Shonan Times (Syonan Shimbun), 18 August 1942

Total Pages: 4
1 4 Shonan Times (Syonan Shimbun)
  • 90 1 The Syonan Times 140, Cecil Street, Syonon-to Telephone 5471. Nippon-Go V Many people realize I *f- the vital importance of 1 Nippon-go in their future yL, m J careers and are using f^ every facility available <V to learn the language. y*- Time wasted means op- V portunities lost. Be
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  • 89 1 Tokyo, Aug. 17. yL. IT was announced v \t Saturday that Pre- A mier General Tozyo, p+ who held the Third V T* Court rank of Junior yL, I Grade, has been pro- *i moted to the Third I Court rank of Seniot ■> Grade. J Dr.
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  • STOP PRESS
    • 35 1 Tokyo. Aug. 17. ry\l-HONYEI announced this afternoon that our submarines, operating in waters around Australia, sank ten enemy vessels, totalling approximately 90,000 tons, from ate July up to early August.
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    • 77 1 Lisbon, Aug. 17, Domel. FALLING back before U»e crushing offensive of the German juggernaut, the Soviet forces have abandoned Maikop, according to the Soviet Information Bureau communique received here. The communique admits that the Soviet forces, southeast of Kletskaya. are now in a critical position, while the
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  • SEVERE BLOWS ON ALLIED NAVIES
    • 213 1 Command Of Seven Seas Now In Axis Hands Berlin, Aug. 17, Domei. I IS the German nation h X "was held spellbound X > I by the Dai-Honyei an-( nounoement of the huge V J losses inflicted by the Jrc Nippon Navy upon the 1£ V Allied fleet off the
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  • 206 1 Punitive Forces Reducing Enemy Positions In Chekiang Kiangsi Tokyo, Aug. 17. I CONSECUTIVE attacks by our forces and the acute shortage of foodstuffs have greatly exhausted the remnants of Chungking forces who have been driven into the mountainous regions near Fenglin and Kiakow, 30 kilometres south of Kiangshan. in Cheklang
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  • 251 1 Western Mediterranean 100,000 Tons Damaged TN THE STILL RAGING NAVAL AND 1 AERIAL ENGAGEMENTS IN THE WESTERN MEDITERRANEAN, THE ITALO-GERMAN FORCES SANK 200,000 TONS OF BRITISH WARSHIPS AND OTHER VESSELS, DAMAGED A TOTAL OF 100.000 TONS AND SANK MORE THAN 100,000 TONS OF
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  • 452 1 /COMMENTING on the naval battle now going on in the Mediterranean, the Japan Times and Advertiser declares that the Allied losses in this battle have been "as significant for the fighting in the Mediterranean as the Anglo-American losses in thei Solomons battle have
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  • 50 1 Lisbon, Aug. 17, Domei. r* is reported from Havana that the Cuban Navy General Staff has announced that two smailsized Cuban merchantmen have been torpedoed and sunk somewhere in the Gulf of Mexico. The announcement adds that several survivors from both vessels are missing
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  • 185 1 Lisbon, Aug. 17. Domel. THE topic of the day in Spain is the devastating blows dealt by Nippon, Germany and Italy against the Anglo-Amer can navies and merchant shipping off the Solomon Islands and in the Mediterranean,
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  • 70 1 Stockholm, Aug. 17. Domel. THE Dai-Honyel announcement disclosing the sinking of 13 Allied cruisers, nine destroyers and ten transports, was splashed under banner headlines in all Swedish evening newspapers. The concensus of Press opinions Is that this battle is the first real sea battle, at
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  • 59 1 Swatow, Aug. 17. DOCUMENTS formally returning Swatow Waterworks to the Swatow Municipality were signed in Swatow Sunday between the Nippon military authorities and the Municipal officials. Swatow Waterworks, which have been under military control for three years since the landing lof the Nippon forces in June, 1939. will
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  • 272 1 Solomons' Battle TOKYO AUG 17 THE JAPAN TIMES AND ADVERTISER, COMMENTING ON THE SPECTACULAR RESULTS SCORED BY OUR IMPERIAL NAVY IN THE BATTLE OFF THE SOLOMONS, WHICH IS DESCRIBED AS "THE GREATEST NAVAL ENGAGEMENT I SINCE THE OPENING OF THE PRESENT CONFLICT,"
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  • 196 1 Tokyo, Aug. 17. THE Niti Niti editorially commenting on the brilliant results of the Solomons' Battle, as revealed by the Dal-Honyei announcement. declares that our Navy has frustrated the Anglo-American plan to build up a "third front on the sea" as a
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  • 292 1 I Lisbon, Aug. 17. Domel. *T"HE fierce onslaught by ths German forces along the bend of the Don River In front of Stalingrad on August 14 forced the Soviet troops to abandon some positions in that sector, according to information received in Lisbon.
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  • 255 1 y Tokyo, Aug. 17. #j jf TENNO-lIEIKA (ranted V SI an audience to Lieut.- General Masaharu Hon- Li ma, former Commander- in-Chief of our forces in y the Philippines, who re- turned to Tokyo at B 1.42 p.m. Friday. In the presence of f
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  • 281 1 Tokyo, Au«. 17. NOTWITHSTANDING the precise Dai-Honyei communique speciiying the exact number ot enemy warships and transports sunk during the tremendous naval battle off the Solomons. Anglo American dispatches reaching Tokyo through neutral channels remain strangely silent on the results of
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  • 45 1 Lisbon. Aug. 17 Domel THE American radio reports that a German submarine n\% torpedoed and sunk another Orazilian oil tanker in the Caribbean Sea, 450 miles from land. The report says that this was the twelfth Brazilian ship sun* by Axis submarines.
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  • 28 1 Lisbon, Aug. 17, Domel. r' is reported from London that the British Air Ministry has stated that German bom'oars raided points in East Anglia.
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  • 714 2 SATURDAY'S official celebrations went off with a swing from start to finish and everybody v/ent home quite satisfied in spite c; the weather; but there was one very conspicuous omission in the proceedings which makes it quite clear that the local-bom Chinese and Eurasian sections of
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  • 117 2 Batavia, Aug 15 MARKING another concrete step towards the res.oration oi educeti;nil system in Java, all middle grade schools in the island w.ll be opened from September It U learned ihat the decision was reached by the Nippon "Military dministraticn. following a conference cf
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  • 204 2 Restoration Of Peace Industries Stressed As People's First Task Manila, Aug. 17. IT is revealed that Lieut.-General Sizuiti Tanaka, 1 the new Commander-in-Chief of the Nippon Expeditionary Forces in the Philippines, in an address to Filipino civil officials, stressed that for the sake
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  • 580 2 Manila, Aug. 17. THE attitude of benevolence and liberality of the Nippon authorities in allowing self-gov-ernment in the Provinces and the pledge to co-operate wholeheartedly with Nippon in the realization of the Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere wers the highlights of
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  • 113 2 Lisbon, Aug. 17. IT is reported from London that Oliver Lyttelton, Minister of War Production, re* calling a statement he mad* a few weeks ago said: "The next 90 days will be the gravest in our history." He continued: "I se# nothing to make
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  • 286 2 Reconstruction Activities Industrial Conditions 'Completely Satisfactory 9 Nra>r»w ft M. ani} a- Au B- g. cus for sugar production, had 18 ippon officials from various sugar miUs before the outbreak parts of the Philippines re- of the present war, most of which ported that the reconstruction have been restored to
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  • 142 2 Tokyo, Aug. 17. THE Filipinos have come to 1 the realization that they cannot gain independence without relying on the assistance of Nippon, declared Lieut. Gen. MasaharuHonma, former Commander-in-Chief of our Expeditionary Forces in the Philippines, to the Press at
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  • 391 2 (By Saburo Kobayasi, Dontei War Correspondent with the Imperial Navy) Amboina, Aug. 17. CTRIKING swiftly at dawn on July 30 on tho v East Indies islands of Kei, Aru and Tenimber which dominate Australia from the north, landing forces of our
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  • 185 2 T Tokyo, Aug. 17. HE r.vugai in an editorial declares that the ruthless methods, employed by the British authorities in India in suppressing the independence movement, must be condemned "as a crime against mankind." The Tyugai says that Britain cannot hope to kill by force the
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  • 138 2 Algiers. Aug. 17, Domei. TWO persons were killed and six 1 wounded when a French seaplane, operating in the airline Marseilles-Algiers, was attacked by a British fighter plane in the Mediterranean. While nearing the Algierian coast, the pilot of the hydroplane sighted four fighters patrolling
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  • 64 2 Lisbon. Aug. 17, Domei. instance of low morale of the American soldiers is seen in British press reports which revealed that a United States army private, Louis Stevens, who is charged with manslaughter in the slaying of Private Berard Soffer, a military policeman, was
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  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 134 2 NOTICE is hereby given that the Trade Marks depicted above are the exclusive property of Kong Hua Factory of Syonan-to, and that the same are used by the said Kong Hua Factory in respect of cigarette paper, manufactured and sold by the said Kong Hua Factory in all the territories
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  • Page 2 Miscellaneous
    • 927 2 LEARN NIPPON-GO! (NIPPON-GO O TUKAIMAS*OI> LESSOR No. 51 Enfluh Nippon-Go Pronunciation 1. T am returning tenki za. warui kara tehnkee ga waJirooer kah- the karrima.su rah kahehrerir.ahs w«aiher is bad 2. I did not go on amr ga Km im.« iv a.l mefa &ah loom-ivi'i liuli wcount of the kara
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  • 1305 3 K.R. Ramanath, D. Comm., Says nRITAIN is struggling -iesperately for herself—many of her former allies lie prostrate, humbly, humiliated. Her enemies are formidable, far too 3trong for her. There was a time when Britain's far-flung dominions poured in men and materials in an attempt to
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  • 380 3 ANTI-BRITISH DEMONSTRATIONS THROUGHOUT INDIA MORE ARRESTS AND 1 DEATHS REPORTED Lisbon, Aug. 17, Domei. HESPITE desperate efforts on the part of Britain to che<Jk the spread of the Indian independence movement, anti-British demonstrations in India have become fiercer and more extensive, resulting in the
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  • 191 3 Tokyo. Aug. 17. THE entire aniled people of India have arisen at last in their .-up m-r battle against British oppression for independence under the leadership «f Matiiha* Gandhi, declares a special Yomiuri-Hoti dispatch from Bangkok. The dispatch said that for the firct time
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  • 394 3 MORE REPRESSIVE MEASURES TAKEN Lisbon, Aug. 17, Domei. CAITH in Gandhiji continues to find expression in various parts of India. Bombay dispatches revealed that five persons were killed and four injured in Dacca (Bengal Province) when the Police fired on a mob. It
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  • 159 3 Lisbon, Aug. 17. Domei. JT is reported from London that criticism of the British Government's policy in India is seen in a resolution made public by tha Executive Committee of the National Peace Council appealing for the re-opening of negotiations having as their objective not only
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  • 111 3 Tokyo. Aug. 17. IiAHATMA GANDHI, who is now imprisoned at tta Aga Khan's Palace near Poons. has not yet commenced hi i hunger strike, the Niti NUj reported from Zurich, quoiing information reaching there. It is said that Gandhiji is at present subsisting on
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  • 64 3 Tokyo, Aug. 15. IT is learned here that the Taan- choukuo authorities have approved of a second five-year pk.n which chiefly concerns the lur^oscaie development of farming. The plan Is said to have aeen based on the results achieved by the first five-year plan, and
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  • Page 3 Advertisements
    • 882 3 LATEST A DYERTISEMENTS GENERAL THE EMPLOYMENT CONTRACT AOVEBTISCMEKTS SELANGOR TURF CLUB waktfr SERVICE AGENCY, A limited amoam of spare mmrm WAMRD is available for contract (NEW ORDER) A young lady about 20 years <Operatinr with the c*n»nt «f advertisements in the Syonan V !old as English teacher, applicants Gunseibn Romuhan)
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    • 128 3 Bangkok. Aug. II D'vnei. IT is revra!ed that the new Government Labour Ordinnnce, affecting all men In Thailand excepting men over 50 years, students, prieyts. Fick per«or. and others already employed, will be put inco effect shortly in crder to incease Industrial output as well as the production of foodstuffs.
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    • 339 3 TOWN BOARD NOTICE Owners of houses and lar.d .luatoc? within the Town Board areas of Johore Bahru, Skudal. Senal, Kula;. Tehrau. Ulu Tiram. Ulu Choh anci Pengkalan Rlnting are reminded that rates for the 2nd half-year 2632 are due and payable »n advance, "it^ruc demand at the Town Board Office.
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  • 446 4 Tokyo, Aug. 17. THE Niti Niti, quoting reports from Rome, reported that serious anti-British demonstration broke "out among Indian soldiers within the ranks of a certain British regiment on the El Alamein front recently. The reports said that more thai;
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  • 279 4 AMIDST the gaiety of concerts, dance parties, card games and deck golf, with which the returning British nationals aboard the Tatuta Maru enjoyed themselves from Yokohama to Syonan, Sir Robert Craigie, former British Ambassador to Tokyo, always wore a solemn and sad-looking face confining
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  • SPORTS
    • 344 4 THE re-play between the Chinese and the Eurasians for the Mayor's football cup on the j Padang yesterday provided a large cro I'^ with excellent football, and u*e result was another t-hree-all draw in spite of extra ;lme being allowed. Eoth teams took
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    • 124 4 Till, cup presented by the Mayor of s.vonan to be competed for by Hie Chinese, Malays, Indians and Eurasians has yet to be won. Commencing on Saturday, Malays beat the Indians on the Padang. three-nil, and the Eurasians and the Chinese drew,
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    • 262 4 DECEIVING a walk-over from the I% Chinese and defeating the Malays by two goals to nil. the Eurasians had little difficulty In annexing: the Mayor's Cup for hockey on Saturday on the Pa* ang. The trophy wps presented by Mr. Y. Iwata. secretary to
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  • 170 4 Mayor Of Syonan Congratulates People "For Their Sincere Efforts" NIPPON'S WAR FOR LASTING PEACE MEW Malaya, with the assistance of Nippon, was making great strides towards the attainment of the Co-Prosperity Sphere, declared Mr. Sigeo Odate, Mayor of Syonan, in his address on Saturday during
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  • 55 4 LARGE-SCALE celebrations were held it* Syonan and throughout Malaya on Saturday to commemorate the re-birth of Malaya under the aegis of Dai Nippon. In Syonan, Nippon officials were entertained by the Chinese community to a luncheon this being part of the celebrations. The houses of Syonan were
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  • 306 4 Manila, Aug. 17. |^ROSS SECTION opinion of Manila citizens following the great Nippon naval victory in the battle of the Solomons revealed that the Filipino people believed that the American game of bluff in East Asia has been further blasted by our Imperial
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  • 136 4 AUTHORITIES SEIZE CABLE FACTORY Lisbon, Aug. 17, Domei. INDICATING that social unrest is still prevalent in the United States, also that the American Government is failing to secure the co-operation of the people in resorting to strong methods and the imposing of its will on the
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  • 65 4 Tokyo, Aug. 17. MAJOR GEN. Luang Virayodha, Military Attache to the Thai Embassy here, who has been appointed as the new Thai Minister to Manchoukuo, expressed his appreciation for the hospitality and friendship extended by many Nippon-zin during his stay here when interviewed by Domel.
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  • 117 4 HPHIS competition Is open to children below the age of 17. The essays, not exceeding 400 words in length, will be on "My Experiences in the Study of Nippon-Go." Those sending: in essajs must clearly state their name and address at the head of the first
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  • 212 4 THE East Asia Exploitation Associax w tion with Count Yoriyasu Aruna as President will be formally created on Au* 2O The Association will be on Aug. 20. The Association wui De active in exploitation work in East Asia, particularly in Southern Regions,
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  • 180 4 Dr. Lim Boon Keng, former president of the Amoy University, and chairman of the Sycnan City Chinese Association, dur ing Saturday's celebrations, declared "Syonan city is now completely restored to its pre-war prosperity." H? said "We were amazed to find Nippon soldiers so welltrained
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  • 139 4 /■CEREMONIES, commemorating the re-birth of Malaya, were held in the Selangor Public Square in front of the Government Office Building on Saturday. During the day, concerts, plays athletic meets in different parts of the city were held, while theatrical groups gave special performances
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  • 292 4 "fHE principal of the East Asian powers is Dal Nippcn. she has a lofty and sublime idee in wiping out the evil and compted influence of the British and Americans, which has been exerted on the people here for mmv centuries
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  • Page 4 Advertisements
    • 126 4 East Asia Welfare Meeting In MukJen Tokyo, Aug. 15. lA S cne of ***c ieatures cf tne celebrations commemorating the tenth anniversary of the rounding of Manchoukuo. an East hsia. Welfara meeting will be held su Mukden, for three days, commencing from Aug. 18, it is report?d from Mukden. Monument
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    • 114 4 SYONANSI-SIDEN ALTERATION TO SERVICE NO. 1 As from Aug. 20. 2602 Service No. f will operate from Moulmein Road to Nelson Road via Lavender Street, Victoria Street. New Bridge Road, Cross Street and Tanjong Pagar Road (.interval of 10 minutes). SERVICE NO. 6 TANK ROAD TO KEPPEL HARBOUR As from
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  • Page 4 Miscellaneous
    • 101 4 To-Day 7s Radio Nippon-Go Lesson YESTERDAY you learned on the radio th 3 use of the preposition "kara" meaning "from." To-day you will study the preposition "to meaning with." To tomoni" is sometimes used giving the same meaning as "to."' Now let us try the following examples 1. Kara wa
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    • 108 4 SYONANSI SIDEN SERVICE No. 16. Y s from 20th August. 269*!. Omnit-ns Service No. 16 wit operate front riry'ans to Karopon- Melayu or Te!ok Ku.au Road via Chang:' n<>i I (Interval of 16 n ii:utr First bus leave Geylang -..■,ii la-t Mi- leave Geylarg -,ri p.m. First bait leave Kampong
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