Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 January 1942 — Page 2

MONDAY, JAN. 26, 1942

FIRST USE STAMP | THEFT IS REPORTED

Early Wednesday they opened an attack on a Japanese-held | Theft of the first Federal “use” bridge when suddenly they were attacked from the rear. | ee It was decided to appeal to Japanese humanity and send am- jleX stamp {rom an auto was: rebulances filled with wounded through the lines. Six ambulances Ported today by police. marked with the Red Cross drove toward the Japanese-held bridge. It occurred yesterday afternoon The Japs halted the trucks and parleyed with the drivers. They sent while John Cliffe’s auto was parked the trucks back with a demand that the entire force surrender. in front of his home, 603 W. RayInformed that surrender was out of the question, the Japanese ond st b shelling the position and machine-gunning it from the afr, ine : egan shelling pos a ac gu g n “Y guess T am out $2.09," Mr. Clift said.

cluding the ambulances. Finally it was decided to place the worst-wounded in a fast truck DONE. 4 hd ee as 3

PAGE 2 THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES |

JAPS ADVANCE Fighting Men, Given Up for Dead, Trek Through Jungle Mud to Reach Home Line ON SINGAPORE gs. BakOLD SontD

United Press Staff Correspondent SINGAPORE, Jan. 24 (Delayed) —Men who refused to quit when Invaders Take Batu Pahat, Anchor of the British

they were given up for dead or captured straggled back into the Imperial lines today, a band of mosquito-bitten heroes bearing with them Left Flank. (Continued from Page One)

leave the wounded with volunteers. destroy heavy equipment and escape. Sorry unable to help after your heroic effort. Good luck. (Signed) Gordon Bennett.” “Saturday night,” a survivor related. “we took up a position nine miles from the Muar. The first attack came about 7 p. m. We managed to beat it off. There was nothing more till Sunday morning, when Jap infantry attacked. followed by tanks. Our anti-tank batteries polished off 10 Jap tanks. “Again the Japs retired. We began to prepare to push on toward the Muar to try to contact the Indians. “The Japs must have infiltrated to our rear because Sunday night they made a surprise attack with bayonets. However, we came off best “The sniping continued Monday, although it was fairly quiet until 4 p. m. Then a terrific artillery barrage started and a heavier infantry foree attacked again. We started to withdraw between 5 and 6 p. m. “I and 15 others were cut off from the main force and dashed into the jungle. We waded waist high in the jungle swamps for 26 hours, but managed to rejoin the battalion.” It was decided to continue the withdrawal eastward. What was left of the battalion on Tuesday morning moved about four miles.

their wounded. They were the remnant of an Australian and Indian force which had fought so fiercely against a Japanese onslaught last Sunday that they did net realize they had been flanked and cut off. They held for almost a week the vital road which runs from Muar to Yongpeng. After almost 100 hours of fighting the Aussies asked if they might send their wounded through. The Japanese refused. except on condition of absolute surrender. They decided to go on fighting Thursday. a message was flashed to them from headquarters of Maj. Gen. Gordon Bennett, commander of the Australian forces in Malava. It said: “Regret there is little prospect of any successful help for you. Lloyd's party, if successful, should have appeared before this. Twenty of your men and a number of Indians already have returned along the road, which is still in our possession. You may at your discretion land planes, by virtue of a declara-

* tion of war by the Thai government DANGER GROWS C y R d f vesterday against Great Britain and | ’ aise 0 a reserve Marine officer, was first]

the United States. had joined the| already powerful Japanese air 10,000 Jap Troops Landed In Islands Off North |up for unification,

ail in attacks on the Australi A dispatch from Australi had held the west coast Coast, Say Reports. | “The report on the Pearl Harbor | after a ently hopelessly, radio that no help have effected a new landing in the TSh of New York both called for|§ Singapore a full Congressional investigation.

quarters said that 200 more men of a big Australian-Indian force which had been cut off for a week had now Japanese break By BRYDON TAVES i tragedy.” he said, “demonstrates south of the Muar River United Press Staff Correspondent the need for a unified command for | t was indicated that they) arp BOURNE, Australia, Jan. 26. the Hawaiian outpost, a move I them The front is so close to re; is possible + corre. Buka Passage at the north end of Chairman Davida I. Walsh (D.| Mass.) of the Senate Naval Affairs| Committee said his group would be-|

in an effort to dash through the Jap lines. A volunteer driver, with mortars and machine guns blasting a solid wall of fire, tore straight at the Jap lines. An enemy bullet struck him. The speeding truck toppled into a ditch. . The remaining force decided possible into the jungle. Some assistance came from headquarters. Planes appeared and dropped morphine for the wounded, other supplies and food. In the trek through the jungle as many of the wounded as possible were brought along.

Punish Guilty at Hawaii; HITLER UNABLE | Sings to Help Unified Land Command Is Also Demanded 10 STEM REDS -

(Continued from Page One) EE YW CT.

‘Two of His Best Divisions i Smashed With Heavy

Losses, Moscow Says.

| LONDON, Jan. 26 (U. P).—-Two| | of Germany's best divisions, rusied | into the southwest Moscow front| trom another sector in a vain at8! tempt to stop the relentless Rus-| :| sian counter-offensive, have been ¥| thrown back with heavy losses, a | special radio Moscow bulletin said | 8 | today. |

miles above Singapore on the east coast Despite the admission of the loss of Batu Pahat, re cached here that the Japanese were now forced to maint r offensive

+f their

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to get as many of the wounded as

to strain ain thei because and the fact that it took reinforcements longer to reach the front It was disclosed also that Thai-

considerable losses

senior Republican member of the House Naval Affairs Committee ane

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VISION

Face 1942 with a new energy and determination—born > good vision. Vision that will help you achieve the things you have your heart set on. Poor vision may have held you back in '4l—with its fatigue and nervousness —but there is no need for this to continue. Have your

They front

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joined the Imperial advanced oops after working through the ~ece lines Jan. 16. 1 g had saved the entire perial line | before they were 4. appar- —Ten thousand Japanese troops! have recommended for over four were told by have been landed at Rabaul, in the vears could be sent Bismarck Islands. and the Japanese, Rep. Maas and Rep. Hamilton

“id all

that

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«ite each | the Solomons, the Government reD1 cil | ported today,

1as

1

Singapore |

h 1 1h The powerful Japanese force now .;,, .4 once a thorough study of the

Adolf Hitler was reported to have

concentrated at Rabaul, 800 miles northeast of Australia, was landed from a 17-ship invasion fleet In addition the Japanese had in-

report to determine whether there | should be further investigation of;

higher Army and Navy officials.

{| personally ordered the division, the 6th and Tth, into the lines from nis

| new

and presumably safe “inner|

$| call” headquarters at Minsk or in|

Miss Phyllis Wilcox, Indiana University coed, will use her singing talent to help raise funds to

eyes examined today.

NHC Fekrlack

Senator C. Wayland Brooks (R.| Ill) wanted such an inquiry to de-| termine why Mr. Stimson and Mr.! Knox had agreed to “sending of our military and naval equipment to | other countries” when our most im-|

fight infantile paralysis. She will appear Friday night in the show at the Butler Fieldhovse with a long list of other entertainers.

east Prussia. The Moscow | Russians had regained nine im-| | portant inhabited places in the last 24 hours on the southwest -

Sigh . {| Moscow front, and the regular CAPITAL WRITER DIES { portant outpost was “inadequately | Russian war communique reported

Optometrist at

ARRANGE RITES FOR JEANNETTE E CULL vasion forces at Kavieng, in New ! Ireland Island near Rabaul; at Coartvicrec ag Arye

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This passage, at the northwest lied.” | . : toc] S ied. ; | on : : AR ‘end of the Solomons, is a stepping kiana! astonishment that | Eve 3 = ; | that 16 towns and villiages had | WASHINGTON, Jan. 26 (u, 2) (UTA U dE , stone between the Solomons and) gp. and Short each was only | EERE been captured on the entire front. —Joseph S. Wasney, 44, a Washing- : Bg "|New Ireland, in the Bismarcks. It bs aii eh eh ton staff correspondent of the 137 W. Washington St. separates Bougainville, of which | Superficially acquainted with the 1400 Germans Slain {United Press associations for more po is the pa town. and Raky | Other's preparedness measures may | Associate Justice Owen J. Roberts of the U. S. Supreme Court po i.) troops were reported ad- than 20 years, died at Glendale, Md ; : : 1 er only 125 miles from New Ire. | translate itself into considerable, (seated in car) is besieged by Washington newsmen as he leaves the le ancing all along the line, break- | Sanitarium yesterday from: a heart ; S Pd .} Hl N E )) 15nd. : Sa uth command hj Reae] White House after delivering to President Roosevelt the report fixing 'ing such German resistance as attack which followed a long illness. | CRAWL OL CT # ia Ww e. : | 3 It was feared here that the Jap- nS | four Aine or Neve ate] the blame for the success of the Jap attack on Pearl Harbor, | there was by storming or sa - ¥ i i ba so v - » » 13 " 'V i y ’ er10 anese had succeeded in angie | ficer in command of all land, sea Parties, prier to the attack, of the) Oahu could have beeen covered but ng win Sl 3 h Cane 7 ee ot the alu} aif forces in 3 Siven sres-iike) Werning inessage of Dec. 7190 [1 wes ok, TE a rurique reported py he Toe Bt alt from Australia Hawail — it scarcely would have| ‘The report concluded with exon- | §. The Japanese inielligence serv- that the Russians in their latest trip to Texas in the hope OITes Siral rom - i . | been possible for an Army officer ‘ ice had evidently supplied the at- : : 00 G s A government statement said ci- ve bm A ree eration of other officers and enlisted | hn ; " . | operations killed 1400 Germans. of recovering from a nervous break- _. \ { there to “assume ristakenlv that | tackers with detailed information| ; tured reat 2d a ? villians had been evacuated from he Nave was oy vr men on the island, asserting that sith a { The Russians cap ul g Madang. on the east coast of New| the Naw) as conducting adequate | concerning targets to be bombed. quantities of munitions and stores. Gu " = nd from Tula i Island in! offshore patrols or for a Navy offi-| ‘except for a negligible number, Prior to Dec. 7 Japanese spies had | it Wak asserted. horton ‘Wewak. northeast cet ko INaKS the IsusRe of “assum- the use of intoxicating liquor on entered the island in gfeat num-| Stockholm dispatches said Hitler ’ New Guinea. Was bombed today. {ing” that the Army was operating!the preceding (Saturday) evening | Pers. Short had blocked proposals had abandoned his headquarters at @ A test blackout was arranged for its sound detector devices 24 hours|did not affect their efficiency” to require Japanese consular agents, gmolensk. the entire Eastern coast of Austra-|® Ri ase dat in all wit | Other highlights of the report: |!0 register. Stockholm reported also that ou 1] asms lia. in expectation of Japanese air ALES for defense both Me Ari Why Planes Were Massed Marshal Klementi Vana: sent : two raids on the continent, and a for- 8 Mach GRR ERS dus . . | to eastern Russia to organize new v and Navy would institute immedi-| 1 Short and Kimmel were aware | American airplanes were massed : ; P , : 2 : Short. and ‘mies, had now returned to the sound hg mat biog gg Tg ately plans for consolidation of au- that previous Japanese actions in-|{08ether on the ground because Vos oh er] thrown into ac-| JERS some eed naggi Brice In- nment intended to register every thority and closer co-operation on dicated that hostilities might be Military authorities had ordered an (io; tens of thousands of newly makes your nose runny, stUBSUp your | male up to the age of 60 for mili-| > Ps taken. undertaken prior to a formal dedla-falert seins sabotage. It was as-|raineq shock troops from the Ural boa ord causes COuging spate that fhe Rig WR hed | subs § ration of war. sumed that it was easier to guard. ; ion. make you miserable . . . relieve misery Lent % gr and it bongo WU Sunk eur Sefure Altary 2. On three occasions, Short and tduipment against “Fifth Column” Fouling rogt this SPECIAL, HOME-PROVED VICKS WAY. el that istration of all wom-| Two sensational examples of fail-| Kimmel were advised by Washing-|damage when it was so massed. Vyazma Threatened Boil some water—pour it into a SE i ure to take even last-minute pre- ton officials and by naval intelli-| 8: The air patrols of Oahu were| Tne Russians were driving hard| DOW Add a heaping spoonful of |” Primi Mi iste John Curtin an. cautions were cited in the report— gence that hostilities in the Pacific|\n@dequate. No inshore patrol was| own the Smolensk road, where VapoRub. Then breathe n the steama —~ iy h " the sinking of a Japanese submarine were probable. |maintained by the Army prior to they were reported to be threaten- ing medicinal vapors, | nounced in a speech t pe 12% outside Pearl Harbor more than an| 3 Short and Kimmel without ex-|D2€C: 7 and no distance recon-| no yyazma, 135 miles southwest of From the first breath you can feel | negotiations Xn procee ing '0 hour before the air attack and the ception believed the chances of a|DiSsances by the Navy except|noscow. jelief come as yepoRups medication el of the United Nations Far detection of approaching aircraft raid, while the fleet was based at uring drills and maneuvers. | On the northwest Moscow front sages. pr pny gs oh SL S a A S > { : { Tar . a : : > To ' y . East command. nea an hour before the SESS! pear! Hones, oe riots nil." | sa raf CCoanment elven rr. | as iges manne pre Subiies the Libation ytless the Eo . Short an immel independ- y | the capture o elidovo, on the = estion in Bushmen Aid Defense | The pupire to take appropriate ently took such action as earn [JY defepie measures concerned | g,hev-Velikie Luki Railroad 185 he upper bronchial tubes, head, nose : ' Isteps upon detection of the ap-|qeemed appropri or (chiefly with sabotage which tended |,.:1oc from the capital. in addition| and throat. Fe ee a an. Proaching aircraft was probably the informed ae eet [10 lead him to believe that what he p weg noes dis Once you enjoy the results of this nounced that Australian defense | MOSt tragic example of might-have-| Going, ‘had done met the requirements of | Special communiques said the special medicated vapors treatment forces were fighting “magnificently” eens. The air warning system| 5 on Nov vheh Admiral the warnings and orders received |; . Germans had lost more than you will realize why so many peoagainst the Japanese in the hills closed down at 7 a. m, ordinarily, Harold R. Stark, chief of naval by him. ; ‘ {12,000 men between Jan. 16 and, : (but a young non-commissioned offi- : : | 10. Kimmel's and Short's behind Rabaul. cer who wanted to practice asked operations, sent Kimmel a message to confer IR | The government said that most of p RED a

ao a reiLire | Jan. 25 and that between Dec. 6 33ans is toh eet -oper resulted |, Jan. 15 the ‘man t and received permission to stay on. ¥ hich Stark characterized as a “War |jargely “from a sense of security due S00 men Tan 0 At 7:02 a. m, he detected what oe there was sufficiently|to opinion prevalent in diplomatic, ynestimated numbers wounded, he thought was a large group of paris ‘rained personnel availableimilitary and naval circles, and in| frosi-bitten and ill. | aircraft some 100 miles north of °¢ Lcarl Harbor to operate the air- the public press, that any immediate, Russian losses between Dec. 6 and | Pear] Harbor and reported the same craft warning system 24 hours a day. attack by Japan would be in the Far Jan. 15 were put at 30,000 men at 7 to an “inexperienced” An arc of nearly 360 degrees around East.” killed.

7:30 a. m,, had been specially trained in jun- lieutenant. The latter assumed they List Many as Typhus Victims . . were friendly craft, since some WwW M . : : gle warfare and sent to the north- = * Pd Veen 1 | A Daily Mail Madrid dispatch eastern islands in expectation of a ean te b mh ee el tw a r oves Oo AY uted Vichy reports that the GerRe I res . . Ecks {mans had lost 500,000 men so far By LOUIS F. KEEMLE lin January, including 300000 who URJISH Prest War antirn |died of typhus, pneumonia, frost-

apanese sneak attack. Jap { Thus the last opportunity for a At the start of the eighth week of the war in bite or exposure.

hev were reported by the Gov-| : i general alarm before t s ernment to be fighting stubbornly S. ore the Japanese the Pacific, the United Nations are striking back| The Soviet special communiques harder than at any time hitherto, showing unmis- [said the Russians between Jan. 16

in the hills against Japanese ij Planes arrived was passed up. land Jan. 25 had captured 69 tanks,

tempts to filter in from the Rabaul; area takable evidence that they are beginning to organize | 4 : their strength effectively. [268 field guns, 49 mine throwers, The Japanese have not been stopped and the 33¢ machine guns, 142 automatic

the defenders were militiamen, and that they included many fierce, experienced bushmen. The bushmen, most of them from the Victoria area of southeastern

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that some ships were hit. One Aus- that the full onslaught of the Jap- The next few weeks are likely to be critical. The most hopeful news| DOTEES: 10 Wirsigss sigtions, 24 ams beta } vs + : : | The Government was Sting] The board said there were de-|attacks en Japanese supply and| intensified as additional Ea a pea PDs | threatened areas by means of air- ment for adequate defense of J ‘her p | . § Japanese where it hurts most. Com- | themselves in serious difficulties in! i ‘ ; ; e | selves § \ s in plane reconnaissance, as communi-| Hawaii, but added that full use was munications are their most vulner-|the many islands where they have! THe v Mobilization of defense forces terials available Wer rhb ; & : . ver a front of more than 4000 miles| Thev are dependent for s ios] om : : > i N N ‘ : pend supplies proceeded swiftly today, and all de- It cited an anti-submarine net, from Burma to the Australian man- ang reinforcements on a on what is normally a complete to Pearl Harbor, which was opened - a4 ; aks " ; : : . ) pri American and Dutch naval losses! port, supply ship and warship sent holiday—Australia Day, anniversary at 4:38 a. m. on Dec. 7 for the in these attacks have been nil and to the bottom or put out of R onl at Sydney, Jan. 26, 1788. It was the was not closed until 8:40 a. m.—43 ¢ ¢ ; vs > . 29! attacks can be kept up and even| i dati is first time that the defense forces minutes after the Japanese attack Pb op i rs ae Dy sie Jee) i é 2 JIU e ute 1. | tory in the 154 years of the coun- marine sneaked into the nator. SUGAR RATION T0 UE bomber 5 RYH Coir & try’s history. {but was sunk apparently before its| py / Spe on pI i ies. t ‘einforce- | | The report listed the following ¢t there & I | “causes contributory to the success |B Res soon cnoushe “Disregard of international law! : and cuitom relating to declaration| Much as 100 pounds—a years supherence by the United States to| Then ~ome stores ran out of sugar | such laws and customs. | toward ovening and worried cusfective counter-espicnage. | brown sugar and powdered sugar— Enlisted Men Exonerated which they were trying to exchange So the wholesalers and retailers, | sages (from Washington) on the chain and independent alike, are action in the Far East, and on anti-| It will save them many a customer | sabotage measures. | who might otherwise angrily stomp| ment to reply to the message re- stock is gone. lating te the anti-sabotage meas-| While there is no shortage, there | general, Hawaiian Department. fare the reports which have con-Non-receipt by the interested fyseq the consuming public, the Thiasa ort believe. MONDAYS AND FRIDAYS Films Developed UNTIL 9 P. M. developed 3 Stinted ELMER DAVIS Studie 242 Mass. Ave.

tralian plane was missing. |anese attack began is the successful naval and aerial {munition trucks and great quantinearly all its reports fro the i i in-| ty ; ; fein 3 po m the ficiencies of personnel and equip- {ransport lines. That i§ hitting the ments arrive, the Japanese may find | cations had been cut off for days. not made of the men and ma- ale spot, for they have spread out forced landings |fense factories speeded production, supposedly guarding the entrance gate. | routes now under fire. Each trans of the landing of the first settlers entrance of two mine sweepers and ap losses extremely small. If the weakens the force of their drive. | had been in action on home terri- began. Meanwhile, an enemy sub- United States war planes and heavy| States w s and heavy | torpedoes could do any damage. | : pe 3hy Yemage ADEQUATE FOR TABLE mens might turn the tide, if they lof the Japanese attack: (Continued from Page One) of war by the Japanese and ad-|PW for the zverage family. | “Retrictions which prevented ef- tomers compiained. Some bought today for table sugar. “Emphasis in the warning mes-| probability of aggressive Japanese hoping for rationing to begin soon. “Failure of the War Depart-| out of the store when the sugar ures instituted by the commanding|js Jess sugar than before. These § or 8 Exnosures 25 eC 4 Middle of 1st Block

*

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