WEATHER Occasional light drizzles this morn ing followed by cloudy weather with little change in temperature this afternoon tonight and Sun day; cooler in mountains tonight. Tshe Hhelby Bnily steu I - State Theatre Today - “DESTINY” Starring ALAN CURTIS & GLORIA JEAN NEWS—MUSICAL—CARTOON CLEVELAND COUNTY’S NEWSPAPER SINCE 1894 TELEPHONES 1100 VOL. XLIII—18 ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS SHELBY, N. C. SATURDAY, JAN. 20, 1945 TELEMAT PICTURES SINGLE COPIES—5c J British Troops Cross Maas Unopposed; Nazis 7 Miles From Strasbourg PARIS, Jan. 20.—(/P)—Three successive German at tacks from the center of *’ cross-Rhine corridor have smashed the Seventh A. defense line back almost five miles into the village of Weyersheim, 8 1-2 miles above Strasbourg. PARIS, Jan. 20.—(fP)—British troops jumped the Maas (Meuse) river below Roermond unopposed last night, widen ing the Second Army’s push in the Dutch panhandle which is forcing the Germans back on the Roer river line 38 miles west of Dusseldorf. At the southern end of the western front, Americans fought up to 10,000 Germans linked in a solid bridgehead over the Rhine at one point only seven miles above Stras bourg. Just below the British opera tions, U. S. First and Third Army troops drove in upon St. Vith, highway stronghold in the dimin ishing Belgian bulge, and advanced north of captured Dlekirch, 30 miles to the south in Luxembourg. 'British assault troops cross ing the Maas by boat seised } Stevensweert without opposi tion. The crossing added, about i two miles to the seven-mile assault arc of white-camou flaged tanks and troops bulg ing into German lines within eight to 10 miles of the Roer river. Although Stevensweert had been abandoned, it was still too early to tell whether the enemy was be ginning a general withdrawal from the tip of his salient between Roermond and Geilenkirchen in Germany, a front dispatch said. British troops advanced up to 1,500 yards in mop-up operations, and pushed beyond Hongen, a mile from the German-Dutch frontier. Farther north, German para chute troop* seised * 'Zetten, six miles north of Nijmegen and four miles below Arnhem, but Allied counterattacks drove them back in night street fighting. The Germans apparently were See BRITISH Page 2 Half Of Canadiar Overseas Unit AAV OL Group Drafted For Foreign Service Loses Many Just Before Embarkation OTTAWA, Jan. 20.—(/P)—Half of a group of 15,600 Ca nadian home defense soldiers drafted for overseas service went absent without leave before embarkation, and 6,300 are still at large, defense minister A. G. L. McNaughton dis GERMANS IKY INFILTRATION Ground Action Relatively Quiet; Airmen Up De spite Weather ) ROME, Jan. 20——'The Ger mans have attempted infiltration tactics with small groups at a number of places on the east bank of the Senio river on the Adriatic sector of the Italian battlefront, Allied headquarters said today. Yesterday It was announced that a German bridgehead on the river's east bank in the Fusignano area on the same sector had been broken and the Nazis were driven back to their original positions. Despite bad weather that groun ded medium bombers, fighters and fighter bombers attacked enemy positions on the Eighth Army front yesterday. Thursday night light bombers of the tactical air force hit enemy communications in the Po valley, road and rail traffic. SHIPPING Coastal aircraft attacked ship ping in the northern Adriatic and Ligurian sea. The Mediterranean Allied air forces flew more than 900 sorties, destroying five enemy aircraft. Four Allied planes are missing. Rain and slush slowed down the Fifth army action to the lowest point in several days and patrols reported little contact with the enemy. A Nazi patrol raided the area of Monte Grande, southeast of Bologna, but was repulsed. South west of Bologna skirmishes occur red a mile weBt of Monte Belve dere, 3,500-foot height dominating Highway 64, as well as .southwest of Abetone and just northeast of Castel Vecchio. R Field Marshal Albert Kesselring’s w scouts again penetrated a wood See GERMANS Page 2 i closed today. Some 1,500 of these 7,000 return ed voluntarily or were aprehended, he added, and about 500 sailed for Britain along with the others who did not take unauthorized leaves. He said this total of 8,300 con scrlped men sent overseas was ac companied by “the full normal quota of reinforcements"—presum bly men who had volunteered for service abroad. The 6,300 still absent will be classed as deserters If they do not return within 21 days. Gen. Mc Naughton said the troop move ment began Christmas week. But the majority of men have not been classed as deserters yet, he added. FULL COMPLEMENT Army authorities anticipated late arrivals and absentees, the an nouncement said, and moved en See CANADIAN Page * WHAT’S DOING SUNDAY '' 10:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m.—UB.O. center open to service men visiting In city. MONDAY 10:00 a.m. — General board meeting of all pastors and workers of Kings Mountain As sociation at First Baptist church here. NAZI AGENTS HUNTED — FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover has sounded a nationwide alert for three German espionage agents who are under orders front' the Nazis to enter the United States. They are Oscar Max Wilms (top), Max Christian Johannes Schneemann (center), and Hans Rudolf Chris tian Zuehlsdorff (bottom). AIM® BOMB RAILS, BRIDGES LONDON, Jan-. 20—(AV- More than 760 U. S. Flying Fortresses with 600 Mustang Escorts hammer ed rail networks and Rhyne bridg es supplying the German forces In Alsace today after a one-day lapse in heavy bomber air as saults. The targets were freight yards at Heilbronn, north of Stuttgart, and at Rheine, north of Munster, and a Rhine highway-rail bridge at Mannheim. Poor weather llzfelted tactical missions of cantineql-based U. S. Ninth air force planes yesterday to 199 fighter’'bombed sorties and 28 reconnajLsanca flights, from which four planes wtf§ lost. Labor Draft Bill With Teeth Promised By Monday WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.—(£>>—' House Military committeemen pre dicted today they’ll have an ad ministration-sought labor draft bill—armed with prison penalties for evaders—written and ready for House consideration Monday. The bill, asked by the White House as a means of forcing men 18 to 48 into war Jobs and keeping them there, faces stiff House opposition, however. Or ganised labor supporters are against it and some farm state representatives say they fear the heightened manpow er drive may stt-ip the farms of workers. Abandoning the ,4dea of military labor battalions for those who leave jobs, the committee yester day substituted agr-ypumshment the draft dodger penalties of the se lective service act: Maximums of five yea* imprisonment and a $10,000 fine. Before the hfll is finished the same punishmetot will be set up for those who Agnore attempts to assign them tc^'essential jobs. The See LABOR Page 2 S INAUGURAL IS BRIEF, SIMPLE; CROWDSMALL Says Trend Of Civilization Always Upward; Cannot Live Alone CALLS FOlTcOURAGE WASHINGTON, Jan. 20.— (fP)—Franklin D. Roosevelt began his fourth presidential term today with a pledge that “we shall work for a just and durable peace as today we work and fight for a total victory in war.” “We can and we will achieve such a peace,” Mr. Roosevelt said after taking the oath in an unprecedented ceremony on the south portico of the White House. Before him the small est inaugural crowd in years had scuffed a light snow off the White House lawn. Abdut him on the portico were gath ered the government’s top leaders—including the new vice president, Harry Truman of Missouri. Praying to visipaJo see. the way that leads to a better life and world peace, the President said: “We shall strive for perfection. We shall not achieve it immedi ately—but we still shall strive. We may make mistakes—but they must never be mistakes which result from faintness of heart or abandonment of moral principle.” TEXT The text of probably the short est inaugural address in history: Mr. Chief Justice, Mr. Vice President—my friends: You will understand and, I be lieve, agree with my wish that the form of this inauguration be simple and its words brief. We Americans of today, to gether with our allies, are pass ing through a period of su preme test. It is a test of our courage — of our resolve — of our wisdom — of our essential decency. If we meet that test—successfully and honorably—we shall perform a service of historic importance which men and women and chil dren will honor throughout all See INAUGURAL Page 2 | Steps Taken To Curtail Use Of Power Officials of the city of Shelby were talcing steps this morning to comply with requirements of the war production board order cur tailing the use of electric current. As a supplier of electric power, the city must notify all of its custom ers by February 1 of the new or der which goes into effect on that date. If there are violations they must notify those who are respon sible for the infractions by regis tered mail, sending copies of the letters to the war production board for enforcement steps. Any consumer who violates the order is subject to penalties pre scribed by federal law, which may include the discontinuance of elec tric service at the direction of the war production board. Uses of electricity to be prohibit ed after February I include the fol lowing according to Information received yesterday afternoon by Mayor Harry S. Woodson: 1. Outdoor advertising add out door promotional lighting. 2. Outdoor display lighting ex cept Where necessary for the con duct of the business of outdoor establishments. 3. Outdoor decorative and out door ornamental lighting. 4. Show window lighting except where necessary for interior il lumination. 5. Marquee lighting in excess of 60 watts for each marquee. 6. Whiteway street lighting in excess of the amount determined by local public authority to be necessary for public safety. 7. Outdoor sign lighting, with [ limited specified exceptions.' ROOSEVELT SEES INAUGURAL MEDAL—President Roosevelt looks at the inaugural medal, issued to commemorate his fourth inauguration, in the hand of Sculptor Jo Davidson (right) in the White House. Look ing on are members of the Medals Committee, Melvin D. Hildreth (left) and Alfons Lander. Yanks On Left Flank Meeting Stiff Fight Battle Is Scattered Series Of Small Scale, Bitter Clash es; Enemy Well Dug In GENERAL MacARTHUR’S HEADQUARTERS, Luzon, Jan. 20.—(/P)—Lt. Gen. Walter Krueger is winning the im portant battle of the left flank. His Sixth Army is smashing Japanese tanks, silencing artillery concealed in caves and going after enemy soldiers in 10-foot-deep holes with flamethrower^. It is the first real fight since the Yanks landed at Lingayen gulf Jan. 9. PROMISCUITY IS ASSAILED » KINGS MOUNTAIN. — Declar ing that venereal infection has come to be more a result of prom iscuity—especially in teen-agers— than prostitution, Dr. Z. P. Mit chell, director of the county health unit, told the local Womans Club at its meeting Friday night that new stress needs to be placed on young people’s recreation and mor ality. The greatest number of new cases of venereal diseases are occurring in boys and girls from 16 to 20 years of age, the army calling for examination of numerous "girl friends’’ of soldiers visiting this section and fully 60 per cent of such investigations are revealing infec tion with one or both the princi pal venereal diseases, the health director said. He deplored prom iscuity which he said appears to be flourishing about certain taverns, in automobiles and even in some homes among so-called ‘‘friends’’. He said he is convinced that ade quate recreational facilities and more wholesome surroundings would cut down greatly the prom iscuity and in turn the infection which is showing up among men of the armed services visiting the territory. Miss Irene Clark, senior public health nurse, read a paper on tu berculosis and arrangements were made for the group to sponsor with the Parent-Teacher groups the showing of moving pictures on venereal subjects through’ schools. Mrs. E. A. Schenck, president, named a nominating committee composed of Mrs. W. K. Mauney, Mrs. J. S. Norman and Mrs. Don Blanton who will render their re port at the group’s next meeting when officers will be elected. Mrs. Ted Weir was in charge of the dinner and presented the speakers. Twenty Jap tanks have been knocked out and 600 Nipponese killed—some of them 23rd divis ion troops from ftlanchuria—in a three-day period along the left flank. "A. That flank jut# into the hilly, eastern side of Pangasinan prov ince. The broader it gets the more effectively it isolates Japa nese forces on the north around Baguio, Philippines summer capi tal, from other enemy forces on the south defending Manila. Significantly, since the fight ing flared up on the left flank, there has been scarcely any official word of a further push in strength southward by Yank columns last reported approaching Tarlac, 65 airline miles from Manila The battle of the left flank is not a continuous engagement of massed forces but rather a scat tered series of small scale, bitter clashes. The Americans are link ing up a solid line along the Ma nila-Baguio road in a 30-mile stretch from near Rosario on the north to the Agno river on the south near Villasis. From the north to south in that area, today’s communique and As See YARIKS Page 2 Battles Raging Along 800-Mile Front; Reds 214 Miles From Berlin LONDON, Jan. 20.—The Russians, driving to cut off East Prussia, have penetrated within 62 miles of the Gulf of Danzig in the Junkers Province and have smashed to within 214 miles of Berlin in the southwest, the German communique disclosed today. The Germans told of fierce battling against a rolling Red army tide of 3,000,000 men everywhere along a blaz ing 800-mile front as Moscow broadcasts Indicated a fresh series of victory announcements might be forthcoming to ALLIES SIGN ARMISTICE WITH HUNGARY Will Announce Terms With Provisional Gov ernment Loter LONDON, Jan. 20—So viet Russia, the United States and Britain have signed an armistice with Hungary’s pro visional government, the Mos cow radio announced today. Moscow said the terms would be published later. The Hun garian regime is headed by Col. Gen. Bela Miklos, and is seated at Debrecen in Rus sian-won territory. The armistice was arranged after three days’ negotiations. Foreign Commisar Vyaches lav Molotof headed Russia's delegation. Ambassador W. Av erell Harriman, Maj. Gen. i John R. Deane, and George F. Kennan, a U. S. representa tive on the European advisory commission, represented the United States. The British charge d’Affair es, John Balfour, headed Britain’s group. WHERE WILL WALLACEGO? Many Think Rejected Vice President To Get Place In Cabinet WASHINGTON, Jan. 20. —(A*)— Henry A. Wallace said goodbye to his office today with as handsome —if veiled—a guarantee of per sonal social security as any re jected vice president could ash. President Roosevelt, who sometimes is an old tease at his news conferences, assured a questioner yesterday that Henry won’t starve. And that, he added, is a real tip. Maybe the Iowa corn breeder knew exactly what his chief had in mind, but he wasn’t talking as he went down to the White House to administer the vice presidential oath to his successor, Harry Tru man. Was the president making ready to appoint his loyal lieutenant sec retary of commerce? Fresh tracks pointed that way. Two important See WHERE Page 2 Postwar Political Problems In Europe To Be Difficult You’ve got to |iave a lot of faith, hope and charity, to believe that tljere can 6e anything like a wholesale application of the prin ciples of the Atlantic charter to a Europe which already is rapidly slipping back Into its naughty po litical habits of pre-war days. That presumably is one of the delicate problems which will come before Messrs. Roosevelt, Church ill and Stalin at their forthcom ing meeting. I£ the problem is solved it certainly will require a lot of what we euphemistically call “realism.’’ i Prime Minister Churchill Thurs day nailed his position to the mast in a fighting speech which was one of the most forceful of his brilliant career. He told the world bluntly that he and Stalin had agreed on a joint policy for the Balkans to prevent future wars. He declared, however, that “this agreement raised no question of divisions of territory or spheres of interest after the war,” and that President Roosevelt had been kept “constantly informed.” See POSTWAR Page 3 mgnt irom the Kremlin. Marshal Ivan Konev’s First Uk rainian armor reached the area of Kepno (Kemperi in a 20 mile ad vance from Wielun northwest of captured Krakow. German home guard battalions, the Volkssturm, were battling to stop the smash along the upper Silesian border, Berlin said. Kepno is only nine miles from the frontier and 33 miles northeast of Breslau, the chief industrial center of German Silesia. Only 204 miles lie between Keuono and Berlin. Northwest of Warsaw Mar shal Konstantin Rokossovsky’s Second White Russian army reached or crossed the south western border of East Prus sia on a 35-mile front and stab bed to Gllgenburg, 62 miles from the Gulf of Danzig. Gilgenburg is only five miles from Tannenburg, where the me morial to von Hindenburg’s vic tory of the Masurian Lakes in the First World War was erected. The Russians also reached Nei denburg, eight miles inside East Prussia, and Chorzelle on the east Prussian-Polish border, the Ger mans announced. POLISH CORRIDOR In the center of the blazing front Marshal Gregory K. Zukov’s First White Russian army was pouring toward the Polish corridor between the Vistula and Warta (Warthe) in new breakthroughs, and the Germans said fighting was raging against the onfushing line of Red army tanks. The Russians had reached the area of Plock, Vistula river fort ress 125 miles from Pomernia. The Russians were 238 miles from Berlin in this sector. Moscow announced officially last See BATTLES Page 2 _ WAR POWERS ARE RATIFIED Telegrams Asking For More Pay For Teachers Flood Legislature RALEIGH, Jan. 20. — (£>)— The legislature today ratified a bill giv ing emergency war powers to the governor, thus reviving all procla mations issued under the act by former Governor Broughton. The 1943 act expired January 3, when the 1945 general assembly convened. Two senators and 23 representa J tives attended the brief, perfunc ! tory sessions today. The senate j passed a measure providing for the preparation and filing of records | of clerks of the Superior court and | Rep. McCracken of Macon intro duced a bill to place Macon county under the statewide primary law. Macon now used the convention form of nominations. TEACHER PAY More than 100 telegrams were received by members, most of them asking increased pay for public school teachers. It will not be necessary for Gov ernor Cherry to issue new procla mations, as the assembly action i will automatically invoke the re gulations framed by his predeces i sor. The emergency powers made i effective by the former governor established the North Carolina speed limit for motor vehicles at 35 miles an hour, and among other : things: j 1.—Altered the limits of the weight of motor vehicles engaged in transporting petroleum prod I ucts. 2.—Suspended and modified cer See WAR Page > 1