Shonan Times (Syonan Shimbun), 25 March 1942

Total Pages: 4
1 4 Shonan Times (Syonan Shimbun)
  • 19 1 THE SYONAN TIMES 140 Cecil Street, Syonanto Telephone 5471. No. 30 WEDNESDAY, MARCH 25, 2602, SYOWA 17 5 Cents
    19 words
  • 334 1 Key Points In S. Pacific j Indian Oceans Bombed NAVAL ENSIGN HOISTED ON BUKA ISLAND IN SOLOMONS Tokyo, Mar. 24. CUCCESSFUL bombing attacks on enemy positions in the southern Pacific area and in the Indian Ocean have been carried out by the Imperial naval
    334 words
  • 101 1 Stockholm, Mar. 24. ACCORDING to a dispatch from Melbourne, the Australian Government has decided that it is almost impossible for the Australian troops to hold New Guinea, no matter how hard they resist the Nipponese onslaught. PORT DARWIN RAIDED Shanghai. Mar. 24. PORT DARWIN
    101 words
  • 75 1 Hong Kong, Mar. 24. THANKS to the efforts of the Nipponese engineering corps, repair work to the Canton-Kowloon railway and the artery linking Hong Kong and Kowloon has just been completed. The most difficult task of restoring the long tunnel passing through Beacon Hill has also been
    75 words
  • 96 1 Lisbon, March 24. pONTINUED activities of NipV* ponese submarines in the Pacific have caused the most serious food crisis ever to be con ii on ted in the Hawaiian Islands. Moreover, owing: to a shortage of ship bottoms, it is extremely difficult to transport supplies to
    96 words
  • 69 1 Lisbon, Mar. 24. ADMITTING successful Nipponese air raids on Port Moresby in New Guinea and Wyndham, a key point in north-west Australia, the Australian Government has officially announced that Monday's Nipponese air raid on Port Moresby was the heaviest one since the outbreak of
    69 words
  • 98 1 Tokyo, Mar. 24. AN attempt to assassinate the Egyptian Premier has reportedly been made, according to an Asahi dispatch reaching here from Ankara. The reported assassination attempt coincided with the presence at Ankara of Sir Stafford Cripps who was on his way to India. The
    98 words
  • 82 1 Bangkok, Mar. 24. THE Nipponese Ambassador to Thailand is scheduled to leave Bangkok by plane for Tokyo next Saturday or in the early part of April at the latest to discuss current matters with his home Government. The Ambassador recently had several conferences with
    82 words
  • 71 1 Kublshev, March 24. THE Nipponese envoy to the Soviet Union, Lieut.-Gen. Tatekawa, paid his farewell call on Soviet Foreign Commissar, Molotov, at a meeting which lasted fully one hour and 30 minutes. He was also greeted by the Soviet Coir.missar for Foreign Trade. Emerging from
    71 words
  • 186 1 CHURCHILL'S OBVIOUS CONCERN Melbourne. Mar. 24. VA/ITH the progress of the war, command of the defence forces in Australia has now been taken over by Americans under Gen. Mac Arthur. Furthermore, the pro-American attitude of Prime Minister, Curtin, is becoming more and more noticeable. Greatly worried
    186 words
  • 65 1 Shanghai. Mar. 24. ACCORDING to information from Buenos Aires, the United States has declared that she is not in a position to supply Argentine with arms. This declaration was made during present negotiations conducted by the arms purchasing commission of the Argentine in America.
    65 words
  • 53 1 Rangoon Mar. 24. A NUMBER of cholera cases recently occurred among British and Indian forces stationed north of the Irrawaddy River, according to the British prisoners taken by the Nipponese. The incidence of this disease among the British forces is daily increasing owing to a
    53 words
  • 55 1 Berlin, March 24. THERE have been uprisings among the natives In New Guinea against the British, according to a report received here. It is reported that British plan lations in the river Taplk area have been attacked by the natives. The British authorities admitted that
    55 words

  • Page 2 Advertisements
    • 338 2 ADVERTISEMENTS "^^C^lTr PfcRotJINAL. •jsr a rsurs the office of The Syonan Times in Cecil Street. Rate: SI for two insertions. -fa. ic MUTHUBAMY BROS, wteh to inform tfcetrcustosnen.that the; ELTTB H^ IS?B2SSe SSTS mVed"tokTSin^St^TuniSon of Bras Baaah Read. 2»-34_ n th trtiereJI\ U 7«I*<SJ?mat^BAULA. nFs«& £2w£FJ£ hFsS* Sease conununirate with
      338 words
    • 323 2 URGENT-Will the ChinwTsaleman and Engineer of WESTERN Bsrsßwarasw^ INDIAN EXPERIENCED CTXTTER rtJf Dl g^ en t d *£g£*SSmK S 7 SS2 TtoeT No. 7, c/o Syonan Times. A 0000 MWARD will be given to K^t'SSSfi w X 14 HiehS R^ Sllside g*^ a SS^Kln^'comnmnlc*tc Mr. 8. P. LIVINGSTON, c/o Mr
      323 words
    • 306 2 MA-D-NOTICE No-16 MILK SJr™aTeS AND INSTRUCTIONS TO BE it is hereby notified that:— (J) Cond ensed milk (including; unsweetened milk) cannot be sold except for consumpfey infjmts under one w and by slck per on; <*> Any person who wants to purchase condensed milk must buy from one shop only
      306 words
    • 239 2 MAJK syo*aii-to) NOTICE NO. 11 COLLECTION OF CONSOLlDAT- ---«-««,>» ETC.) Householders who wish to entertain the Municipal services for water gas electrnights oil and trade J requested to present themselves immediately at Revenue Division of the Treasurer's Department and t0 make new applications for these services. Applicants shaU pay deposits
      239 words
  • Page 2 Miscellaneous
    • 99 2 NIPPON LESSON No. 28 (Nippon-Go) English Nippon-Go Pronunciation Hard (solid) katal bchtai hard (difficult) raudsuk&shii moodxookahshee heavy omoi ohmoy high takal tnhkai honest shojikl ahohjeekee hot atsul ahtsooee Ignorant much! na moochee nah incorrect, wrong machigatta mah-cheegahttah kind shlnsetsa sheensehtsoo lame bOcko beekkoh late, slow osoi ohsoy lasy busho booshoh
      99 words

  • 371 3 EDUCATION SYSTEM IMPROVED (By the Onlooker) MEWS of the re-opening of schools in Syonan will be unanimously greeted judging from the reaction of a number of people who were approached on the subject yesterday. The concensus of opinion 01 parents and students who were questioned
    371 words
  • 166 3 The Town Clock, after a short "holiday," has since recently re sunied to mark the passage of time under the "New Order.' After the first air raid in the vicinity of the Government Offices in the latter part of January the British authorities put
    166 words
  • 53 3 THE Thompson Road Broad--1 casting Station authorities announced that repairs to the station machinery which was "scorched" by the enemy before they retreated, is proreeding rapidly. SBy the early part of April normal broadcasting will be resumed. News and other items will form part
    53 words
  • 86 3 Tokyo, Mar. 22. THE famous Nippon Tourist Bureau has now changed Its name to Bast Asia RYOKOSHA (East Asia Tourist Bureau). Now that the southern occupied areas have assumed normality, this bureau intends in the very near future to establish branch Information Bureaus in Hong Kong.
    86 words
  • Page 3 Advertisements
    • 374 3 M.A.D. Notice No. 21 HAWKERS AND MARKET STALL HOLDERS MUST GET NEW LICENCES It is hereby notified that:— Itinerant Hawkers, Day and Night Street Stall Hawkers and Hawkers Shelter and Market Stall Holders, formerly licensed by the British Government before the 15th of February, 2602, are hereby notified that they
      374 words
    • 582 3 M.A.D. NOTICE No. 20 LIMED RICE Syonan Municipality will shortly release limed rice for the public consumption to which attention of the consumers is called as follows. The said limed rice which was originally imported by the British Government from Java contains a certain quantity of lime for the purpose
      582 words

  • 820 4 Outline Of Nippon's Early Struggles Against Powers PART ONE (By Charles Nell) MANY readers of The Syonan Times have approached the writer of this article and asked for an explanation of the terms "The New Order for East Asia," and "The Greater EastAsia Co-Prosperity
    820 words
  • 151 4 Berlin, Mar. 24. SIR STAFFORD CRIPPS, British Lord Privy Seal and Special Envoy to India, upon his arrival will demand that the Indians voluntarily resort to the "scorched earth" policy in the event war starts in India. This is said
    151 words
  • 127 4 IT has come to our notice that, despite previous warnings, copies of the Syonan Times are still being sold in excess of the authorised price of five cents per copy, and readers are hereby warned that it is
    127 words
  • 147 4 Tokyo, Mar. 24. OBSERVERS here belittle the announcement made in Washington that Henry Morgenthau, U.S. Secretary to the Treasury, and T. V. Soong, head of the Chungking Economic Mission to Washington, have signed an agreement providing for America granting a $50Q,000,000 credit
    147 words
  • 76 4 Shanghai, Mar. 24. THE Nipponese Army and Navy authorities here have announced the regulations for military control of the enterprises of enemy nations in central China excluding the Wuhan district which has been under military control since the outbreak of the Greater East Asia war.
    76 words
  • 171 4 New Fisheries Agreement Proof Of Amity BITTER PILL FOR BRITAIN U.S. Tokyo, Mar. 24. TOKYO newspapers on Tuesday morning unanimously greeted the renewal of the Nippon-Soviet fisheries agreement as a testimony of the normal relations existing (between Tokyo and Moscow. The newspaper Asahi says that the agreement is a barometer
    171 words
  • 66 4 Tokyo, Mar. 24. NIPPONESE mopping up operations against Chungking and Communist troops in the coastal areas of Kwangtung Province between Mar. 17 and 20 accounted for 206 Chinese dead left behind on the battlefield and 218 others taken prisoner, it was revealed on Monday. Large
    66 words
  • 80 4 Buenos Aires, Mar. 24. THE U.S. Secretary of Commerce Jessie Jones has stated that the United States is making a feverish attempt to step up the production of artificial rubber, and has pointed out that strict rationing of robber is now necessary in America, Jessie
    80 words
  • 211 4 Batavia, Mar, 24. THE Nipponese Military Administration authorities at Batavia have announced an interim policy governing currency, foreign trade, etc. The Nipponese policyl has been! mapped in such a manner as to promote the welfare of the East Indies people on the basis
    211 words