WASHINGTON, Dec. 8. — (ff) — Labor and employment bills today threatened to create a legislative log-jam and upset congressional plans for a long Christmas holiday. Capitol Hill leaders would like to give President Truman a labor for a Christmas present — that’s what he asked for in a special mes sage this week—but they aren’t so sure they can deliver. They also would like to heed his request for prompt action on em ployment legislation before leaving town on Dec. 20 or 21. But they are not too optimistic about that, eith er. Bill On Program A labor bill, not the one the presi dent wants, is on the House pro gram for consideration Tuesday. Written by the military committee, it would penalize unions striking in violation of their contracts and re strict union political activities. Whether it is called up for a deci sion may depend on progress the House Labor committee makes on a bill the president wants to set up for a fact-finding board to handle major labor controversies. The labor committee starts hear ings Monday. Acting Chairman Ramspeck (D-Ga) had hoped to get IVio Kill VsA-f/'tvA fha Wrmco within n week, but labor is fighting it and opponents within the committee are threatening to force long hear ings. Consequently the military com mittee may offer major provisions of the labor committee’s measure as an amendment to the bill com ing before the House Tuesday. Chairman May (D-Ky) of the Mili tary committee has threatened to do that unless the labor committee acts quickly. Hearings on the Se nate side start Wednesday. Slated For Vote Another labor-opposed bill is ten tatively set for House vote later in the week, if it can be crowded into the bulging docket. It would ex tend provision of the 1943 "anti racketeering” act to labor unions. Three _ days of the house week have been set aside for debate on a sharply revised senate-passed so called “full employment” bill. One of the many undisposed of items in President Truman’s 21-point legis lative program, it spells out a gov ernment policy for maintaining a high level of employment and pur chasing power. It makes no men tion of the “full employment” goal sought in the senate measure. Indications of how bitter the fight will be on this bill came when the (Continued on -Page Two; Col. 2) HOMMA ACCUSED OF DEATH MARCH Formally Charged With Atrocities Against Amer icans, Filipinos TOKYO, Sunday, Dec. 9— {&) The United States today formally charged Japanese Lt. Gen. Mass haru Homma. conqueror of the Philippines, with permitting the death march of Bataan and other atrocities against Filipinos and Americans. The indictment, made public by General MacArthur, also named four other officers accused of sane tioning murder, brutalities and otb er crimes during the early months of. the war in the Philippines. Homma. 58. who is held at Omori prison camp outside Tokyo, will be taken to Manila for trial short ly, presumably before the same type of military commission which two days ago sentenced Lt. Gen Tomoyuki Yamashita to death Some of the other officers nam ed already are in the Philippines. The trial dates will be announced later by Lt. Gen. Wilhelm D. Styer, commander of U. S. forces in the Southwest Pacific. t The indictment, consisting of twr broad charges and 42 specifica tions. does not accuse Homma him ocil -- - specifically ordering them, but o; permitting troops under his com mand to murder, rape, rob, pil large and othewise violate the laws of war. The other officers listed were Lt, Col. Saichi Ohta, commander oi the dreaded Kempei Tai (militarj police) in the Philippines during 1942; Major Zanzo Saito, comman der of the so-called “Tiger Unit" of the Japanese army; Major Taka shi Tohei, commander of a Kempe: Tai unit’ near Manila: and Col. Akira Nagahama, chief of th6 Philippines Kempei Tai from late 1942 to 1945. Atrocities mentioned in the 45 specifications included the bombing of Manila by the Japanese after it had been declared an open city, the bombing of a general hospital on Bataan, the bayonetting to death of American and Filipino hospital patients, the beheading of an en tire Filipino family, and the use of live targets in bayonet prac tice. Particular emphasis was laid on the Bataan death march in which thousands of American and Fili pino prisoners of war perished. Two Youngsters Injured When Struck By Taxicab Four-year-old Billy Lee Grissom, son of Mr. and-Mrs. William Gris som, 16-G Nesbitt Courts, was in jured and his 11-year-old sister, Peggy, suffered slight bruises and shock yesterday afternoon when struck by a taxicab on South Front between Princess and Market streets. The children, crossing Front street from east-to-west near the Bailey theater, were struck by a Bluebird cab operated by Willie J. Goodman, colored, 12-F Robert R. Taylor homes. Goodman was charged with reckless operation and jailed in lieu of $500 bond. Billy Lee Grissom’s injuries con sisted of a fractured right leg and severe body bruises. He was car ried to James Walker Memorial hospital for medical attention His sister was not hospitalized after be ing checked by a physician. Witnesses to the accident tolc Police Lieut. O. V. Thompson, nearby when the children were struck, that the pair dodged intc the taxicab, traveling south at the Front street between intersectior cross-walks and were struck b> time of impact. Shopper-crowded (Continued on Page Two; Col. 1) r > CHARGE PRESIDENT WITH USING ‘CLUB’ Claim Shutdown Will Not End Urttil 30 Per Cent Raise Granted By ALLEN V. BOWLING United Press Staff Correspondent DETROIT, Dec. 8.—(UP) —In sharp rejection of a White House appeal for end of the General Motors shut down, the United Automobila Workers union (CIO) tonight accused President Truman of using a “policeman’s club” to abrogate labor’s right to strike* UAW President R. J. Thomas sternly warned the President that he was “striking at the heart” of the program which led to a Demo cratic election victory in 1944. As the powerful union mobilized its 650,000 members for a fight against the administration’s labor legislation proposals, the wage dis pute paralyizng General Motors continued with more than 175,000 workers idle in 93 GM plants. Spurn Offer a n( OAO n rf n tno representing GM local unions bit terly spurned the company’s re peated offer to increase wages 13 1-2 cents an hour, or approxi mately 10 per cent. The conference said the strike would not end until its 30 per cent wage gain demands had been "fully satisfied.” Then the delegates angrily de fied Mr. Truman’s appeal for an immediate upturn to work in a "display of (patriotism” to maintain reconversion production at war time levels. A resolution adopted by unani mous vote of the conference re iterated the charge of CIO Presi dent Philip Murray that “the fed eral administration yields in ab ject cowardice” to the "arrogance of industry.” "We are asked to retreat from economic Democracy as furthered under the courageous leadership of Franklin D. Roosevelt,” the resolution said. In another resolution, the con ference asked 25,000 members of the United Electrical, Radio and ■n it _ tir_1_▼ T— I_/OTCi. _ 4 xuauuilic ti umvi o v/***w** u« five GM plants to join the strike “if the company persists to ne gotiate in bad faith.” Walter P. Reuther, UAW vice president directing the union’s strike strategy, said the actions will be reported back to local unit# immediately and unanimous ap» proval of the conference resolu tions is expected by Tuesday night Keynotes Attitude Thomas keynoted the union’s at titude in condemning administra tion requests for compulsory fact finding boards and a mandatory 30-d'ay “cooling off” ban on strikes. “It would tear from the hands of labor unions the major weapon essential _to effective collective bargaining with the anti-board managerial groups of billion dollar corporations,” he asserted. “With out the right to strike at a time chosen by the union you just do not bargain collectively with the management that runs the automo bile industry.” Thomas virtually charged the president with a strike-breaking movement when he cited the dif ference between the railway labor act signed by President Coolidge and the new administration pro posal. “President Coolidge broke no strike when he signed the railway labor act in 1926,” he said. “There was no major railroad strike at that time. The proposal of Presi dent Trumah is completely and utterly different.” The labor chieftain emphasized that under the railway act there is no compulsory cooling off period during which a strike is banned. Also, he saidt the act provide* no penalties on labor unions. Under provisions of the admin* istration’s proposal, however, strikes called during the 30-day cooling-off interim would be illegal and strikers involved "would be subject to penalties’’ of other fed eral labor acts, Thomas said. Attacks Bill "There is no question that en actment of the bill will result in the breakdown of proper collec tive bargaining,” he declared. "The corporations will refuse to bar gain honestly, relying on the re strictive effects of President Tru (Continued on Page Three; Col. 7)
Wilmington Morning Star (Wilmington, N.C.)
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Dec. 9, 1945, edition 1
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