WEATHER' Cloudy with occasional light rain and little change in temperature to day followed by partly cloudy to night and Tuesday. Cooler Tues day and in west portion tonight. Tshe Hhelhy Baily Him« - State Theatre Today - “And Now Tomorrow” Starring Alan LADD _ Loretta YOUNG NEWS — MUSICAL CLEVELAND COUNTY’S NEWSPAPER SINCE 1894 TELEPHONES 1100 VOL. XLIII-19 ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS SHELBY, N. C. MONDAY, JAN. 22, 1945 TELEMAT PICTURES SINGLE COPIES—6c Invading Annies, Only * 80 Miles Apart, Threaten To Split Area In Two LONDON, Jan 22.—Russian armies captured Inster burg today in a sweep which rapidly was engulfing East Prussia and drove past the Vistula bend in Poland to within 182 miles of Berlin. The second and third White Russian armies, driving into East Prussia from the southwest and northeast, were only 80 miles from a junction which would slice East Prussia in two. . Marshal Gregory Zhukov’s central offensive overran Labiszyn, 182 miles from Berlin and only 11 miles southwest of Bydgoszcz at the elbow of the Vistula, where it turns __ norm 10 jjanzig. Bydgoszcz (Bromberg) is the seventh city of Poland with a pop ulation of 141,000. It is 90 miles southwest of Dan zig, 190 miles from Berlin and 34 miles from the German border of Pomerania, Inowroclaw, Aleksandrow, and Argenaualso were captured in Zhukov's drive on the main route from Warsaw to Berlin. All three towns are within 32 miles of By dgoszcz. Insterburg, a city of 40,000 pop ulation, is only 50 miles from Ko nigsberg, capital of East Prussia, and is 37 miles Inside the prov ince. Stalin announced the fall of the key railway center in his 18th order of the day In six days, and praised 44 generals for taking part in the capture. Moscow dispatches said Cherni akhovsky's tanks had blazed a path to within 26 miles of Konlgs berg on the northeast in a con quest which was overrunning al most half the rich old province of Prussian estates. Apparently this was the neigh borhood of the lower end of the Kurisches Haft, coastal lagoon. DEFEN8E CALL Berlin called for a defense of the Reich by all Germans who can handle a weapon. Marshal Stalin's five great armies, smashing along an 800-mile front from the Baltic to Budapest, bore down on Berlin from 195 miles at two places and rolled over many German towns and villages in Silesia 28 miles from Breslau, Adolf Hitler’s ninth city. Only a square of northwestern " Polish territory about 100 miles wide and 160 miles long re mained as a buffer between Stalin’s massed forces and the length of the German frontier. The German communique lnfer entially admitted the Soviet cap ture of Tannenberg, East Prussian military shrine, by announcing that Marshal Konstantin Rokos See INVADING Page 2 Wallace Calls For Full Employment Opposition To His Appointment Spreads On Capitol Hill; Jones Resentful WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—(£>)—Henry A. Wallace call ed for “full and efficient employment” throughout the na tion today as opposition to his appointment as secretary of commerce spread on capitol hill. SPANGLER WILL HEAD WAR FUND Red Cross Campaign Will Open Nationally March 1 Mai A. Spangler, sr., will again direct the Red Cross War Fund campaign It was announced today by Dale R. Yates, chapter chair man, who said the well known civic leader had agreed to accept the chairmanship lor his fourth successive year. Cleveland county’s quota In the national campaign, which begins March 1, will be made known to chapter officials in the very near future, Mr. Yates said In reveal ing that the national asking will be in the neighborhood of $25,000, 000. SERVICE UP 12 PER CENT The Red Cross has expend ed its service by 12 per cent nationally and internationally under war time operations of the past 12 months in the 3, 757 chapters comprising the organisation. Work of the lo cal chapter, particularly in the field of home service to fami lies of those in service, has been expanded far more than 12 per cent, according to Mrs. W. R. Casstevens, secretary. The campaign in Cleveland county will be timed according to the national drive and Mr. Spang ler hopes to have his city and county organizations in shape for an intensive drive to be launched on the opening date and be cleaned up as rapidly as possible. In announcing the acceptance by Mr. Spangler of the chairman ship, Mr. Yates said the Red Cross i and the public are fortunate to1 have secured so competent a lead er and added that he is confident the goal will with whole-hearted public cooperation, be not only attained but also exceeded as in past years under Mr. Spangler’s direction. Even before his nomination to take over the job of protesting Jesse Jones reached the Senate, the former vice president Issued a statement saying: “I am happy that the Presi dent has named me to a posi tion providing for continuous activity in the public welfare. “In the highly geared world of today and tomorrow, there must be full and efficient em ployment throughout the na tion.” The Senate received Wallace’s formal nomination from the White House shortly after It convened at noon. In what appeared to be a bid for WASHINGTON, Jan. 22. — I^V-A move to strip Henry A. Wallace of control over Federal loan and financing agencies as commerce secretary was start ed in the senate today by Fin ance Committee Chairman George (D-Ga). southern democratic support when his nomination comes up for con firmation, Wallace summed up his new Job as one designed to See WALLACE Page 2 I" '■■■■ 11 . U. S. AIRMEN SHOOT DOWN 16 JAP PLANES Carrier Aircraft In New Raids On Formosa And Ryukyus AIR REINFORCEMENTS U. S. PACIFIC FLEET HEADQUARTERS, Pearl Harbor, Jan. 22.—(^—Unit ed States carrier-based air craft, which Japanese reports said were again striking at Formosa and the Ryukyus, shot down 16 enemy planes attempting to reach the Phil ippine battlefront on Luzon. This Navy interception of air reinforcements for Gen. Tomoya ki Yamashita’s hard-pressed Lu zon force was reported in a Pacific fleet communique yesterday. It said the enemy planes, flying from Formosa, were shot down Friday. The communique made no mention of any new attack on Formosa which Tokyo radio said was being raided, along with Okinawa island in the Ryukyus, by about 450 carrier based planes. The Tokyo re port added that “air battles are now raging” and that 38 raiding planes had been de stroyed and 21 others damag ed. It said “several cities and towns were badly damaged.” Such eaesqy yepqrfci Owquently precede official amw(Rfeeftu$nt from this headquarters of fleet op erations. Adm. William F. Halsey’s Third fleet carrier planes last hit Formosa Jan. 14 and 15 after raids along the Indo-Chlna and China coast. (Gen. Douglas MacArthur’s com munique, issued at Luzon, said 8m V. S. AIRMEN Page 2 ALLIED AIRMEN OVER GERMANY Britain B»«d Bombers At tack Military Targets Today LONDON, Jan. 22. —— Flying Fortresses and Liberators from Britain braved wintry gales over the continent and bombed targets inside Germany this afternoon. Blizzards checked the pace of the Allied air operations during the morning. The day raid followed nn attack on Kassel, 75 miles south of Han nover, last night by RAF bomb ers. Yesterday American reavy bomb ers from Britain, flying in tem peratures as low as 67 degrees be low zero, plastered rail targets in southwest Germany while Italy based bombers attacked objectives in Austria. Nine hundred U. S. Eighth air force Liberators and Fortresses, with an escort of 500 fighters, hit Mannheim, Aschaf f enburg and Hellbronn. A medium force of hea vy bombers from the U. S. 15th airforce skirted the Alps ad pene trated as far north as Vienna. Continent-based dive bombers of the U. S. Ninth Air force flew 539 sorties, principally against motor transport and armored circles on German roads east of the Arden nes. THE WAR TODAY: Germany In Tight Spot,. Caught Between Two Fronts By DeWITT MacKENZIE.Al* Writer Germany's position in the path of the Red avalanche hourly be comes more grim. Muscovite forces have bludgeon ed their way well into German in dustrial Silesia on the road to Breslau, important railway center and next to Berlin the greatest city in Prussia. They’ve stormed in to East Prussia and captured Tan neberg, scene of Russia’s greatest defeat in the last war and Val halla of the Prussian militarism which the Allies have vowed to destroy as the curse of Europe. The Red war machine is driving the Hitlerites before it across the frozen plains of {Roland towards the borders of the Reich. How long can the Germans hold out against this terrific offensive —an onslaught unprecedented in history for weight!and intensity? The Hitlerites are trank to admit that the European war has en tered its decisive stage. The only point in doubt ip How long the Reich can hold out. In trying to find an answer we shouldn’t jump to the conclusion See GERMANY Page 2 mm CROWD ON WHITE HOUSE LAWN FOR INAUGURAL—President Franklin D. Roosevelt takes his fourth term oath on the rear porch of the White House as diplomats, members of congress, and distinguished guests look on in foreground, standing in the snow. On the porch are cabinet members, Supreme court jus tices, and their wives. Roosevelt grandchildren watch from stairs. DR. BARNHARDT DEATH YICT1M Rites This Afternoon For Well-Known Methodist Minister Bishop Edwin D. Mouzon of Charlotte and District Superinten dent E. M. Jones of Gastonia head ed a group of Methodist leaders gathered In Shelby this afternoon to pay final tribute with local friends and associates to the me mory of Dr. J. H. Barnhardt. 71, whose 46 years of faithful service as a minister of the Methodist church closed with his death here Sunday morning. The funeral at 4:30 p.m. in Central Methodist church is being conducted by the Rev. Paul Bardin, Jr., assisted by Rev. J. S. Gibbs and Rev. R. M. Hauss. Burial will be in Sunset cemetery here. Death came to Dr. Barnhardt, long a leader in the Western North Carolina Conference, at Shelby hospital just a week after he had suffered a stroke at his home here. Two days prior to that he had participated in the Crusade for Christ rally at Central Methodist church and had been actively leading the newly-organized Hoyle Memorial church for whose pas torate he emerged from a two-year retirement. FROM MARION Dr. Barnhardt came to Shelby to live from Marion after serving several of the leading pastorates of the Western North Carolina Conference, including Asheville’s Central church, Greensboro’s West Market street church, High Point’s See J. H. BARNHARDT Page 2 ROBBERIES ARE CLEARED UP Robbery of the A. J. Putnam store at Waco, Joe Philbeck’s station and City Service station in Shelby, all of which occurred on the same night, has been cleared up with the arrest of James Phil lip Neal and Robert Putnam, both of Cherryville, it was announced this morning by Sheriff J. R. Cline who worked with Highway Patrol man H. D. Ward and Gaston coun ty officers on the case. The defen dants were arrested last night in Cherryville by Patrolman Ward and the Gaston officers. Sheriff Cline said this morning that both prisoners had admitted a part in the robberies and that part of the loot taken from the Waco store has been recovered. The prisoners will be given a preliminary hearing in Gaston county as well as in Cleveland county as crimes took place in both counties. In all, Sheriff Cline said, there are a dozen cases of breaking and entering in which these defen dants are involved, only three of which are in Cleveland county. They are also said to be wanted in Knoxville, Tenn. ■ 4 MANPOWER SET-UP: Stipulation; No Man Drafted For Job Can Be Required To Join A Union WASHINGTON, Jan. 22.—(/P)—The house military com mittee wrote an anti closed-shop amendment into manpower legislation today and refused to specify agriculture as a criti cal industry. The amendment, which mem bers sajd was approved 14 to 10 in a closed session, stipulated that no man taking an industrial job at the request or direction of his draft board should be required to join a union as a condition of employment. Opponents contended the a mendment, offered by Representa tive Andrews (R-NY), would vio late closed or union shop con tracts between industry and la bor. The committee likewise turned down an amendment by Represen tative Stewart (D-Okla), to write into the work-or-be-jailed legisla tion a directive to selective service to “consider agriculture as a criti cal war industry” and to issue at once a directive to local draft board ordering them to follow the letter of the Tydings amendment. This portion of the selective ser vice law spells out conditions un der which farm workers may be deferred from induction. COAL, STEEL Reports of alarming conditions in coal and steel industries were added today to the nation’s in creasing problems over war man power shortages. But Congress hopes to have some of the answers figured out before this week end as the house military affairs committee resum es consideration of work-or-jail legislation. The steel industry, in indorsing such legislation, sees these dan ger signs ahead: A reduced coal supply .... down to a point to seriously threaten steel mill operations. Loss of manpower in the steel mills in the approaching induction of men aged 26 See ANTI Page 2 DRAFTEES GO FOR INDUCTION Henry Lawton Fogle Is Named Leader Of Group Off To Fort Bragg A group of 89 selectees under the leadership of Henry Lawton Fogle left here this morning for Fort Bragg for final induction into the armed services. Sixty-three of the group were fathers. Assistant leaders were James Buren Wilson and Gordon Lumley Chambers. Hal Bridges and Joseph Archie Moore were the only selec tees who failed to answer to their names. Their addresses are now being sought by the draft board. Those who left ware: James Blanton Ponder Bay William Moore Matthew William Blanton Carl Lathrage Mullinax "Paul Clarence Nanney John Lee Hicks Thomas Cecil Powell Roscoe Patterson Wright Robert Eual Floyd Alfred Mitchell Wilson Allen Webb Gardner Howard Bernard Bettis James Buren Wilson John Quentine Bridges Colon Eli Hamrick Jack Peterson Loyd Lamar Cabaniss Joe Wililamson Bowen Coell Foster Ernest Spurgeon Philbeck John Albert Davidson Harry Woodrow Fowler Roy Franklin Sweezy J. C. Runyan See DRAF^ES Page 2 - # Transport Trucks Caught By Allied Warplanes In Attempt At Getaway PARIS, Jan. 22.—(A5)—Allied warplanes caught 3,000 German vehicles, the bulk of transport of an entire army, in an attempted sneakaway from the Ardennes salient through the Siegfried line to the Rhine, and tore them to pieces to day in a ruinous daylong attack. The planes attacked with bombs, rockets and machine guns. The nazis had waited too long to run the gantlet down the snow drifted escape roads and were caught on two high ways in concentrations so thick that the allied pilots said afterwards “we couldn’t miss.” There was every indication that the ruin would be the greatest since the wounded wehrmacht fled for the Seine through the Falaise Gap. The destruction of equipment promised virtually to immobilize at least one of Field Mar shal Von Rundstedt’s two mobile reserve armies. BUSY WEEK FOR LEGISLATORS Spending Agencies Sche duled For Appropria tions Hearings RALEIGH, Jan. 22.—UP)—With several of the state’s largest spend ing agencies schedvled for approp riations hearings and a bill on medical care and hospitalization likely to hit the hoppers. North Carolina’s legislators will begin to night what promises to be a busy week. Slated for hearings before the big, joint appropriations commit tee this week are the departments of public instruction and educa tion, the highway and public works commission, and mental institu tions and sanitoriums. A bill introduced simultaneously in both houses last week to up the l.ay scale of public school teachers is expected to be discussed by the committee in connection with the education hearings and gives prom ise of being one of the most con troversial measures of the 1945 ses sion. Although the hospital and medi cal care commission, appointed by former Governor Broughton, has scheduled a hearing for Jan. 30, it is likely a bill, calling for a mini mum of $5,000,000 for hospitalization and expanded programs of health education, may be introduced this week. Insurance is also expected to be in the forefront of legislative pro cedure during the week. Former Governor Broughton’s appointed commission to draw up strong reg ulatory insurance laws will meet Wednesday and probably will con tinue its session for several days. The legislature climaxed its third week of activity by ratifying a bill to restore the emergency war pow ers of the governor and by receiv ing the teacher-salary measure. The finance committee, second largest in the assembly, got down to work on the budget revenue bill. Sched uled for a hearing before the com mittee this week are spokesmen who probably will protest the pro posed levy of a tax on motion pic ture houses and theaters. WHAT’S DOING TODAY 7:30 p.m.—County Medical so ciety meets at hospital. TUESDAY 7:00 p.m.—Regular meeting ot Lions club. 7:30 p.m.—C. A. P. meets at armory. 7:30 p.m.—Cleveland lodge 202 A. F. & A. M. meets. Work in third degree. Tarlac Falls To Americans By ELMONT WAITE GEN. MacARTHUR’S HEAD QUARTERS, Luzon, Jan. 22:—yp) - Tarlac, with its two airfields only 65 air miles from Manila, fell to the swiftly-advancing Americans, Gen. Douglas MacArthur announc- j ed today. The once proud city, most; prosperous in the central Luzon I plains, was reduced largely to I smoking rubble by the fleeing Jap-! anese only a few hours before the Yanks arrived. Seizure of the important rail and highway junction put the Americans nearly half way to Manila from th£tr Lingayen gulf jeachhead and within 22 miles of Clark airfield, largest of the Phil ippines. Adjacent to Clark field is Fort Statsenburg, major military post. Tarlac, a city of 55,000 including I its populous suburbs, was devas i tated ,by the Japanese, who evi- j j dently sprayed every building with : . gasoline and applied torches as the 1 ! Americans approached down two converging highways. Only bewildered, omeless Fili- j 1 pinos met their liberators. Associated Press Correspondent j Fred Hampson said the main body of American troops entered the city Sunday neon “too late to catch it Japanese garrison but not too late to experience the full extent oi destruction wrought here by an enemy which had abandoned it to flames only a few hours before.” j Tarlac had six miles of paved! j streets, three hotels, four large, j schools, provincial capitol buildings | a large rice mill and hundreds of ! substantial shops and dwellings. "We captured Tarlac all right,” Sec TARLAC Page 3 Allied air cower intervened as the American Third Army fought into the strets of Wiltz, souttern anchor of German defenses in Luxembougr, and as the U. S. First Army stormed into the open from the forest belt protecting St. Vith, 2 1-2 miles away. On the north, the British closed within three miles of the Roer river near its confluence with the Maas (Meuse) at the German stronghold of Roermond in Hol land. The French First Army striking up froi» Mulhouse appar ently was slewed down in deep snow after gaining up to six miles in two days. German attacks north of Strasbourg apparently were being held. Two road jams, each con taining roughly 1,500 vehicles and each containing some takns, were spotted by pilots over the Ardennes at 5:30 a. m. These were kept under attack for 90 minutes with ev erything the planes could toss through the overcast, which hampered but did not stop the ' slaughter. One concentration was in the Prum area, behind the Siegfried line and east of sharply menaced St. Vith. The vehicles were head ed toward Bohn on the Rhine where heavy troop movements had been observed earlier. SECONDARY ROAD The other was taking a secon dary road eight miles north of Die kirch, apparently bypassing Vian den, a road junction close to the Luxembourg-German border which already was under American artil See TRANSPORT Page 2 POLIO DRIVE STARTSTODAY School Children Begin Campaign With A Solici tation For Dimes ‘ Got a dime mister?’’ That isn't a panhandler talking but a Cleveland county school child who has been commissioned to raise funds in the annual in fantile paralysis drive which start ed here this morning. Much pre liminary work was done Saturday by the school children who are being given first whack at the folks with their appeal made on behalf of the less fortunate chil dren who are afflicted or who may hereafter be afflicted with polio. Chairman John Anthony who is directing the campaign said this morning that preliminary re ports from the schools have in dicated that the work of silicita tion has started with enthusiasm. Work in the city schools of Shelby is under the direction of Walter Abernethy, superintendent of schools; in the county schools un der the direction of Horace Grigg, :ounty superintendent; and in ings Mountain by B. N. Barnes, so superintendent of schools. CHOOL QUOTA The county school system has been assigned $3,000 for its part of the total Cleveland quota of $12,800. This has been worked out on the theory that each white class room can give approximately $13.50. This quota was worked out bv a committee of principals composed of D. W. Morris, of Beth ware. W. R. Gary, of Fallston and H. K. Leonhardt of Dover Mills. See POLIO Taje S