WEATHER Fair and continued cool today and tonight; Wednesday, partly cloudy and a little warmer; showers west portion Wednesday afternoon. Tshk Hhellly Baily Hint - State Theatre Today - “YOU CAME ALONG” Starring ELISABETH SCOTT CLEVELAND COUNTY’S NEWSPAPER SINCE 1894 TELEPHONE 1100 VOL XLIII— 278 ASSOCIATED PRESS NEWS SHELBY, N. C, TUESDAY, NOV. 20, 1945 TELEMAT PICTURES SINGLE COPIES—5* Iranian Troops, Sent To Quell Disturbances, Stopped By Soviets APPARENTLY HAD CONSENT OF RUSSIANS Four Battalions Halted At Kazrin And Sent Back To Tehran SEVEN SAID KILLED TEHRAN, Nov. 20.—(/P)— Iranian troops dispatched to Azarbaijan province to quell separatists disturbances there were halted at Kazvin today by Russian authorities and ordered to return to Tehran, the Iranian government said. Four battalions of troops and gendarmes had been moving slowly northward from Tehran, apparently with' the tacit consent of the Russian army commander, to quell the outbreak in which seven already have been reported killed. Kazvin Is about 100 miles north east of Tehran and approximately one-third of the distance between the Iranian capital and Tabriz, Azebaijan's largest city. The troops moving to reinforce government garrisons consisted of two Infantry battalions, one battalion of motorized troops and one battalion of gendarmes, the latter accompanied by two Ameri can advisors from Colonel Nor man Schwarzkopf's police and ad visory mission in Iran. The troops were expected to reach Kazvin by tonight. Communications between Teh ran and the northern part of the country still were cat and no clear picture of the fighting could be obtained at the Iran capital. A government communique said the situation was calm at Zenjan Astara and Ardabll. HARA-KIRI FOR GEN. HONJO Leader In Conquest Of Manchuria Ordered Ar rested Monday TOKYO, Nov. 30 —(JP)— Baron Oen. Shigeru Honjo, accused war criminal and reputed ringleader In the conquest of Manchuria, committed hara-kiri today less than 24 hours after he was order ed arrested. The baron was lying on his right side In a pool of blood In his of fice at the former Japanese war college when allied reporters and photographers arrived. Blood still oozed from the body and the hilt of his ceremonial sword was thrust up from the sheet which partly covered the body. A small cup containing tea dregs was beside the body. The old-line officer performed the Japanese hara-kiri ritual by slashing his stomach cross-wise, then cutting his throat. W JN UNIFORM But instead of the ritualistic kimono, Honjo wore his army uni form. His upthrust boots were highly polished. Honjo one of 11 war leaders of the past lmperiallstis decade or dered Imprisoned yesterday, died shortly after his secretary found his slashed body on his office floor. “I cannot endure as a soldier of our country to appear before a court of allied powers,” Honjo said In a letter written shortly before he killed himself. *'I find no way of apologizing to See HARA-KIRI Fage 2 ONE YEAR LATER—Forest (Nub bins) Hoffman (above), 4 of Chey enne, Wyo., is looking JOrward to Christmas on “standard time” this year. A year ago his parents gave him an early Christmas party on Nov. 19 because he wasn’t expected to live until Christmas on account of a bladder ailment. An opera tion saved his life, and now he’s doing fine. TAP Wirephoto). KNOX FORESAW SNEAK ATTACK Richardson Says FR Loath To Increase Fleet In Summer 1940 By JACK BELL WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 —(F)— The late navy Secretary Frank Knox predicted on Jan. 24, 1941, that if war with Japan occurred, hostilities might begin with a surprise attack upon the Pacific fleet or the naval base at Pearl Harbor. His prediction was made in a letter to Henry L. Stlmson, then secretary of war, and was disclos ed in an exchange of correspond ence made public today by the congressional Pearl Harbor inves tigating committee. Introduction of the Knox letter was one of several developments at the day’s sessions. Others in cluded: 1— Admiral J. O. Richard son, commander of the Paci fic fleet until 10 months prior to the Japanese attack at Pearl Harbor, testified the late President Roosevelt was “ra ther loath” to Increase the manpower of the fleet in the midsummer of 1940. 2— Committee aides said that Admiral William D. Leahy, Mr. Roosevelt’s chief of staff during the war, would be call ed to testify during the day. Admiral Richardson also told the committee that after a July, 1940, series of conferences with President Roosevelt, Secretary Hull and others, he left Washington See KNOX Page 2 Health Program To Get Quick Attention, Deferred Action m/v. «y, —\/rr“ President Truman's request for a broad health and medical program received assurances today of early congressional attention but defer red action. Its point also met with both approval and disapproval of the American Medical Association. Rep. Priest (D-Tenn), chairman of the House Interstate Health subcommittee promised hearings soon, but he declined to say Just when they would start or how long they might last. Senator Wagner (D-NY), who with Rep. Dlngell (D-Mlch) mtro duced a bill to carry out the Pres lueui/ s lecuiuiiieuuttUKJns, preuiC'.ea senate labor committee action with in two months. Otherwise, congressional re action to the message read by a house to about a score of mem bers was indefinite. Most of the lawmakers told reporters they wanted to know more about it, particularly if it approached what some called "socialized medicine." "It will receive careful scrutiny," said Rep. Knutson (Minn), ranking Republican on the house ways and See HEALTH Page 2 COMMUNISTS INVADING CHANGCHUN In Race With Rival Chin ese Nationalist Soldiers u. s. is"accused CHUNGKING, Nov. 20.— (fP) — Chinese communist troops were reported invading Manchuria’s capital in force today in a race with rival na tionalist soldiers, already 35 miles inside the vital indus trial territory after a break through in the south. The China Times declared that 4,000 communist troops had entered the capital of Changchun, but failed to say whether Russian oc cupation forces still were in the city. The Times also asserted without c^firmation elsewhere that new conferences between China and Russia on the tense Manchurian situation would begin soon, either in Moscow or Chungking. Unofficial reports in Chung king said the Russians had laid down 20 conditions which the nationalists must meet before being allowed to fly troops in to Manchuria, making an over land drive necessary. Chungking newspapers asserted this drive already was well under way, with nationalist troops racing 23 miles almost unopposed beyond positions a dozen miles inised Manchuria to within 190 miles of the great industrial city of Muk den. NEW CHARGES With these well-equipped, Amer ican-trained troops apparently on the loose after having broken through the Chinese communist line along the great wall, the com munist press leveled new charges at the United States. The United States is convert ing China into “an American colony,” the communist Daily News charged. The activities of the American forces have enraged all patriotic Chinese, the newspaper asserted. It compared it with the “impe rialism” of the British in India, French in Indochina and the Dutch in The Netherlands East Indies. Noticeably, the criticism was is sued swiftly after the other Chung king papers had reported the over night nationalist advance along the Tientsin-Mukden railroad. The nationalists occupied the See COMMUNISTS Page t SEEKS TO FORM GOVERNMENT De Gaulle Confers With Leaders Of Three French Parties By JOSEPH E. DYNAN PARIS, Nov. 20 —(AV- Gen. De Gaulle today conferred with Com munist, Socialist and Popular Re publican (MPP) leaders of the Constituent Assembly in his efforts to form a coalition government. No declaration was immediately forthcoming whether progress had been made in reconciling Com munist demands for a policy-mak ing cabinet post and De Gaulle’s avowed opposition. Prior to the conference with De Gaulle, the Communist parlia mentary group met and announced it remained firm in its request for one of three ministries — foreign affairs, war or Interior. The Communists made one con cession in announcing acceptance of the Socialist amendment adop ted by the assembly yesterday m voting on this point. NO COMMENT De Gaulle declined comment fol lowing his conference with the leaders. One government official, who said his opinion was shared by several others in the foreign min istry, predicted that De Gaulle would unify the armed forces un der a minister of National de fense, and offer the post of un der-secretary of air to the Com munists under a non-communist minister of defense. If accepted, the compromise might break the long deadlock over composition of the government which will rule Prance while the constitution for the Fourth Republic is being drafted. EZRA POUND JAILED FOR TREASON—Ezra Pound (left), bearded, 65-year-old Idaho-born poet charged with treason for braodcasting Axis propagana in Italy during the war, arrives in Washington en route to the District of Columbia jail. He is accompanied by U. S. Marshal C. M. Kearney. Pound was flown from Italy and handed over to the Department of Justice. (AP Wirephto.) $79,309 Pledged To Community Center Cosh Of $74,909 Together With Pledges Of $4,000 Made—Number Of Donors Disappointing A total of $79,309 in cash and pledges has been re ceived for the Community Center project of the Shelby and Cleveland County Foundation it was announced today by m_mi_j n rt_j i _ x x taouxti xnau v. i uxu. From 455 contributors cash and bonds in the amount of $74,309 have been received, while pledgee for future payments total $4,400, Mr. Ford said. The report does not include re ports from workers in industrial plants now being solicited, and Campaign Chairman Mai A. Span gler expressed the hope that gifts in process or to be made before the end of 1945 would lift the memorial fund to the $100,000 goal set for it to have by the end of the year. MEMORIAL The Community Center is to be the community’s memorial for all who served in World War II and as such it is the hope of Founda tion trustees that every citizen will have a part in its provision. The fact See $79,309 Page 2 WHATS DOimT TODAY 7 pun.—Scouters club meets at new Scout hut at Lawndale with Troop No. 1 of that place as hosts. Members going from Shelby meet at Star office at 6:30 to pool rides. 7:30 p.m.—CAP cadets meet at armory. WEDNESDAY 7:15 p.m. — Sunday school workers’ council of First Bap tist church meets at the church. 7:30 p.m.—Called meeting of Cleveland Lodge 202 A. F. & A. M. for work in third degree. 7:45 p.m.—Thanksgiving ser vice at First Baptist church in place of weekly prayer meet ing. Jaycees And Ladies Have Magician Show Members of the Junior Chamber of Commerce and their guests were fairly *agog with attention last night at the Hotel Charles as Ar thur Thompson, of Charlotte, guest entertainer at the annual Jay cee Ladies’ Night program, demon strated that “the hand is quicker than the eye.” Mr. Thompson, who started his programs as a hobby a number of years ago, has come to be well known as a magician and enter tainer throughout these parts. He was introduced by R. T. LeGrand, jr. Guests of the Jaycees for the occasion were their wives and sweethearts, wives of Jaycee mem bers now in the armed forces, presidents of various civic culbs, including Athos Rostan, president of the Lions club, and Mrs. Ros tan; Mason Carroll, president of the Rotary club, and Mrs. Car roll; Reid Misenheimer, president of the Kiwanis club, and Mrs. Misenheimer; Clyde Short, Cham ber of Commerce president; Willis McMurry, commander of the Amer ican Legion, and Mrs. McMurry. Welcomed as former members of the Jaycees were Sherrill Lineber ger and James Byers. The program opened with a See JAYCEES Page 2 HOLIDAY ROUNDUP: Churches In < Thanksgiving With Thanksgiving just two daysi off, churches in the city and county were making final arrangements for Thanksgiving services to be held at various times between Wednes day and Sunday. Services open tomorrow night when the Eastside Baptist church will meet at 7 o’clock, with the pastor, Rev. W. P. Biggerstaff, in charge. At 7:45 tomorrow evening, the First Baptist church will hold its Thanksgiving service. A full pro gram of music and the expression of thanks has been arranged, in cluding talks by John P. Mull, Miss Hity Plan Services Laura Cornwell and O. M. Mull. Thanksgiving scripture will be read. On Thursday morning, the church will join other churches in a union service at the Presbyterian church. On Thursday morning at 8:30, the Central Methodist church will have its annual Thanksgiving service, with Rev. Kale delivering the ser mon on “A Proper Optimism”. Mrs. Robert Gidney will direct a program of special Thanksgiving music, and Mrs. Kemp Huss will be at the organ. A special offering will be See CHURCHES Page 2 BRITISH BOMB ROADS HELD BY INDONESIANS Javanese Armed By Japs During Occupation Pour Into Capital ALLIES LOSFSTATIONS By Ralph Morton BATAVIA, JAVA, Nov. 20. —(/P)—Indonesian-held road ways into Semarang were bombed by six RAF Thunder bolts today and fighting be tween native and Allied fore-; es broke out in several sec tions of Batavia. The official Netherlands news agency Aneta reported authorities expressed belief that a consider able number of young Indonesians belonging to the Permuda, an or ganization armed by the Japanese during the occupation, were pour ing into the capital by train. Allied authorities had lost con trol of the railway stations. The action about Semarang was the first aerial offensive against the city in the current fighting. The Indonesians had barricaded themselves across three roads which formed the only contact be tween two Indian forces which were attempting to link-up against stiff resistance. PEOPLE WARNED After an overnight staff confer ence, the British dropped^- 10,000 leaflets on the town, warning the people to leave before the R.A.F. struck. They were given 90 min utes notice. The British officially expressed anxiety over the situation in Se marang. A crowd which threatened British headquarters sustained 50 casualties when it was dispersed by mortar fire yesterday, and total Indonesian casualties in the dis trict were put at 50 killed, 50 See BRITISH Page 2 CAR CEILINGS CONFUSING Some New Car Prices Less Than On Comparable 1942 Used Cars WASHINGTON, Nov. 20— (TP) — Ceiling prices for some new autos will be less than present ceilings on camparable 1942 used cars, OPA acknowledged today. There are “good reasons” for this, an OPA official said in comment ing on a congressman’s criticism of higher prices for used models. The official, asking anonymity, noted that when used cars were brought under price control in July 1944, used 1942 autos were given the same ceiling as those applicable on February 29, 1944, to new cars still in the ration pool. Those new car ceilings were con siderably higher than the March, 1942 price levels at which they had been fixed originally, the of ficial said. INCREASES PERMITTED The reason: Dealers were per mitted to increase the ceiling by one per cent each month to cover storage charges. This meant that 24 months of storage charges had been added through Feb. 29, 1944. It was at that price level that ceilings for used 1942 cars were pegged. Here’s an example of how this worked out: The ceiling on a new Ford V-8 Deluxe Tudor in March, 1942, was $850. By February 1944 it was up to $950. West of the Mississippi river it was up more in accord ance with traditional price differ ential). DEPRECIATION CUT Thus the ceiling on the same model used car was $950. At pres ent it ,is $912 because of a four per cent cut for depreciation. The retail ceiling announced Sunday for the same model 1946 Ford is $882, which is less by $30 than the current ceilings for the 1942 used car. Only Ford and Studebaker new car ceilings have been announced, and at present only Ford’s lend themselves to this kind of compari son. The OPA official said, however, that some other new autos prob ably will have ceilings less than those on comparable 1942 used models. 1 - - - ■ • 4 HE TAKES CREDIT FOR PEARL HARBOR—The Pearl Harbor In vestigating committee in Washing ton has learned that Admiral Osami Nagano (above), chief of the Japanese Navy general staff, testified in Tokyo recently that he, alone, decided on Nov. 3, 1941, to attack the Hawaiian bastion. (AP Wirephoto). ' B-29 SETS NEW RECORD Lands In Washington After Non-Stop Flight From Guam WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—(A5) —A B-29 which came all the way from Guam without a stop landed here this after noon, and the army air forces immediately claimed a world’s distance record. The plane hit the runways at the National airport at 1:35 p.m. (EST), approximate ly 35 hours and some 8,000 miles after it left Guam. WASHINGTON, Nov. 20 —(A1)— The army announced today that i B-29, winging its way eastward trom Guam, has set a non-stop iistance record—and is still fly ing. The B-29 passed over La Crosse, Wis., at 9:30 a.m. (EST.) This Is 7,368 miles from Guam, the army lir forces said. The Superfortress had broken ;he record at that point. The B-29 is expected to arrive it Washington National airport ibout 1:30 p.m. (EST) today. The previous mark of 7,158.44 miles was hung up by the British in 1938, flying from Egypt to Aus PREVIOUS TRIALS Last month three Superfor tresses, carrying three generals, tried for a non-stop record in a flight form Japan, but failed be cause of unexpected headwinds. That flight, from the Japanese island of Hokkaido to Chicago, was about 7,000 miles. After landing to refuel at Chicago, the planes continued on to Washing ton. An army official said today that the Guam flight is longer be cause the B-29 did not take the short way home—over the top of the world. Slight changes were made to fit See B-29 Page 2 INDICTMENTS READ TO 20 DEFENDANTS Prosecutors Of U. S., Brit tain, France, Russia Read Charges bormanTTat LARGE By Daniel De Luce NUERNBERG, Nov. 20.— (#*)—A strangely assorted score of gloomy nazis sat de- . jectedly today before an in ternational military tribunal and beard themselves formal- J ly accused of nazi war crimes, the murder of 10,000,000 Eu ropeans, plunder, horror and torture. Throughout the opening session of the historic trial for their lives, Hitlerian followers such as corpulent Hermann Goering, vague Rudolf Hess and defiant Field Marshal Wilhelm Keitel listened through earphones while spokesmen of tha nations which crushed their hier archy recited crimes the world had never before witnessed. By turns, prosecutors of the ' United States, Great Britain, Fiance and Russia droned through the four counts of the 35,000-word indictment accusing the last of the leading Nazis of conspiracy to com mit crimes against the peace, actual commission of crimes against the peace, war crimes and crimes against humanity. Even the appendices containing individual charges against the 20 defendant were read, meaning that the men who terrorized Europe only a year ago could not be ar raigned until the Wednesday ses sion. The Nazis sometimes sat with earphones clasped on to hear trans lations in German piped to them as the prosecutors read in English, French and Russian. Robed attor neys sat beside them. TRIED IN ABSENTIA Of the 24 originally indicted, one is at large, two are too ill to at tend and one has committed sui cide. Martin Bormann, Hitler’s de puty, was being tried in absentia. *j Robert Ley, the labor leader, tool* | his own life. Ernest Kaltenbrunner of the Gestapo and Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach were ill. After the indictments are read in full, each defendant will plead eith er “guilty” or ‘‘not guilty”. Then the prosecution wiil make its open ing statement. Rudolf Hess, an almost im pish grin playing about his sun ken mouth, was lined up in the dock with the Nazi defendants —20 in all. The 21st, Martin Bormann, Hitler's deputy, is be See INDICTMENT Page 2 Eisenhower Would Let Wives Go To Occupation Troops BOONE, IA„ Nov. 20—(A3)—Gen eral Dwight D. Eisenhower, who spent most of two days at the hos pital bedside of his wife, recover ing from bronchial pneumonia, says he favors taking the wives of occupation troops to Europe “af ter we have gotten down to occu pation forces.” General Eisenhower, In a press conference prior to leaving for the American Legion convention in Chicago and after being advised by physicians that his wife was “on the road to recovery”, said his policy “will give the wife of the lowliest GI the same right as any officers, wife, or my wife, for instance.” Labor-Management Groups Act To Prevent Stalemate 13y aiblvLt^u r. WASHINGTON, Nov. 20. — (£>)— Management spokesmen, complain ing of what they termed “unreal istic” work being done in commit tees of the labor-managemest con ference hinted today they might file separate reports for conference consideration. This development came as the “big six”—the heads of the two in dustry and four labor organizations represented—took action designed to prevent any of the committees from winding up in dead-locked disagreement. The six set themselves up as a cimsuiuve uuuy iu wiiitu tmy uuuu« dering committee could bring its problems before arriving at an im passe. In the background was this situ ation of committee progress: Of the six spadework committees, only one has filed a progress re port. All reports were called for on Friday. Two other committees turned in reports, then pulled them back for further debate. Still another committee, the one seeking remedies for jurisdictional See LABOR Page S ^