Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 August 1951 — Page 28
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. portance to us to determine how | , close the menace would come.” |
persuade Japanese warlords to
. Tass by slipping.
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By United Press WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 May. Gen. Charles A. Willoughby said today Russia had a 60 to 90-day advance warning of Japanese war plans in 1941 but that this information never was passed along to the United States. He said that, as chief of intelligence for Gen. Douglas MacArthur's Far Eastern Command, he was looking for every scrap of information he could get about the possibility of a Japanese thrust southward. “Historically,” he said, “we can say that if we had had the information (which the Soviets had) in September or October it would have constituted an enormous political, economic and military warning and we would have been better prepared to meet the attack of Dec. 7, 1041.”
Gets Sidetrabked
Gen. Willoughby testified before the House Committee on UnAmerican Activities for the second straight day about the spy rings which Russia had established in China and Japan. It was through the Richard Sorge ring in Tokyo that Gen, Willoughby said the Russians became aware of Japan's plans to move its military forces south instead of toward Russia's Siberian frontier.
Gen. Wiloughby had promised to supply the committee today| with evidence of direct links be-| tween Communist fronts in this country and abroad. But under] questioning, he got sidetracked, into talking about the weeks! _ leading up to Japan's attack on| Pearl Harbor.
Eyed Siberia
While Japan considered a military move against Siberia early in 1941, Gen. Willoughby said, Sorge's later messages to Moscow made it clear that Japan had decided on what the general called an “inevitable collision” with American and British forces, 1 in the Far East. i
“As late as Oct. 15,” he said, *"Sorge positively relayed to Mos-!
Tells of Tip to Russ on Jap Moves Soviet es
cow that the Japanese would] move south. The name Pearl Harbor does not appear in his;
messages because that was a fixed date in a fixed month. “That is not important. The important thing was to know which way Japan would go.” Gen. Willoughby said this type! of information was “of vital im-|
‘Vital Service’
His intelligence service ‘had appraised the potential and knew of Japanese movements on the Chinese mainland,” he said, but “nothing of the quality of Sorge’s reports was available to us.” Gen. Willoughby said the Sorge ring had performed a ‘‘tremendous, vital service” in helping to
move south. Gen. Willoughby said that strenuous Soviet objections to in-| jecting the Sorge espionage case in the international military trib-! unal in Tokyo after the war offered “practical proof of the involvement of the Soviet government in the spy mechanism.”
Extract of Okra May Save Animals From Shock Death
Science Service MILWAUKEE, “Aug. 23 — An extract from the okra plant prom{ses to save pet and farm animals from shock death, Dr. H. B. Benjamin of this city reported at the meeting here of the American Veterinary Medical Association. The extract is used as a subgtitute for animal blood plasma. In laboratory trials, dogs near death from shock quickly recovered when given the okra extract. In case of atom bombing, there might be many cases of animals as well as humans needing treatment for shock, following injuries, it was pointed out. Other times when it would be useful would be' following operations, long illness or accidents. The okra extract is readily available, inexpensive, easily purified and can be stored indefinitely. It is also being studied as a plasma substitute for human beings. Metal plates, called fracture fixation plates, and Thomas extension splints are helping many animals recover from broken-legs. The splints are for small animals and are put on outside the leg but are made so the animal will not entangle them in grass or shrubbery.
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THURSDAY, AUG. 23, 1951
: THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
$200,000 In Bonus Easy to Work ~~ " ecks Bounce
| WASHINGTON, Aug. 23 (UP) |—Richard Sorge, the Russian =v Back to State who was hanged by Japan in 1944, found things pretty easy for him| on occasional visits to the Ulinted
States, During testimony by Maj. Gen.
(for your bonus checks? More than $200.000 in sta
house n-American activities office of State Auditor Frank De le part of Sorge's con-
Charles A Willoughby before the bonuses has bounced back to the.
fscords*the same day a new ad-| dress is received.
Averaging $400 to $300, the checks include 42 mailed to In-| 'dianapolis recipients, 245 else-| ‘where in Indiana and 162 out of state, Disabled veterans or next-of-!
kin who have moved since appli-| cation for state bonus was filed
Hey, fellas, how about calling| May get further information from
| State Auditor Millis’ office in the (Statehouse.
RB nen
T.
the name in the forged passport. “The tailor remembered me and
he was not interested in the change and made the suit for me. People in the United States do inot think {t strange if the same {man uses two different names.” » . » ANOTHER EXAMPLE: “I shall give an illustration of how loosely everything is done in the United States. I did not pay {my exit tax and forgot to get a {stamped receipt when I went on board the ship for Europe.
noted my name was different, but \,4 filed, according to the auditor. |
and next-of-kin of deceased,” ,said Mr, Millis. “Other bonus checks will be
addresses on their applications or have moved since the application!
“Bonus checks have been! mailed only to disabled veterans ®
paid when the state has collected f= enough money to honor all applications simultaneously. That § may not be until 1953.” Every veteran eligible for § World War II bonuses should § register every change of address §
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P Nor INcLUDING
"FORMER U. S. SPY CHIEF TEST
Willoughby, Gen. Douglas MacArthur's former intelligence chief,
opens, before the House un-American
two footlockers containing evidence of Communist spy work which he obtained from Shanghai police files. Willoughbly, saying he is prepared to name more than 180 persons who have been key figures in Russia's espionage network, added that there are Soviet spy
rings now v operating in the U. 8. | sim
IFIES—Maj, -Gen. Charles A.
“Just as the ship was about to immediately with the Indiana }’ sail, a customs officer found out Department of Veterans Affairs, | Activities Committee, one of ° [about it, and it looked as though Bonus Division, 431 N. Me|he were going to take me off the ridian St. Hi | {ship, but I slipped him $50 and] James Mills, Veterans Affairs q|
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PAGE 29
PORKY LANE
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fessioh as a spy was read into! |Millis. And he's anxious to re-| the record. It. contained these turn the money to the proper comments: veterans, i WITH THIS “When I was leaving New York The 449 checks were returned COUPON (in 1935), I had a suit tailored, because World War II disabled Cc giving the tailor my real name, L AND $2.00 and on my retwrh trip I went to veterans and next-of-kin to whom see the same tailor and gave him they were mailed filed incorrect 1 PURCHASE
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