WEATHER Cloudy and warm today and to night with scattered thundershow ers followed by cloudy skies and cooler Wednesday with scattered thundershowers in south and east. Tshe Hhelby Xfilistili Him STATE THEATRE TODAY "SALOME, WHERE SHE DANCED" Starring YVONNE DeCARLO i VOL. XLIII—164 CLEVELAND COUNTY’S NEWSPAPER SINGE 1894 TELEPHONES 1100 ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS SHELBY, N. C. TUESDAY, JULY 10, 1945 TELEMAT PICTURES SINGLE COPIES—6c hits scut 10 MAKE TROUBLE AMONG ALLIES Grew Says Peace Feelers Are Attempt To Stir Up Dissension f PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR | WASHINGTON. July 10.— (/P) — Acting Secretary of State Grew declared today that the Japanese are using “purported peace feelers” in an attempt to stir up dis sension in the United States and among the allies. Their objective, he said, is to obtain a peace short of uncondi tional surrender even though they know beyond question already that their defeat is certain. Grew related several Instances of what he called these “alleged peace feelers” and then wound up a statement on the subject by declaring: “The policy of this govern ment has been, is, and will continue to be, unconditional surrender x x x that Li the best comment I can make up on peace feelers and rumors of peace feelers of whatever origin.” The United States, the acting secretary emphatically asserted, has "received no peace offer from the Japanese government, either through official or unofficial chan nels." “Conversations relating to peace,” h3 continued, "have been reported to the department from various parts of the world but, in no case, has an approach been made to this government, directly or Indirectly, by a person who could establish his authority to speak for the Ja *panese government, and in no casa has an offer of surrender been made. | WANT INFORMATION f What the Japanese always seek with their peace feelers, Grew said is to find out the American posi tion and to use the whole idea of an end to the war as a means of stirring up argument over peace terms in order to creaR dissen sion. Grew listed these specific inci dents of what he termed peace See NIPS Page * ^ SEVERE STORM LEAVES 6 DEAD Electrical Storm, Rain And Wind Strike Le high Valley > PHILLIPSBURG, N. J.„ July 10. — broke in to say that if the delegates had attempted to tabulate all kinds of aggression “we probably would have excluded, inevitably, some circum stance that would be an act of ag gression.” it was wiser, he said he l thought, to leave the interpreta tion to each individual case in the light of all of the circumstances surrounding it. Brooks protested that the Mexico City conference had drawn “an ela borate definition” of aggression in the act of Chapulepec. SAME LANGUAGE Senator White of Maine, the Republican leader, noted, however, that the language used in the charter in this case was the same as employed in the. Dumbarton Oaks agreements. Senator Burton (R-Ohio) told the witness he thought the charter See SEN. BROOKS Page 2 Cotton Acreage In N. C. 22 Per Cent Below That Of 1944 RALEIGH, July 10—(/P)—Cotton acreage in North Carolina as of July 1, was estimated by the de partment of agriculture yesterday at 595,000 acres, 22 percent below that of last year. Bernard L. Ross, marketing specialist with the department, attributed the reduction to con centration on tobacco, a shift to peanuts, and difficulty in getting a stand of cotton in the spring. STOLEN BABY THOUGHT SAFE Woman Arrested In Ab duction Of 6-Day-Old Baby Girl MARION, O., July 10.—urt jus tices in the history of this coun try. His appointment would be well received by everyone through out the land.” Judge Webb said today that he j “is flattered” by the suggestion! but that he recognizes “practical difficulties’ in the way of flaming1 of a North Carolirv democrat to. succeed a Republican on the high- j est court. oners Hanged \ Compatriot ed States. The executed Germans, all mem bers of Rommel’s Afrika Korps, were: Walter Beyer, 32, whose rank was equivalent to that of a first ser geant in the U. S. army; Berthold Seidel, 30, a staff sergeant; Hans Demme, 23, sergeant; Hans Schom er, 27, sergeant, and Willi Scholz 22, corporal. IN UNIFORMS All went to their deaths clad m their German uniforms, their onlv request. Their last meal consisted — See 3 NAZI Page i i JCDGE WEBB NAZI U-BOAT SURRENDERS IN ARGENTINE PORT MAR DEL PLATA, Argentine. Tuly 10. —(fP)— A 700-ton German U-boat commanded by Otto Wer noutt and carrying a complement of j4 men surrendered to Argentine naval authorities at this submarine aase today. All were placed under custody. (Where the U-boat has been since Germany surrendered two months .'•to was not immediately explained. ' 'Tied radios flashed orders May 8 i all German surface and undersea ft to head for the nearest Allied rts. Two weeks later Allied navies re still searching the Atlantic for —cm 12 to 15 Nazi submarines still at large.V Wermoutt surrendered to the com mandant of the submarine base Naval authorities closed tb« port area to the public shortly after the German craft appeared in the har bor.