Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1945 — Page 7
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BY Zondte X
wr
Gen. Tojo Near
(Continued From Page One)
his home did his cooking and house hold work. Some American milifary quarters speculated that Tojo had been in structed not to kill himself, presumably by the. emperor. They took this as a possible indication that Tojo was marked as Japan's “fall guy” when the war guilt was fixed... a Since he retired rom public life in’ July, 1944, Tojo had devoted himself to gardening at his home. But since Aug. 14 this year, he had given up gardening and busied himself with settling his affairs. When his «son-in-law, Major Koga, an army staff officer, committed suicide after Japan's surrender, rumors spread that Tojo had killed himself. He was quoted as telling a policeman then: “I won't ‘die yet.: There time when I should die.” A Japanese doctor, Tamemitsu Erba, was the first medical man after the shooting to reach Tojo's villa. He administered first aid, but refused to do anything more because Tojo said he wanted to die,
is a
Sutured Wound Johnson came next in an American ambulance and sutured what he called a “sucking wound” in the lower chest. Tojo grimaced with
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{camps to investigate barbarity com-
~| Indianapolis time) and
r Death After
pain as Johnson stitchéd the wound. He had Tojo moved from the chair in which he shot himself and placed on a cot. There he sprawled, covered with a blue and white quilt. The entrance and exit of the bullet were bandaged. Johnson gave Tojo one unit of blood plasma. aty6:27 p. m, (4:27 a. m. Indianapolis time) and a shot of morphine 18 minutes later. Tojo shot himself only four hours after Gen. Douglas MacArthur, moving swiftly to smash Japanese militarism, had ordered his arrest as the start of a general roundup of Japanese war crime inals. \ Occupation Spreads The American occupation army, now more than 100,000 tsrong, rap- | idly was taking over all of the main Japanese home island of Honshu. Advance units entered Fukushima, Yamagata and Iwate prefectures, stretching between Tokyo and Northern Honshu, today and established liaison with Japanese ‘army headquarters in those areas in preparation for formal occupation by 5000 troops Saturday. ‘Some 15,000 other American troops will occupy the northeast coast ports of Sendai, Ishinomaki and Shiogama Saturday, Japanese sources said. An advance party of 110 Americans already has entered | Sendai. The Japanese Domei agency said the Japanese northwestern army will be" disarmed and demobilized by noon Friday (10 p. m. Thursday, Indianapolis time), Symbol in U. 8.
Tojo, the little one-time premier who bécame a symbol in the United States for Japanese deceit and barbarity, had been living the life of a retired farmer since his deposal as premier July 18, 1944,
EERSTE TAX
Authoritative sources said one of MacArthur's main reasons for ordering Tojo's arrest was a fear he might be assassinated or commit hara-kiri before he could be brought to justice as a war criminal. Yokohama. The members include: Investigate Barbarily
American count er-intelligence teams already have left for prison
plaints with power to make arrests. The arrest order climaxed a swift series of decrees issued by Mac-
break up Japan's war-mesking potential and. bring the nation firmly under his control, His earlier decrees demanded the abolition of the imperial general staff by Thursday (Wednesday, “established |
strict censorship over Japanese newspapers and radio broadeasts. It was obvious that MacArthur had stayed his hand in issuing his
cient combat troops ashore to put down any hostility by the Japanese government or army, More Troops Pour In With more than 100,000 American troops, fully equipped with tanks and other combat equipment, already ashore in the Greater Tokyo area, thousands more were landing from ships and planes every hour.|
General Arrest Order Goes Out
TOKYO, Sept. 11 (U, P.) —A gen- | eral arrest order went out today for the entire Tojo cabinet that led Japan into war and 28 other Japanese war criminals, including the infamous Lt, Gen. Masaharu Homma, perpetrator of the Bataan death march. Homma took Genk Jonathan M. Wainwright's surrender on | Corregidor and was directly responsible for the march from Bataan to Ft. O'Donnell,
Hong Kong Sweat March Wilts Japs
(Continued From Page One)
under the hot sun and a few stumbled and fell from exhaus< tion.’ But it was an easier march than Bataan. At the” gates of ‘Shanshuipo prison, they were halted, British naval air corps men ordered them to open up their bundles for inspection,
gentle. Some of them had been interned for three years in the same poison, with many of their new prisoners as jailors, " o
The walkout, by
Arthur in the past 24 hours to |
The Britishers were none too |
WHITE-COLLAR Shooting Self Below Heart|
STRIKE FLARES|
12,000 at Westinghouse Plants Idle.
(Continued From Page One)
er communities in the Minnesota Twin City area. A flurry of strike threats hit New York in the milk, utility and decorating industries. Members of the Brotherhood of Consolidated Edison Co. employees voted to hold a strike vote Sept. 27 among 25,000 employees. The brotherhood is, seeking recognition as bargaining’
_{agent.
Nine thousand union painters and | |decorators voted to strike against! the “Association of Master Painters and Decorators for higher pay. Two | milk ‘companies were faced with]
strike threats in New York.
Recall of 22.000 Ford motor com-
pany employees brightened the la- and was working for the Colonial Memorial Park.
bor picture in Detroit, but a new strike of 3000 production workers went into effect at the Murray corporation, makers of auto bodies. members of the C. I. O. United Auto Workers union was attributed to elimination of overtime pay.
Hudson Strike Continues
Ford workers returned to the giant River Rouge and Highland Park plants yesterday after com- | pany officials announced they had | arranged for an alternative source of supply of auto wheels, normally! received through the Kelsey-Hayes
Wheel Co., where a strike of 4500 at Warren, O., and wage disputes smith 1-c Roy Lee Hopper, Deca- |
is in progress.
A strike of 6000. workers con
tinued at the Hudson Motor Co. and lesser strikes idled some 3000 other Detroit workers. Meanwhile, domestic gas consumers in the Kanawha valley of West
following the American conquest of | Virginia today were receiving an Saipan inthe Marian
TREPPIPrC ETRE RE Tepe
waegEte sentatives of the United Fuel Gas
Co. and C. I. O, union officials prepared to ‘resume a conference designed to end the five-day work stoppage of pumping station operators. Elsewhere, 35,000 workers threatened to strike at the Lockheed Aircraft Corp.'s Los Angeles plant,
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES Wounded Boy's Brave Fight fo Deceive Fate Ends i in Death
o
(Continued From Page One)
dians play this year, but he wasn't able to attend the games,” she added. He learned to cook in the marines, Mrs, Manet explained, and spent lots of his time this spring and summer fixing meals at home, “For Mother's day he fixed a chicken dinner fit for a king,” she said proudly. A veteran of Guadalcanal and a member of the 2d marine division, the young sergeant had “fibbed” about his age in order to enlist in | January, 1942. At boot training, he was named | the outstanding man. in his | platoon. He went overseas in September, 1942, and fought through (the campaign for Guam in July, | 1944, Before enlisting, Sgt. Hyatt had attended Technical high school
Baking Co. He was a member of {University Park Christian church |and of Boy Scout Troop 82. Funeral services will be held at {10 a. m. Thursday in Shirley
and a wage dispute, involving more than 2000 employees at the Magna[vox Co., Pt. Wayne, Ind, was certi{fied to the war labor board. Other strikes kept 14,000 idle at| isix Goodrich Rubber Co, plants in Akron, O.; 6500 at the Midvale Steel! Co. in Philadelphia, and 3200 at the| Parker Appliance Co. in Cleveland. Approximately 3000 Packard elec~ [tric division workers were on strike
|affected 1600 Heil Co, employees in Milwaukee, 2200 Washington an®
erson, N. J., silk workers.
INDIANA G. |. AMONG PRISONERS "RESCUED
“Pvt. Lowell Winfrew, North Jud= son, Ind., soldier who has been in a Japanese prison camp on northern Kyushu, has been released from the camp. > Pvt. Winfrew ‘was one of the American prisoners who arirved in Kanoya, Japan, after being rescued by the U, 8. 5th airforce,
Oregon lumbermen, and 1500 Pat-|
ARMY 5 REDUCING
(Continued ‘From Page One)
ance of duty and qualifications to
seeking advancement, the war department said. “It is unavoidable that men with distinguished records in staff and
field assignments will revert to! lower ranks. In 1940 the prewar
amounted to two-thirds of “one per | cent of the total officer personnel of the army. When Japan was defeatéd, the army had approximately 1600 general officers or onefifth of one per cent of the total
Sgt. George Hyatt officer personnel of 800,000."
Brothers mortuary, with the Rev.
8. Grundy Fisher of the University | Songress
about
RANKS OF wens, *
SEATTLE, Sept. 1n ©. P).- = 8-year-old Seattle Rw E w clawed and bitten to death late
provide an incentive for officers |ast night by a 250- pound
grizzly bear,
Richard Strand died in Doctors hospital four hours after he was
attacked by the animal, |. Vera Guinn, a neighbor who attempted to save the child, was
army had 100 general officers which | bitten on. the back of the leg.
The half-grown bear belonged Earl Coffrin, who kept it chained in his back yard,
whole demobilization job from the jarmed services, Much dissatistae{tion with the speed and method of
There have been mutterings in mustering out the nation’s soldiers taking over the and sailors has been indicated.
|Park church officiating. | The Ralph Barker post, 1587, {Veterans of Foreign wars, of which | [she young marine was a member, \will conduct graveside services at FOR Surviving besides his mother are | his father, George Hyatt Sr. two) sisters, Mrs, Henry A. Staib, and Helen Hyatt, and a brother, Mahlon Jay Hyatt, all of Indianapolis.
SIX INDIANA MEN ON CASUALTY LIST
Six Indiana servicemen were | listed missing or wounded -on the
| navy department casualty list to. day. Missing are:
Aviation Metal-|
tur; Seaman 2-¢c John Michael] Krzyzewski, South Bend; Coxswain Claud Ancil Luttrull, Princeton; | Radioman 2-¢ Jack Edwin Walker, | Anderson, Listed wounded in action are | Gunners Mate 2-¢ William C. oo Bones, Linton —and “Boatswain's | Mate dsp--Damen-: Rdward- Ctopay |. | Anderson, | Mav NAME JUDGE PARKER WASHINGTON, Sept. 11 (U. P.)-! ~President Truman may announce | tomorrow appointment of Federal! Judge John J. Parker, Charlotte, N. C, to the U, 8. supreme court, it was indicated today.
#
|
¥ BUT AT least one bluejacket,
was heard to say: “All right, put it back. no food from you, mate.” Other Japanese who were found with hidden knives and
gently.
Japanese officers also were searched—even to the point of having to drop their pants before the grinning British seamen, It was expected that about 6000 Japanese would be interned
the surrender is completed,
OFFERS FREE SUPPLY
| The development by Prenc Chemists of a palliative formula f easing the. difficulty in coughing nd caused by spasms of
looking into a Japanese mess kit,
1 take |
other weapons were handled less
COLONELS and other ranking |
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+ have Hem anapped . . lave towed... all in He convenient Ayres Ounsss Jip Cet Jfth Joon
Open September 10 - October 15
You'll find what service men and women wont at Ayres’ Overseas Gift Center... it includes a gift shop with weighing, wrapping and mailing facilities
Gift boxes will be displayed to give you ideas for completing your individual box, and. there will be people at the center to give you further sug-
You'll want to be certain your special bit of holiday cheer arrives in time... so mail overseas gifts early. ok
CHRISTMAS OVERSEAS
MRS. STEVENS SERVICE MEN'S GIFT PACKAGE
Chocolate Nut Fudge, Fancy Salted Nuts, and Light Pruit Cake, 3.75 Packed in tin cans, ready to ship in approved mailiag cartons.
CANDY CHRISTMAS TREE—130 White artificial tree, trime med with fruit flavored hard candies, Weighs only 15 oz. —other items may be packed in same box.
Candy and Epicure Shop, Street Floor
SEPT. 10 TO OCT. 15
