8
WE PUBLISH LOCAL AND WORLD’S LATEST HAPPENINGS LEADING JAPANESE DAILY ON ISLAND OF HAWAII VOL. XXXV HILO, HAWAII, T. H., TUESDAY, AUGUST 26, 1941 NO. 9034 OIL SHIPMENT NEGOTIATIONS NOW UND’RWAY GENERAL SETTLEMENT O F PENDING JAPAN-U.S. PROB - LEM ACCEPTABLE WASHINGTON, Aug. 26—Ques- tioned at the press conference re- garding Churchill’s statement that United States is' seeking settle- ment in the Pacific giving Japan the utmost reassurance and her le- gitimate interests, Secretary of State Cordell Hull cautiously de- clined to divulge whether any con- crete proposals are under discus- sion between Tokyo and Washing- ton and told the newsmen that there is not much for him to say except that the informal conver- sation, which he had with Ambas- sador Nomura Saturday, was typi- cal of the situation. Hull Admits Talk Underway Asked if the Japanese govern- ment presented any definite pro- posals for settlement, Hull reiter- ated the only thing he could say at the present stage was the in- formal conversations occurring. He declined to comment Lon- don reports that Britain is seeking Japanese agreement to neutralize Thailand and the Dutch Indies and said that any settlement with Jap- an must rest on the fundamental principles the United States have been advocating and added that if these principles were referred to it would clear up any specific points. He also failed to comment on Churchill’s pledge that Britain will side with th^ United States if the effort to reach a settlement fails. Egypt, Indo-China End Trade Relations ANKARA, Aug. 26—It was re- ported from Cairo that the Egypt- ian government complying with (the demand by the British Ambas- sador, Sir Miles W. Lampson, notified the French Ino-China de- cision of severe trade relations with it. JAPANESE IN HANOI W E SET UP GUILD TENOR SPEECH OF CHURCHE CAUED TRICK ;CHURCHILL’S REFERENCE TO i JAPAN ADDS LIGHT EAST TALKED OF AT SEA MEET I WASHINGTON, Aug. 26— The Baltimore Sun editorialized Win- ston Churchill’s reference to Jap- 'an illuminating a confirmed poli- ! cy in the Pacific, discussed at the sea meeting. It opines that Churchill without saying so in specific terms made clear that he and Roosevelt dis- cussed the far eastern question in detail and agreed measures to counter Japan’s moves in the event the effort to effect a peaceful ad- justment fails. The paper concludes Churchill’s declaration of Britain’s side is un- hesitatingly with the United IStates in the latter contingency to 'emphasize gravity of “Japanese I threat’’ and also gives welocme !evidence of the Anglo-American !solidarity in dealing with the situ- ' ation, which is vitally important to both nations. I ROME, Aug. 26— Commenting ion Churchill’s speech, Gayda edi- torializes the entire tenor speech and indicates that the speech was intended to lift hopes of the Brit- ons, who expected the announce- ment of immediate United States participation in war after the ocean meeting, but were disap- pointed. It also encouraged “American belligerency’’ by pretending that Britain is capable of realizing war aims, which at the same time will prove profitable to American fi- nance and “schemes of imperial- ism.’’ TOKYO, Aug. 26—The Kokumin termed the talk “a trick to alien- ate the Japanese from the Axis’’ ; and declared that the entire ten- ior speech belied sincerity of the I statement’s previous words— all Iefforts will be made to bring about a peaceful solution in the Pacific !■—while resorting “all sorts of ma- ;neuver publicity to intimidate Jap- an in the event of throwin-g away her face for vanity and prestige.’’ Speeches such as this are merely outward and “are intentionally taken in order to shift the respon- sibilities for war or peace in the far east to Japan,’’ the Kokumin S£ud. WillFlvtoU. S. Negotiation for Oil Shipment TCKYC, Aug. 26—Koh Ishii, de- puty spokesfan of the information board, admitted negotiation is go- ing on between the United States and Japan, regarding the shipping question in connection with the sending of oil to the Soviet by A- merica but no talk is going on be- tween Ambassador Tatekawa and Moscow authorities, he said. Queried regarding press report that American oil tankers are be to convoyed to Vladivostok, the de- puty spokesman replied he has no information concerning that. Turning to the freezing of Am- erican assets in Japan, the deputy spokesman declared that the Japa- nese government is strictly ob- serving the principle of reciproci- ty. The deputy spokesman said that freezing regulations on Neth- erlands East Indies is not so strict. Queried regarding the resump- tion of trade with NEI, Ishii re- plied that the question is still im- der discussion but now much pro- gress has been recorded. Asked in regard to Article 9 of the Portsmouth treaty of 1905, which stipulates non-fortification of the Straits of Soya and Tartary as well as their free navigation, the deputy .spokesman replied that the provision must be interpreted in the light of changed interna- tional situation. FORMATION PLANNED IN AC- CORDANCE WITH FIC ECO- NOMIC TREATY HANOI, Aug. 26— Representa- tives of eighteen Japanese import- ers’ companies in Hanoi and Hai- phong conferred at the local Japa- nese consul-generals residence on steps to organize an importers’ | guild in North Indo-China in ac- ; cordance with the Japanese-Fren-; ch Indo-China economic treaty. ! Sixteen Japanese firms in south ! Indo-China had already organized : their own guild while 24 others in the eastern part of the French co- | lony are expecte to take up similar | steps. These guilds will control Japa- nese imports under the guidance of Japanese authorities. SHORTAGE OF IMPORTS HITS SINO TRADERS DUTCH EAST INDIES GOVERN- MENT SUFFERS REVENUE DECREASE CANTON, Aug. 26 — Reports reaching here from the Nether- lands East Indies indicated that Sino traders as well as natives in the Dutch colony have been suf- fering from shortage of imports of Japanese goods following the freezing of Japanese assets. It was noted that majority of the 1,200,000 Sino traders there are engaged in trade with the Ja- panese for their cotton and miscel- laneous products. Reports said that their inability to pay taxes are now resulting in heavy decrease in the NEI govern- ment revenues and added that Si- no traders can’t expect much trade with United States’ in view of shortage of bottoms. Meanwhile, it was understood that 70,000,000 NEI natives are hard hit by the shortage of Japa- nese goods as well as higher tax- es. Francis Biddle Named I U.S. Attorney General WASHINGTON, Aug. 26—Roo- sevelt nominated Francis Biddle, solicitor general, succeeding Rob- ert Jackson as attorney general in 'his cabinet and gave final instruc- tions to Willys Peck, new minister ■to Bangkok succeeding Hugh Grant and who leaves for Thailand I tonight. SUGHT IRANIAN RESISTANCE ENABLES BRITISH TD CAPTURE BANDAR SHAPUR AND 1 SHIPS HATA MOVED BY JAPANESE COOPERATION I _____________ BELIEVE JAPANESE FORCES SHOULD TURN OVER JOB TO NANKING NANKING, Aug. 26 — General Shunroku Hata, commander-in- chief of the Japanese expedition- ary forces in China, di£CU£,sing yesterday afternoon the Yangtze model peace area, which he in- spected over the three-day period from August 18, to the press, said, “The peace area is not only a touchstone indicating the future of Nanking but as concrete evidence of the national government’s be- lief in the peaceful reconstruction is worthy of greatest efforts.” He also said that he is deeply impressed by the wholehearted co- operation of Japanese forces and Nanking in the model area “with the Chinese government army, po- litical parties and people, combin- ing their total strength in the pro- ject.” Hata reiterated that the convic- tion of the Japanese forces should turn over the administrative res- ponsibility of the peace area to Nanking as soon as possible “and concentrate their efforts in direct action of anti-Chunerking, ’ 3-Pronged Drive Directed Ag^ainst Iran Mon- day with Cooperation of Navy and Air- forces in Conveying^ Detachments TOKYO, Aug. 26 Koh Ishii, deputy spokesman of the I information bureau, at the foreign press conference said that ! Japan was “shocked” by the Iranian invasion and said that ; the British move was made on unjustifiable pretext. He de- : cleared that on August 22, Hull told the press at Washing- ton that the United States would oppose British invasion of Iran. Ishii said that Hull’s statement was made after he con- ferred with Mohammed Schayestev, Iranian minister to Washington. LONDON, Aug. 26 — Reports from the British general headquar- ; ters in India announced that Brit- ish and Indian troops had entered Iran at three points Monday and iare advancing with slight resist- ;ance everywhere. ! Bandar Shapur was taken and ' seven Axis ships namely, two Ger- man damaged ships, three Italian i slightly damaged ships and two ■further German ships, which had I been beached, were reported cap- I tured with their crews. I The communique further men- tioned that leaflets were scattered Ifrom RAF bombers in Te heran ! and other towns in Iran which ex- Iplained why Iran is being invaded land that no hard feelings are di- Irected against the Iranians, i Oil installations at Naftishah and Qasrishan were reported oc- cupied with little or no opposition and inhabitants were reported showing no hostile feelings. TOKYO, Aug. 26—“Peace-loving Americans may be shocked by the British invasion of Iran without any provocation,” Koh Ishii, depu- ty spokesman of the information board, replied to a foreign corre- spondent today when asked to comment on the Iranian situation. Asked if Japan has been shock- ed, the deputy spokesman replied, “Of course.” He added that “there is no justification for British pre- ventive measure.” British contend that they in- vaded Iran to prevent the Ger- mans from occupying the country but “the British can invade any country if their contention is jus- tifiable,” the deputy spokesman said, pointing out Iran is not in danger of German invasion. President Vargas oi Brazil pre- sented this plane to Paraguayan Flyer Navarro, who plans a flight to United States in near future. sion in central Asia in order to ac- quire loot of the rich Persian re- sources. “We are curious to knew the attitude of Roosevelt, who al- ways is stressing the need of de- fending small neutral countries. It is clear that Iran provoked no one. Anglo-Soviet occupation of Iran is a clear repudiation of the substan- ce of good faith in the eighth points of the Anglo-American de- claration.” IRANIANS RESISTING LONDON, Aug. 26—Authorita- tively, the Iran army consisting of 190,000 men is resisting the An- glo-Soviet forces although it did not reveal the extent of the Iraai resistance. It was revealed that the British forces landed at Banda- shapur, deepest part of the Per- sian gulf, which is closest to Tehe- ;ran and Caucasus border. VERNACULARS COMRIENT TOKYO, Aug. 26— Vernaculars commenting on the British inva- sion of Iran unanimously branded tlie action as aggressive while un- official commentators stressed that the British act is a glaring violation of the eight-point pro- gram enunciated after the Churc- hill-Roosevelt meeting. The Nichi Nichi said “Anglo- Soviet demands regarding Ger- mans in Iran amount to high handed interference in Iran’s do- mestic affairs” and also virtually and unanimously the morning-pa- pers heeded closest attention on next moves of the Turkish govern- ment. Motives for Violation The Nichi Nichi said that real motives for the violation of Iran’s neutrality is firstly, the opening of the supply route for the passage of war materials to the Soviet, sec- ondly, the seizure of Iranian oil fields as well as protection of So- viet oil in Caucasusu against the seizure by Germany, thirdly, the use of Iranian bases in the event of Nazi occupation of Caucasus. Nazi Method Employed Observers drew significant par- allel on the above moves and Jap- an’s diplomatic efforts to secure petroleum supplies from Dutch In- dies and said this is another elo- quent testimony of hypocracy of the British statecraft and proof that Britain whenever necessary doesn’t hesitate to employ the so- called Nazi methods. The Nichi Nichi concluded that Iran’s military forces are entirely inadequate to cope with Anglo-So - viet invaders and “w'e can only voice sincerest sympathy for this latest victim of the Anglo-Saxon aggression.” ISHH “NOT INFORMED” TOKYO, Aug. 26—Koh Ishii, de- puty spokesman of the informa- tion board, repeated “not inform- ed” when correspondents targeted him with barrage of questions re- garding the contents of the latest Nomura-Hull meeting. When a correspondent question- ed Ishii on the extent of Nomura’s powers in carrying on negotiations, Ishii said, “I can’t say specifically but, of course, he has large sphere according to his discretion.” Asked whether Japan would welcome gen- eral settlement of pending Japan- America problems, Ishii declared, “If we could come to a reasonable conclusion, of course, we would,” however, declined to elaborate. M ri S es IN SINGAPDRE STRONG INDIAN ARMY ALSO DISEMBARKS TRANS- PORT SINGAPORE, Aug. 26 — The largest single body RAF officers and men sent to Malaya in more than a year arrived from Britain. The transports also disembarked strong Indian army reenforce- ments including infantry artillery, complete hospital staff numbering 26 officers and 280 medical per- sonnel. The RAF personnel included Australian airmen from the mid- dle east. Wedding Reception Slated This Saturday Mr. and Mrs. Yoshinori I to of 48 Ohea Street is giving a wedding reception at their home on Satur- day, August 30, at 6 p. m. in honor of Miss Tatsuko (Ito) Tanizaki, who is getting married to Masami Isomura, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jyu- kichi Isomura of Hilo. Miss Tanizaki is a graduate of the Hilo High school with the class of 1936 and at present is employed at the Boston Store as clerk. Mr. Isomura is connected with the California-Western States Life In - surance Company and the Hawaii Hochi, HUo Branch, White Sewing School Picnic Held Sunday The White Costume Dressmak- ing School held its annual picnic at the Onekahakaha beach on Sun- day, August 24. Games including the apple bit- ing contest, cracker eating and whistling contest, blind fold bana- na eating contest and fwalking the bottles contest were. enjoyed. A quiz game and an amateur singing contest were held. Valu- able prizes were awarded the win- ners. Miss Tomiyo Matsumoto re- ceived the grand prize. Miss Namie Nambu, first prize, Miss Chieko Une, second prize, and Miss Ha- tsumi Uno, third prize. Lunch was served by the White Sewing school girls. GRASS AS HUNAN DIET' IS FAVDRED BY SCIENTISTS EGG QUOTATIONS (August 26, 1941) Trading erratic with wide range in prices, carry-over stock noted in some quarters ai’e: Large: 55 to 63 cents per dozen. Medium: 50 to 56cents per dozen. Small: 32 to 42 cents per dozen. These prices are gathered fron: reliable sources but are not gua- ranteed. They are for the dat€ stated above and represent Hono- lulu wholesale prices to retail stores on this date only. Richard Yamauchi Sailing Tomorrow Richard Yamauchi, son of Mr. and Mrs. K. Yamauchi of Piopio Street, who was visiting his fami- ly the past 2 months will return to the mainland via Honolulu tomor- row to continue with his medical studies at a Chicago university. Previous to his return here he was enrolled at the Oregon State Col- lege at Eugene, Oregon. Mr. Yamauchi is a graduate with the Class of 1937 of the Hilo High school and was class vice president. Teen Twenties Club to Enjoy Table Games The Teen Twenties club will en- joy table games at the YWCA ac- I tivities building tomorrow night commencing at 7:30 p. m. Miss Hi- i sae Sueoka is chairman of the af- fair. i ' All members are requested to I attend. NEW YORK, Aug-. 26 (U P)— A million dollars is wait - ing for the man who can add grass to the human diet. Probably no other item of potential food value would benefit human health as much as common grass the stuff people run lawnmowers through. Tf mankind would eat like a horse, the science of dietetics would be revolutionized. | Grass, according to the Ameri- can Chemical Society, is tops as a source of vitamins. One pound of grass contains more vitamins than 30 pounds of fresh fruits and ve- getables, Twelve pounds of dried grass contains more vitamins than 340 pounds of fruits and vegeta- bles—more fruits and vegetables than the average person eats in a year. But grass is not attractive to the human taste, and Americans per- sistently refuse to balance their diets with fruits and vegetables, and consequently the low level of national health has been called one of the major bottlenecks of the defense effort. SOLDIERS GIVE CANDY VOLUME UPWARD SPIRAL ■WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 (UP) —American soldiers are eating so much candy that per capita con- sumption of sweets may reach an all-time high during the cuirent year. The Department of Commerce reported that the marked increase in candy consumption was due to addition of chocolate bars to the emergency rations used by soldiers in field maneuvers, and also be- cause of heavy confectionery sales at army post exchanges through- out the country. National income is increasing and this trend was expected to be accompanied by increased civilion consumption of candy and com- petitive chocolate products. Chocholate - covered candy bars were the American favorites in 1940, sales totaling $60,000,000— a 12.1 per cent increase over 1939. Penny goods, usually sold in small quantities to school children, brought in $24,207,000 to manu- facturers in 1940. Manufacturers sales of confec- tionery and competitive chocolate products were valued at about $336,000,000 in 1940- an all-time high of 16.9 pounds per capital consumption. To overcome that handicap, a food defense program has been es- tablished, and the nation’s food in- dustry has been recruited to do the job that human “grazing” might if human beings would only graze. The task is well started, accord- ing to William Fellowes Morgan Jr., New York City commissioner of markets. “There is ample evi- dence,” he said, j “that food retail- ers can do the job through adver- tising, displays and sales efforts. “The nation’s largest food dis- tributor increased its sales of these vitamin-bearing foods 25 per cent in the first week of a nine-week drive through education by adver- tising and promotion. The thou- sands of food retailers in the coun- try arc in good position to do the same t^'pe of job.” Cupid Seems To Haunt Same Office MINERAL WELLS, Tex. (UP) — Miss Dolores {Groves, 18, ap- proched her boss, E. D. High- tower, manager of the Retail Mer- chants’ Association, an dtold him she I was resigning to get married. Three days later his second se- cretary, Miss Doris Evans, 20, of- fered her resignation. She, too, planned to marry.; Since that time he has been I swamped with application from | young women—presumably—seek- ing employment. Hightower wasn’t certain wheth- er he had a credit association or a bureau for lonely hearts. 12,000 To Leave Paris To Join Axis Troops PARIS, Aug. 26—Authoritative- ly, completely equipped French “foreign legion against Bolshev- ism” numbering 12,000 will leave on August 28 to join the Axis troops at the Russo front. BUY UNITED STATES SAVINGS BONDS AIMDSTAiMPS Defense Savings Bonds can be registered in the name of children as well as adults. 500 Guilders Allowed Japanese Evacuees TOKYO, Aug. 26—Japanese eva- cuees from the NEI will be allow- ed letters of credit up to 500 guild- ers from traveling expenses in ad- dition to steamship fare as a re- sult of Japan-NEI agreement, the Asahi reporte from India. It said that Japanese residents were per- mitted also to send or receive re- mittances unedr the restrictions which enforced prior freezing ord- er. SUPAI INDIANS LIVE FRUGALLY IN ‘SHANGRI-LA’ GRAND CANYON, Ariz. (UP) —An actual “Shangri-La” 'is locat- ed in a remote and inaccessible branch of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. I According to J. W. Hoover, pro- fessor at the Arizona State Teach- er’s College at Tempe, more [than 200 members of the Supai Indian tribe of Arizona live in this hide- away, and Their only contact with the outside world is by the post- man’s weekly trip over the 30-mile trail. “Situated in Havasu canyon and oasis, it is surrounded by towering and unbreakable walls of rock, ’ Hoover said. “Descent is hazard- ous by a trail cut in the rocks. “It is quite remarkable that this American Eden, which actu- ally is within the confines of Grand Canyon National impark, has not become a mecca for tourists,” he said. “Actually it is virtually untouched and unknown.” Hoover pointed out that the 200 inhabitants live happily on an an- nual income of $6,635. )This means that the average inhabitant gets along on $35 a year, he added. “When a visitor arrives,” Hoov- er said, “he hears the voices of children echoing and overwhelmed by a feeling of being in a world apart.” The Supai are known to other Indians as “the people of the sky blue waters.” A merica O n G uard ! Above is a reproduction of the Treasury Department’s Defense Savings Postei’, showing an exact duplication of the . ,iual “ Minute Man” statue by famed sculptor Daniel Chester French. Defemse Bonds and Stamps, on sale at your bank or post office, are a vital part of America’s defense preparauajmi FmDEFENSE ITALIANS WATCH TURKEY ROME, Aug. 26—Italian politici- ans expressed no surprise on Die British-Soviet invasion of Iran but are more interested in the stand Turkey will take believing that Ankara is likely to ask Axis aid. Virginio Gayda, editor of the Gi- ornale de Italia, accuses Britain for taking advantage of the confu-

DAILY ON ISLAND OF HAWAII VOL. XXXV HILO, HAWAII, …evols.library.manoa.hawaii.edu/bitstream/10524/48903/1/HmvXXXVno... · ch Indo-China economic treaty. ! ... nese goods as well

  • Upload
    lamhanh

  • View
    216

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

WE PUBLISH LOCALAND WORLD’S

LATEST HAPPENINGS

LE A D IN G JAPANESE

D A IL Y ON

ISLA N D OF H A W A II

VOL. X X X V HILO, H A W AII, T. H., TUESD AY, AUG UST 26, 1941 NO. 9034

OIL SHIPMENT NEGOTIATIONS NOW UND’RWAYG E N E R AL SETTLEM EN T O F

PE N D IN G JAPAN-U .S. PROB­LEM ACCEPTABLE

W ASHINGTON, Aug. 26— Ques­tioned at the press conference re­garding Churchill’s statement that United States is' seeking settle­ment in the Pacific giving Japan the utmost reassurance and her le­gitimate interests, Secretary of State Cordell Hull cautiously de­clined to divulge whether any con­crete proposals are under discus­sion between Tokyo and Washing­ton and told the newsmen that there is not much fo r him to say except that the informal conver­sation, which he had with Ambas­sador Nomura Saturday, was typi­cal o f the situation.

Hull Admits Talk UnderwayAsked i f the Japanese govern­

ment presented any definite pro­posals for settlement, Hull reiter­ated the only thing he could say at the present stage was the in­formal conversations occurring.

He declined to comment Lon­don reports that Britain is seeking Japanese agreement to neutralize Thailand and the Dutch Indies and said that any settlement with Jap­an must rest on the fundamental principles the United States have been advocating and added that i f these principles were referred to it would clear up any specific points.

He also failed to comment on Churchill’s pledge that Britain will side with th^ United States if the e ffort to reach a settlement fails.

Egypt, Indo-China End Trade RelationsA N K A R A , Aug. 26— It was re­

ported from Cairo that the Egypt­ian government complying with

(the demand by the British Ambas­sador, Sir Miles W. Lampson, notified the French Ino-China de­cision of severe trade relations with it.

JAPANESE IN HANOI W E SET UP GUILD

TENOR SPEECH OF C H U R C H E C A U E D TRICK; C H U RCH ILL ’S REFERENCE TO i J A P A N ADDS LIG H T E AST

TA LK E D OF A T SEA M EET

I W ASHINGTON, Aug. 26— The Baltimore Sun editorialized W in­ston Churchill’s reference to Jap-

'an illuminating a confirmed poli- ! cy in the Pacific, discussed at the sea meeting.

I t opines that Churchill without saying so in specific terms made clear that he and Roosevelt dis­cussed the far eastern question in detail and agreed measures to counter Japan’s moves in the event the effort to effect a peaceful ad­justment fails.

The paper concludes Churchill’s declaration of Britain’s side is un­hesitatingly with the United I States in the latter contingency to 'emphasize gravity of “Japanese I threat’’ and also gives welocme ! evidence o f the Anglo-American ! solidarity in dealing with the situ- ' ation, which is vitally important to both nations.

I ROME, Aug. 26— Commenting ion Churchill’s speech, Gayda edi­torializes the entire tenor speech and indicates that the speech was intended to lift hopes of the B rit­ons, who expected the announce­ment of immediate United States participation in war after the ocean meeting, but were disap­pointed.

I t also encouraged “American belligerency’’ by pretending that Britain is capable o f realizing war aims, which at the same time will prove profitable to American f i ­nance and “ schemes of imperial­ism.’’

TOKYO, Aug. 26— The Kokumin termed the talk “a trick to alien­ate the Japanese from the Ax is ’’

; and declared that the entire ten- ior speech belied sincerity of the I statement’s previous words— all I efforts w ill be made to bring about a peaceful solution in the Pacific

!■—while resorting “all sorts of ma- ; neuver publicity to intimidate Jap­an in the event o f throwin-g away her face for vanity and prestige.’ ’

Speeches such as this are merely outward and “ are intentionally taken in order to shift the respon­sibilities for war or peace in the far east to Japan,’’ the Kokumin S£ud.

W illF lvtoU . S.

Negotiation for Oil Shipment

TC KYC , Aug. 26— Koh Ishii, de­puty spokesfan of the information board, admitted negotiation is go­ing on between the United States and Japan, regarding the shipping question in connection with the sending of oil to the Soviet by A- merica but no talk is going on be­tween Ambassador Tatekawa and Moscow authorities, he said.

Queried regarding press report that American oil tankers are be to convoyed to Vladivostok, the de­puty spokesman replied he has no information concerning that.

Turning to the freezing o f A m ­erican assets in Japan, the deputy spokesman declared that the Japa­nese government is strictly ob­serving the principle o f reciproci­ty. The deputy spokesman said that freezing regulations on Neth­erlands East Indies is not so strict.

Queried regarding the resump­tion o f trade with NEI, Ishii re­plied that the question is still im- der discussion but now much pro­gress has been recorded.

Asked in regard to Article 9 of the Portsmouth treaty o f 1905, which stipulates non-fortification o f the Straits o f Soya and Tartary as well as their free navigation, the deputy .spokesman replied that the provision must be interpreted in the light o f changed interna­tional situation.

FO RM ATIO N PLA N N E D IN A C ­CORDANCE W ITH F IC ECO­

NOMIC TR E A TY

HANOI, Aug. 26— Representa­tives o f eighteen Japanese import­ers’ companies in Hanoi and Hai­phong conferred at the local Japa­nese consul-generals residence on steps to organize an importers’ | guild in North Indo-China in ac- ; cordance with the Japanese-Fren-; ch Indo-China economic treaty. !

Sixteen Japanese firms in south ! Indo-China had already organized : their own guild while 24 others in the eastern part of the French co- | lony are expecte to take up similar | steps.

These guilds w ill control Japa­nese imports under the guidance of Japanese authorities.

SHORTAGE OF IMPORTS HITS SINO TRADERSDUTCH E A ST IND IES GOVERN­

M ENT SUFFERS REVENUE DECREASE

CANTON, Aug. 26 — Reports reaching here from the Nether­lands East Indies indicated that Sino traders as well as natives in the Dutch colony have been suf­fering from shortage of imports of Japanese goods following the freezing of Japanese assets.

It was noted that majority of the 1,200,000 Sino traders there are engaged in trade with the Ja­panese for their cotton and miscel­laneous products.

Reports said that their inability to pay taxes are now resulting in heavy decrease in the N E I govern­ment revenues and added that Si­no traders can’t expect much trade with United States’ in view of shortage o f bottoms.

Meanwhile, it was understood that 70,000,000 N E I natives are hard hit by the shortage of Japa­nese goods as well as higher tax­es.

Francis Biddle Named I U.S. Attorney General

W ASHINGTON, Aug. 26— Roo­sevelt nominated Francis Biddle, solicitor general, succeeding Rob­ert Jackson as attorney general in

'his cabinet and gave final instruc­tions to W illys Peck, new minister ■to Bangkok succeeding Hugh Grant and who leaves for Thailand

I tonight.

SUGHT IRANIAN RESISTANCE ENABLES BRITISH TD CAPTURE BANDAR SHAPUR AND 1 SHIPS

HATA MOVED B Y JAPANESE COOPERATION

I _____________

B ELIEVE JAPAN E SE FORCES SHOULD TU R N OVER JOB

TO N A N K IN G

N AN K IN G , Aug. 26 — General Shunroku Hata, commander-in- chief of the Japanese expedition­ary forces in China, di£CU£,sing yesterday afternoon the Yangtze model peace area, which he in­spected over the three-day period from August 18, to the press, said, “The peace area is not only a touchstone indicating the future of Nanking but as concrete evidence of the national government’s be­lief in the peaceful reconstruction is worthy of greatest efforts.”

He also said that he is deeply impressed by the wholehearted co­operation of Japanese forces and Nanking in the model area “with the Chinese government army, po­litical parties and people, combin­ing their total strength in the pro­ject.”

Hata reiterated that the convic­tion of the Japanese forces should turn over the administrative res­ponsibility of the peace area to Nanking as soon as possible “ and concentrate their efforts in direct action of anti-Chunerking, ’

3-Pronged Drive Directed Ag^ainst Iran Mon­day with Cooperation of Navy and Air­

forces in Conveying Detachments•

T O K Y O , A u g. 26 K oh Ish ii, deputy spokesman o f theI in form ation bureau, at the fo re ign press conference said that ! Japan was “ shocked” by the Iran ian invasion and said that ; the B ritish m ove was made on un justifiab le p retext. H e de- : cleared that on A u gu st 22, Hull told the press a t W ash ing­ton tha t the U n ited States would oppose B ritish invasion o f Iran. Ish ii said tha t H u ll’s statem ent was m ade a fte r he con­fe rred w ith M oham m ed Schayestev, Iran ian m in ister to W ashington.

LONDON, Aug. 26 — Reports from the British general headquar-

; ters in India announced that Brit­ish and Indian troops had entered Iran at three points Monday and

iare advancing with slight resist- ;ance everywhere.! Bandar Shapur was taken and ' seven Axis ships namely, two Ger­man damaged ships, three Italian

i slightly damaged ships and two ■further German ships, which had I been beached, were reported cap- I tured with their crews.I The communique further men- ■ tioned that leaflets were scattered I from R A F bombers in Te heran ! and other towns in Iran which ex- I plained why Iran is being invaded land that no hard feelings are di- I rected against the Iranians, i Oil installations at Naftishah and Qasrishan were reported oc­cupied with little or no opposition and inhabitants were reported showing no hostile feelings.

TOKYO, Aug. 26— “Peace-loving Americans may be shocked by the British invasion o f Iran without any provocation,” Koh Ishii, depu­ty spokesman of the information board, replied to a foreign corre­spondent today when asked to comment on the Iranian situation.

Asked if Japan has been shock­ed, the deputy spokesman replied,“O f course.” He added that “ there is no justification for British pre­ventive measure.”

British contend that they in­vaded Iran to prevent the Ger­mans from occupying the country but “ the British can invade any country if their contention is jus­tifiable,” the deputy spokesman said, pointing out Iran is not in danger o f German invasion.

President Vargas oi Brazil pre­sented this plane to Paraguayan Flyer Navarro, who plans a flight to United States in near future.

sion in central Asia in order to ac­quire loot of the rich Persian re­sources. “We are curious to knew the attitude of Roosevelt, who al­ways is stressing the need of de­fending small neutral countries. I t is clear that Iran provoked no one. Anglo-Soviet occupation of Iran is a clear repudiation of the substan­ce of good faith in the eighth points of the Anglo-American de­claration.”

IR A N IA N S RESISTING

LONDON, Aug. 26— Authorita­tively, the Iran army consisting of 190,000 men is resisting the An­glo-Soviet forces although it did not reveal the extent of the Iraai resistance. I t was revealed that the British forces landed at Banda- shapur, deepest part o f the Per­sian gulf, which is closest to Tehe- ;ran and Caucasus border.

V ERN AC U LARS COMRIENT

TOKYO, Aug. 26— Vernaculars commenting on the British inva­sion of Iran unanimously branded tlie action as aggressive while un­official commentators stressed that the British act is a glaring violation of the eight-point pro­gram enunciated after the Churc- hill-Roosevelt meeting.

The Nichi Nichi said “Anglo- Soviet demands regarding Ger­mans in Iran amount to high handed interference in Iran ’s do­mestic affairs” and also virtually and unanimously the morning-pa­pers heeded closest attention on next moves of the Turkish govern­ment.

Motives for ViolationThe Nichi Nichi said that real

motives for the violation o f Iran’s neutrality is firstly, the opening of the supply route fo r the passage of war materials to the Soviet, sec­ondly, the seizure of Iranian oil fields as well as protection o f So­viet oil in Caucasusu against the seizure by Germany, thirdly, the use of Iranian bases in the event of Nazi occupation of Caucasus.

Nazi Method EmployedObservers drew significant par­

allel on the above moves and Jap­an’s diplomatic efforts to secure petroleum supplies from Dutch In­dies and said this is another elo­quent testimony of hypocracy of the British statecraft and proof that Britain whenever necessary doesn’t hesitate to employ the so- called Nazi methods.

The Nichi Nichi concluded that Iran ’s military forces are entirely inadequate to cope with Anglo-So­viet invaders and “w'e can only voice sincerest sympathy for this latest victim of the Anglo-Saxon aggression.”

ISH H “NO T INFO RM ED ”

TOKYO, Aug. 26— Koh Ishii, de­puty spokesman of the informa­tion board, repeated “not inform­ed” when correspondents targeted him with barrage of questions re­garding the contents of the latest Nomura-Hull meeting.

When a correspondent question­ed Ishii on the extent o f Nomura’s powers in carrying on negotiations, Ishii said, “ I can’t say specifically but, o f course, he has large sphere according to his discretion.” Asked whether Japan would welcome gen­eral settlement o f pending Japan- Am erica problems, Ishii declared, “ I f we could come to a reasonable conclusion, o f course, we would,” however, declined to elaborate.

M riS esIN SINGAPDRESTRONG IN D IA N A R M Y ALSO

DISEM BARKS TR A N S ­PORT

SINGAPORE, Aug. 26 — The largest single body R A F officers and men sent to Malaya in more than a year arrived from Britain.

The transports also disembarked strong Indian army reenforce­ments including infantry artillery, complete hospital staff numbering 26 officers and 280 medical per­sonnel.

The R A F personnel included Australian airmen from the mid­dle east.

Wedding Reception Slated This SaturdayMr. and Mrs. Yoshinori I to of 48

Ohea Street is giving a wedding reception at their home on Satur­day, August 30, at 6 p. m. in honor of Miss Tatsuko (Ito ) Tanizaki, who is getting married to Masami Isomura, son o f Mr. and Mrs. Jyu- kichi Isomura of Hilo.

Miss Tanizaki is a graduate of the Hilo High school with the class of 1936 and at present is employed at the Boston Store as clerk. Mr. Isomura is connected with the California-Western States L ife In ­surance Company and the Hawaii Hochi, HUo Branch,

White Sewing School Picnic Held Sunday

The White Costume Dressmak­ing School held its annual picnic at the Onekahakaha beach on Sun­day, August 24.

Games including the apple bit­ing contest, cracker eating and whistling contest, blind fold bana­na eating contest and fwalking the bottles contest w ere. enjoyed.

A quiz game and an amateur singing contest were held. Valu­able prizes were awarded the win­ners. Miss Tomiyo Matsumoto re­ceived the grand prize. Miss Namie Nambu, first prize, Miss Chieko Une, second prize, and Miss Ha- tsumi Uno, third prize.

Lunch was served by the White Sewing school girls.

GRASS AS H UNAN DIET' IS FAVDRED BY SCIENTISTS

EGG QUOTATIONS(August 26, 1941)

Trading erratic with wide range in prices, carry-over stock noted in some quarters ai’e:

Large: 55 to 63 cents per dozen.Medium: 50 to 56cents per dozen.Small: 32 to 42 cents per dozen.These prices are gathered fron:

reliable sources but are not gua­ranteed. They are fo r the dat€ stated above and represent Hono­lulu wholesale prices to retail stores on this date only.

Richard Yamauchi Sailing Tomorrow

Richard Yamauchi, son o f Mr. and Mrs. K. Yamauchi o f Piopio Street, who was visiting his fam i­ly the past 2 months will return to the mainland via Honolulu tomor­row to continue with his medical studies at a Chicago university. Previous to his return here he was enrolled at the Oregon State Col­lege at Eugene, Oregon.

Mr. Yamauchi is a graduate with the Class of 1937 of the Hilo High school and was class vice president.

Teen Twenties Club to Enjoy Table Games

The Teen Twenties club will en­joy table games at the Y W C A ac-

I tivities building tomorrow night■ commencing at 7:30 p. m. Miss Hi- i sae Sueoka is chairman o f the af-■ fair.i ' A ll members are requested to I attend.

N E W Y O R K , Aug-. 26 (U P )— A m illion dollars is w a it­in g fo r the man w ho can add grass to the human diet.

Probab ly no o ther item o f potentia l food value would ben efit human health as much as common grass the s tu ffpeople run lawnmowers through.Tf mankind would eat like a horse, the science of dietetics would be revolutionized. |

Grass, according to the Am eri­can Chemical Society, is tops as a source o f vitamins. One pound of grass contains more vitamins than 30 pounds of fresh fruits and ve­getables, Twelve pounds o f dried grass contains more vitamins than 340 pounds of fruits and vegeta­bles— more fruits and vegetables than the average person eats in a year.

But grass is not attractive to the human taste, and Americans per­sistently refuse to balance their diets with fruits and vegetables, and consequently the low level of national health has been called one of the major bottlenecks of the defense effort.

SOLDIERS GIVE CANDY VOLUME UPWARD SPIRAL

■WASHINGTON, Aug. 25 (U P ) — American soldiers are eating so much candy that per capita con­sumption of sweets may reach an all-time high during the cuirent year.

The Department of Commerce reported that the marked increase in candy consumption was due to addition of chocolate bars to the emergency rations used by soldiers in field maneuvers, and also be­cause of heavy confectionery sales at army post exchanges through­out the country.

National income is increasing and this trend was expected to be accompanied by increased civilion consumption of candy and com­petitive chocolate products.

Chocholate - covered candy bars were the American favorites in 1940, sales totaling $60,000,000— a 12.1 per cent increase over 1939.

Penny goods, usually sold in small quantities to school children, brought in $24,207,000 to manu­facturers in 1940.

Manufacturers sales of confec­tionery and competitive chocolate products were valued at about $336,000,000 in 1940- an all-time high of 16.9 pounds per capital consumption.

To overcome that handicap, a food defense program has been es­tablished, and the nation’s food in­dustry has been recruited to do the job that human “grazing” might if human beings would only graze.

The task is well started, accord­ing to William Fellowes Morgan Jr., New York C ity commissioner of markets. “ There is ample evi­dence,” he said, j “ that food retail­ers can do the job through adver­tising, displays and sales efforts.

“The nation’s largest food dis­tributor increased its sales of these vitamin-bearing foods 25 per cent in the first week of a nine-week drive through education by adver­tising and promotion. The thou­sands of food retailers in the coun­try arc in good position to do the same t^'pe o f job.”

Cupid Seems ToHaunt Same Office

M IN E R A L W ELLS, Tex. (U P ) — Miss Dolores {Groves, 18, ap- proched her boss, E. D. High­tower, manager of the Retail Mer­chants’ Association, an dtold him she I was resigning to get married.

Three days later his second se­cretary, Miss Doris Evans, 20, o f­fered her resignation. She, too, planned to m arry.;

Since that time he has been I swamped with application from | young women— presumably— seek­ing employment.

Hightower wasn’t certain wheth­er he had a credit association or a bureau for lonely hearts.

12,000 To Leave Paris To Join Axis Troops

PAR IS , Aug. 26— Authoritative­ly, completely equipped French “foreign legion against Bolshev­ism” numbering 12,000 will leave on August 28 to join the Axis troops at the Russo front.

B U YUNITEDSTATES

SAVINGSB O N D S

AIMDSTAiMPS

Defense Savings Bonds can be registered in the name of children as well as adults.

500 Guilders Allowed Japanese Evacuees

TOKYO, Aug. 26— Japanese eva­cuees from the N E I will be allow­ed letters of credit up to 500 guild­ers from traveling expenses in ad­dition to steamship fare as a re­sult of Japan-NEI agreement, the Asahi reporte from India. I t said that Japanese residents were per­mitted also to send or receive re­mittances unedr the restrictions which enforced prior freezing ord­er.

SUPAI INDIANS LIVE FRUGALLY IN ‘SHANGRI-LA’

GRAND CANYON, Ariz. (U P ) — An actual “ Shangri-La” 'is locat­ed in a remote and inaccessible branch of the Grand Canyon of the Colorado. I

According to J. W. Hoover, pro­fessor at the Arizona State Teach­er’s College at Tempe, more [than 200 members o f the Supai Indian tribe of Arizona live in this hide­away, and Their only contact with the outside world is by the post­man’s weekly trip over the 30-mile trail.

“ Situated in Havasu canyon and oasis, it is surrounded by towering and unbreakable walls of rock, ’ Hoover said. “Descent is hazard­ous by a trail cut in the rocks.

“ I t is quite remarkable that this American Eden, which actu­ally is within the confines of Grand Canyon National impark, has not become a mecca for tourists,” he said. “Actually it is virtually untouched and unknown.”

Hoover pointed out that the 200 inhabitants live happily on an an­nual income of $6,635. )This means that the average inhabitant gets along on $35 a year, he added.

“When a visitor arrives,” Hoov­er said, “he hears the voices of children echoing and overwhelmed by a feeling of being in a world apart.”

The Supai are known to other Indians as “ the people of the sky blue waters.”

A m e r i c a O n G u a r d !Above is a reproduction o f the

Treasury Department’s Defense Savings Postei’, showing an exact duplication of the . ,iual “ Minute Man” statue by famed sculptor Daniel Chester French. Defemse Bonds and Stamps, on sale at your bank or post office, are a vital part of America’s defense preparauajmi

Fm D EFEN S E

IT A L IA N S W ATC H TU R K E Y

ROME, Aug. 26— Italian politici­ans expressed no surprise on Die British-Soviet invasion of Iran but are more interested in the stand Turkey w ill take believing that Ankara is likely to ask Axis aid.

Virginio Gayda, editor of the Gi- ornale de Italia, accuses Britain for taking advantage o f the confu-

i ! i g e T s 7 0 T H E H A W A I I M A I N I C H I Tuesday, August 26,1941

■ ' OlHr. 1)7 United PU ttan Sjnulieafab IB*.

Z a d t l ON AH I ^ H O R S Ebi| JOSEPH CHADWICK

Rhea Charters and her grand­father, Major Stephen Charters, who live on their ancestral estate near the little town of Marches- ter, are in financial difficulties, though the rest of the commun­ity is booming as a result of an airplane factory under construc­tion near by. The family lawyer, unable to persuade the Major to sell part of his land, writes to a man named Carradine who owes the old gentleman a large sum of money. Carradine, adventurer and oil speculator, replies that he can’t pay his debt but is send­ing his son Jim to Charters Manor to lend a hand. Rhea can’t see how this will help and, when Jim arrives, is antagonistic toward him. They have several Quarjels during his first day at the Manor but, despite this, Rhea finds herself unwillingly attract­ed to him. The next morning, she receives a jolL when Philip Lan- ning calls to see her grandfather. He’s a rich young man with whom she was in love four years ago, but who went away and married another girl. She hasn’t seen him since.

CHAPTER XII pATE, thought Rhea, can play ^you cruel tricks. It gives you pain, then adds torture.

This was a bad moment— an emo­tional shock. It made her weak and trembling. She sought words, strove to be casual.

“ You’re looking well, Philip.”It was no lie. He was as handsome

as ever, and his eyes had the old laughter. Marriage, then, had been kind to him. He’d been happy. The only change four years had made was a dust of gray at his temples.

“ I t ’s good to see you, Rhea,” he said. “You’re even prettier than I remembered.”

She felt the hot color in her Cheeks. “Thank you.”

There was a moment of awkward silence.

Then, Gregg reappeared. “Major Charters will see you in the library, Mr. Canning,” he announced.

Philip took Rhea’s arm. “ Come with me,” he said. “ I want to talk to you after I ’ve seen your grand­father.”

He couldn’t know, Rhea told her­self, how the touch of his hand made her heart pound-----

SHE sat in the library, trying to keep her eyes off him while he

and her grandfather talked.Philip was saying crisply, “ I ’m

with North Aircraft, Major Char­ters. I ’ve been sent East from the California plant to manage this new Marchester branch. W e’re making good progress. One building is about ready to start operations. However, we find we need several more acres o f land. We want to buy your east field, sir. It is adjacent to our prop­erty. and it is ideally suited to our purpose.”

“ I ’m sorry, Mr. Lanning—none o f the Manor is for sale,” Stephen Charters said.

“ That’s what I was told, but I thought that, under the circum­stances, you might be persuaded to cooperate with us.”

“ Under what circumstances?” the older man asked stiffly.

“ The national-defense plan. We ure makmg military planes. I thought you might be willing to help out by letting us have your field, which you do not use.”

“ It is not that I am unpatriotic,” the Major explained, “ but it has been my lifelong wish to keep Char­ters Manor intact. Surely, you can find other land that will do just as well.”

“ We can offer you twelve thou­sand dollars,” Philip urged.

Stephen Charters hesitated, then Shook his head. “No—price doesn’t matter.”

Rhea saw Philip frown— saw that he was annoyp'^

“Very well, sir, but I hope you will change your mind.” He rose, then added. “ I knew you didn’t see eye to eye with us. I heard about the inci­dent with the truck drivers.”

The Major looked at Rhea. “ I heard of no incident.”

“ It was nothing,” she said.Philip, h o w e v e r , continued.

“ Some trucks bringing us building materials crossed your land, sir, to avoid loss of time. I ’m told that some one here at the Manor han­dled the matter quite efficiently.”

“ I don’t understand.”“The contractor was overzealous,

sir. He put a strong-arm man on one of the trucks. However, the fel­low took a beating.” Philip turned to Rhea. “ Was it your brother who slugged the man?”

“No, it wasn’t Dick,” she replied. She wished Philip hadn’t intro­

duced the subject. It embarrassed her. She couldn’t forget that Jim Carradine had rebuked her for that incident.

Her grandfather asked, “ Whu was it, Rhea?”

“Jim Carradine. I told him the trucks were trespassing. He tooK matters into his own hands but- but I was respozTsible.”

When the Major smiled. Rhe? knew that Jim’s stock had gone ur several points.

SHE walked from the library with Philip. In the hall, he touched,

her arm.“Rhea,” he said softly, “ I ’ve never

forgotten that pleasant summer four years ago.”

She looked away. “ It seems a long time ago.”

“ It is a long time,” he said, with a sigh. “ I ’ve lived a lifetime since then.”

“Happily, I hope.”“No.”The brief answer made Rhea

glance at him quickly. She saw that there was a shadow in his eyes. She longed to ask what he meant, but didn’t dare.

They went out into the brigh: morning sunlight and down the steps to Philip’s car.

Then, he said abruptly, “My mar­riage was a mistake. Laura and I had to admit it after two years. There’s only one thing to do about a mistake— correct it. So we got a divorce.”

“ O h !” Rhea caught her breath “ I ’m sorry.”

“ It was just one of those things.’ Philip shrugged, then smiled. “Tvt often wondered whether you mar­ried. Why haven’t you.”

“For a very good reason,” Rhe. replied. “ I haven’t fallen in love.”

He looked at her a moment. “ 1 admire a girl who wouldn’t marry for anything but love.”

Rhea wondered whether Laura had married him for his money, and decided that this must be the case.

“Maybe I ’m old-fashioned,” she said.

“ Whatever you are, I like you,” he told her. “Seeing you again has reminded me how much I like you. Look— let’s have dinner together soon. I ’ll phone you— say, tomoi- row.”

“All right, Philip.”He opened the car door, started

to get in, then paused.“Be a pal and try to persuade

your grandfather to sell me that land,” he said.

“ Well— I ’ll see. I won’t promise.” “ Aren’t you on my side?”“ I ’m not sure,” said Rhea.He laughed, and climbed into the

car. In a few minutes, he had driven away.

Rhea stood there, staring aftei him. He was no longer married— he was free again. What would that mean to her, she wondered, and how much did she want it to mean?

(T o he continued)(The characters in this serial are

fictitious ‘

1? Blindness Only PwrnsKment*;^

Mrs. Ann Holmes of New York comforts her son. Captain John M. Holmes during trial in Redwood City, Cal., of socialite sportsman and Army reserve flyer, who blinded Limself in suicide attempt after slay­ing Wilson McNary. young distant cousin of Senate Minority Charles

L. McNary of Oregon.

Contest Pntrv

SOLON— Roger C. Peace, a Greenville, S. C ., publisher, who has taken the oath as Sen­ator to fill the unexpired term of Senator Alva Lumpkin, who died recently after I I days \n olfice.

The eight women ana lour men trying Captain John M. Holmes, shown in his Redwood City, Cal., jail cell, will have difficult problem of deciding whether permanent blindness young socialite inflicted on himself in bungled suicide attempt is sufficirnt punishment for slay­

ing Wilson D. McNary. What do you think?

Special Envoy

Anna lionise Ireise ot Burlingame, Calif., is a candidate in “Girl of the Golden West” contest being con­ducted by California State Fair.

Talented, Too

Bundles of Joy

Dr. Henry F. Grady, president of American President Lines, is in Manila as special representative of Federal Loan Administration.

LEADER— Bisliop A. J. Tomlin­son, of the Church of God, who will lead the proc«*sIon in the ceremony of rotuiring the "Ten Commandmenti" and "Sermon on the Mount** top of Burger Mt. near CUv«^«nd, Tenn., on Sept. 7, before 150,- 000 people.

Private Bill Chadwick does a jug­gling act with dozens of packages that will bring joy to Canadian sol­

diers in training camp.

LADIES, PLEASE! — Clothes were pulled off, hair pulled and |faces scratched as women pickets and non-strikers battled at the Timken Roller Bearing p ant in Columbus, Ohio. Here non- L$triker is being stripped. -

tODAVT O M O R R O W \

- I , -

DON ROBINSON

T R A P . . . . liesThe other day I heard an under-

sized 12-year-old boy solve all the problems of the world. It all sound- ded very easy. He' knew what was wrong, why it was wrong and what ought to be done about it.

I don’t know.who the boy was. I just overheard him talking to his aunt in a restaurant. I pricked up my ears when I heard his eager voice say, “ Gee, if I could only be dictator of the world for just 24 hours!”

“ You must do something to get the problems of the world off your shoulders,” his aunt told him. She suggested that he join the Boy Scouts, go away to camp and en­joy the things other boys his age are er*«oying. “ You’re too nervous and high-strung for a boy your age,” she said.

But he would have none of this getting-away-from-it-all stuff. He wanted to stay right in the thick of things.

“ You don’ t understand what’ s go­ing on,” he informed her, “ But I can see the world’s walking right into a trap. I don’t mean the war. The war’s just part of it. I mean a trap made of lies. The trouble today is that you can’t believe any­body.

“ Lookit,” he went on confidingly, “how can you expect people and countries to get along together when you can’t believe anybody? Even my history books are just written to tell me what somebody wants me to believe. No kidding, there’s no­body I can trust—not Roosevelt, or Churchill or my teachers, or even my friends. And that’s what is go­ing to ruin the world!”

A M B IT IO N . . . youth|My young philosopher friend wasj

just as excitable when he talkedi about going off the parachute jump in an amusement park as he was Dver the problems of the world. Although precocious, he still had an interest in boyish things.

But it was hard to believe that the discussion of the world situa-j tion, to which his conversation al-' ways went back, was coming from the mouth of the small boy at the table next to me. He really intend­ed to do something about it and his. ambitions were limitless. |

“ Lookit,” he explained, “ when I ?et a little older I ’m going to start' working for votes. First I ’ll run! :or the senate and then I ’ll be Pres-1 ident of the United States. By that dme all of the other countries of 'he world will be so weak that I ;an take an army to Europe and fradually conquer the whole world without shooting anybody. Then I ’H nake myself dictator, teU the worliihow Truth is the answer to eveiT-’ thing and then set the people free !”

It sounded as easy as pie. Com­ing from an older m.an it would have sounded like the ravings of a madman, but from this boy, al­though amusing, it merely exempli­fied the scope of ambitions which youth can feel before experience rears its discouraging head.

T H IN K E R S . . . p ra c tic a lityMost adults laugh at the impul-

,sive, untested ideas of youth. It ia a common practice among most oi us to put a damper on them—to puff up with experience and say, “ Wait a minute! Not so fast! Hold ron! It’ ll never work! You can’t do that! It’s impractical! Too theoreti­cal! You’ll learn!”

But maybe we are the ones who are wrong—adults who laughed at the idea of a steamboat, mocked the horseless carriage, guffawed at the telephone, and thought the Wright brothers were a couple ol lunatics who wanted to be birds.

The ideas of a 12-year-old boy, or an 18-year-old boy may need a lot of tightening up and adjusting, but basically these youngsters may have something new to add to our store of ideas—new angles that rep­resent the philosophy of 1960.ID E A S . . . . b irth

Before we put the clamps on Jun­ior’s ideas, it’s worthwhile to re­view our own thinking before we .reached maturity.' Do you remember the ideas you had when you were in your ’ teens?I know I do and I think in general I had better ideas then than I have ever had since. Maybe a lot of them weren’t practical, but secretly I cherish them.

Look up in the attic of your mind. Dust off some of those wild conclu­sions which at one time meant so much to you. Maybe they were rough-edged and incomplete, but don’t they contain something basic, which, if they hadn’t met so much resistance, might have been of some use to you or to the world?

It is the theory of some philoso­phers that no new ideas are ever added to the world’s original fund of ideas. All the ideas which we call new, according to their the­ories, are just a rehashing of old ideas.

But if there is such a thing as a new idea—if society is going to dis­cover better ways to get along—it seems likely that those ideas wifi be borne to new minds rather than old. We are all pretty familiar with the workings of the leading adult minds of our day. For some­thing new, let’s look to the new models—the minds which have been untested but may come to us with fresh, original thoughts.

Something different in movie “art” is this picture of Marguerite Chap­man, New York model and latest Hollywood recruit. Enough said.

THE HOUSE OF HAZARDS -by Mac Arthur

Believe it or Not, Termite is Praised

p r o v i d e n c e , R. I. (U P ) —That lowly of all lowlies— the ter­mite— has a defender in Brayton Eddy, state administrator o f en­tomology and plant industry. He declares in his annual report that the much cursed insects are per-

I forming noble work in the wooded areas of the state by reducing to powder much of the timber down­ed by the hurricane.

1^-^ DARLiNG, I’VE BEEN SHOPPING

^ALL DAY....WAIT 'TILL Y O I ^

^ E E THE ^ARGAINS/\ "

. . . .A N D I DIDN'T E0R6ET YOU — -HERE,TRY ON THIS CUTE LITTLE

SPORT S H IR T ^m

I THE CLERK SAID I COULD HAVE IT CHEa S

JUST BECAUSE IT WAS A LITTLE ^

SUN-FADED; 0/? 50MBTHIN', FROM^

BE1N6 IN THE DISPLAY WINDOW

h DON’T MIND A m r iB fU N -F A D IN G .... . ..B U T I WISH THEY HADN’T USED

A T R A N S P A R B N T PR/C B TAG/

Mother Comforts Accused Son

Tuesday, August 26,1941' T H E H A W A I I M A I N I C H I Page Three

YOUTHRAIUEDTODEIBOCRACYM E X IC O C IT Y , A u g. 26 (U P ) Sanchez Ponton, M exico ’ s

m in ister o f education, urges the youth o f the A m ericas to lead the w ay in opposing totalitarian ism .

"M ex ico ’s youth, as w ell as the youth o f all the A m er i­cas, should set an exam ple to be fo llow ed by those who have lost fa ith or have allowed th e ir ideals to weaken' under the in­fluence o f h istoric upheavals we are now w itnessing,” Pon­ton said.

"S ince pessim ism and m istrust have invaded the decay­in g generations,” he added, " i t is up to the strong youth o f the continent to s ing the hym n oflabor, to keep h igh the fla g o f all our liberties, and against the ‘new o rd er ’ o f to ta lita ri- ans, to place the order o f Am erican dem ocracy o f which Boli­v a r and San M artin , W ash ington and Lincoln, M orelos and Juarez a lw ays dream ed.”

♦ ♦ *

A D V IC E TO T E A C H E R SPonton has published and has circulated to all federa l

school teachers and educators a pam phlet en titled : "T h e M exican School and Continental S o lidarity ,” in which the m in ister says "M ex ico cannot be neutral” in the face o f the European conflict. The pam phlet was considered one o f the m ost strongly pro-dem ocratic publication ever authorized by the M exican governm ent.

Ponton instructed the teachers, in the pamphlet, to teach th e ir pupils the righteousness o f Presiden t Manuel A v ila Ca­m acho’s present fo re ign policy o f supporting the ideal o f Pan -Am erican so lidarity. H e requested teachers to “ proclaim w ith insistence that to ta lita rian regim es are the b iggest ne­gation o f dem ocracy,” and to explain that “ even w ith its im ­perfections,” dem ocracy is the best fo rm o f governm ent.

Th e pam phlet also includes a favorab le explanation o f the M onroe D octrine as one o f the bases on which the ideas o f Pan -Am erican cooperation are founded.

A M O N G E A R L Y IN T E L L E C T U A L S

Ponton, one o f the m ost h igh ly educated men in the g o v ­ernm ent, has devoted m ost o f his l i fe to education and was one o f the f ir s t “ in tellectuals” to jo in the M exican revolution which overth rew P o r fir io Diaz.

H is passionate o ra tory won m any students to the cause o f Francisco M adero in his f ig h t fo r the presidency. Ponton even led a group o f students aga inst the D iaz federa l sold­iers in a sangu inary clash in the m in ister ’s native c ity o f Puebla in the hectic days o f Novem ber, 1910.

Poneon has partic ipated fo r M exico in several in terna­tional conferences and has been fo r the past e igh t years a correspondent m em ber o f M ex ico ’s delegation to the Leagu e o f Nations.

Since he became m in ister o f education, his po litica l ene­m ies have b itte r ly attacked him as a "rad ica l and a Commu­n ist,” but he has denied any connection w ith Communism and recen tly issued a decree banning all Comm unist-authored textbooks from M exican schools.

A IL TOWNSMEN ON H R E FORCEC A L E D O N E A S T , Ont., A u g. 26 ( U P ) _ T h e next tim e

the fire-bell sounds in th is v illa ge o f some 400 citizens all but the lame, the halt and the blind w ill drop w hatever th ey ’re doing and rush to the fire-house.

T h e “ chosen-few ” w ill don helmets, put raincoats over th e ir business suits or overalls and jum p aboard a trim , new

! com bination pumper, hose and ladder engine as they ride out I to the fire-scene.

T h ey ’re the veterans and th ey ’ve received thorough grounding on how to douse the m ost stubborn blaze. Th ey have to be good. F o r in Caledon E ast com petition is tough w ith eve ry man a firem an and the rest o f the townsm en hop­in g the day w ill come when th ey ’ll r ide “ our b righ t-red en­g in e” to a fire .

Those not elected to man the “ fire -re e l” won ’t be specta­tors while th e ir buddies figh t.

♦ * ♦

A U X IL IA R Y T R A IN IN G S T R E S S E DF ire C h ie f B ill Cannon saw to it that th ey too received

tra in ing and th e ir job is to haul additional fire-ex tin gu ishers and o ther fir e - fig h t in g equipm ent which the engine cannot

; carry.I Townspeople say proudly that they have a fire - figh tin g i system second to none fo r a com m unity its size. “ A nd ,” they beam, “ all th is hasn’t cost us a cent.”

! P rog ress ive citizens launched the co-operative fire-de- ; partm ent idea a litt le o ver a yea r ago. The idea took hold,I blossomed and spread and three nearby towns have started a I co-operative o f th e ir own.I M oney fo r the p ro jec t was put up by Tow n Trustee T.I R. Evans, also f ir e insurance agen t in Caledon East.

♦ * * *

W A T E R S U P P L Y S TO R E DA n ingenious system o f w a te r supply in various sec­

tions o f the town was constructed, fo r the m ost part by pub­lic conscious residents who e ith er supplied m ateria ls or p it­ched in to do the actual building.

Thousands o f gallons o f w a te r are stored in underground cisterns, some fed by ra in -w ater through roof-drains.

But the tow n hasn’t had even a grass f ir e since the sys­tem was inaugurated. The equipment, how ever, is tested f r e ­quently and eve ry so o ften the alarm rings out in practice.

Arizona Teachers Lead in Pay Checks

PHOENIX, Ariz. (U P )— Arizo­na school teachers are the highest paid instructors in the nation, ac­cording to a report by Prof. O. K. Garrestson, secretary of the North Central Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. Garret- son’s report showed the average salary was $1,940 for men and $1,- 869 for women in 1940.

Buy D efense Bonds

HILO mm“A fte r Mein Kampf ?” , a drama­

tic re-enactment of t^e rise of H itler and his conquest o f Europe, is showing today at the Hilo thea­ter.

The picture traces the early pro­gress of Hitler, from revolutionary

W O M E N M A N B U C K E T B R IG A D EM A R C E L IN E , Mo. (U P ) A two-wom an bucket brigade

had the situation w ell in hand before anyone called the f ir e departm ent. Mrs. Oscar M inich spotted a small f ir e on the ro o f o f Mrs. G eorge Ross ’ home. She n otified Mrs. Ross and the tw o w en t to work. Mrs. M inich go t a ladder and climbed to the roof. Mrs. Ross carried the w ater.

Amateur Nig^hts Added to Entertainment

C A M P R O B IN S O N , A rk . (U P ) Camp m ovie theatersdon’t have bank n igh t or fre e dishes, so one o f L it t le R ock ’s belles. M iss K ath leen England, ju n io r hostess, has inaugurat­ed a series o f stunt, quiz and am ateur n igh ts a t the sold ier’s club.

H ere the soldiers w ill com pete fo r prizes fo r the best trick , answ ering a tough question or s in ging in a husky baritone o r h igh tenor.

TAILSPIN TOMMY By HAL FORRESTWHAT IS T H IS YOU SAY. L IEU T . F E R N A N D O ?? .. IT W A S NOT YOU W HO R E C O M M E N D E D T H E V ILLA IN O U S TO RAN DO AS T H E M ECHANIC W H O C R IP P L E D CAP ITAN TOM K l NS ' AERO PL A N E ?

•\ J T H E N W H O . . ? ^ ^ —

N O .D O NCASMETTO .' IT W A S . . .

E E S f^O P.TU NATE THAT I . F E L IP E T O R A N D O . W A S H E R E E ltN T IM E TO S IL E N C E F E R N A N D O ./

A DART.^.IT..IT LOOKS L IK E ONE OF THE POISONED VAR IETY USED BY, TO R O R .U O O A N N AT IVES

^ o o K f a t h e r ..' w e VM UST GET H IM TO THE H A C IEN D A Q U IC K L Y ... AN D CAUL A . DOCTOR

S u DD E N L Y . . . T H E Y O U N G A IR CORPS O FF IC ER G A S P S ... S T A G G E R S .A N D FA LL S //

Playing at the Hilo Theatre today only is .the thrill piicked story of Nazi GERMANY, “A F ­TER M EIN KAM PF?”, the tra­gic story of a nation held in slavery by the dread GESTAPO or German secret police.

WINDY AND PADDLES By DICK MOORES^ IF SOU POM'T MIMD, Itminjk I ' ll s l e e p o u tMERE, DOC-SO I ’LL BE AROUND WMEM m e

WARES UP.

AMD I TMo uGMT I W AS A SAP ABOUTtmat l it t le GUS?

O K A V , W IM D Y .*

OOD MIGMt *

LITTLE MARY MIX-UP By HANS BRINKERHOFF

days to his conquest of the Nazi government, and re-enacts many o f the memorable sce:ie^ that are now history.

Many stirring scenes are re-en­acted and depict such historic m- cidents as the murder of Raehm, the tragic trial of Van der Liibbe, and the killing of General von Schleicher.

“A fter Mein Kam pf?” is a com­pilation of exclusive newsreel and studio re-enacted scenes, that c6n- demns Nazism as it unmasks its horrors.

“They Dare Not Love,” starring love drama, co-starring George Brent and Martha Scott, with Paul Lukas, will show at the Hilo thea­ter tomorrow.

PALACE MATRE“The Thief of Bagdad,” dynamic

spectacle of Eastern drama and in­trigue, filmed in grand techni­color, starring Sabu, Conrad Veidt, June Duprez and John Jus­tin, is now showing at the Palace theater. Featured in prominent roles are Rex Ingram and Mary Morris.

The picture is literally dominat­ed with magic and “miracles.” The Flying Horse, The Magic Carpet, the Dancing Dolls, the all-seeing eye and a Djinni who changes at will from a titan 200 feet high into a tiny being who can f it into a bottle, are but a few of the me­morable feats accomplished in this picture.

The story concerns the romance between the young Prince of Bag­dad and the lovely Princess o f Bas­ra and obstacles and fantastic ad­ventures that befall them before he win&;her.

Coming tomorrow is “One N i­ght in the Tropics,” the screen scoop of the year, starring Allan Jones and Nancy Kelly with Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. Also showing is “The Green Hornet Strikes Again,” featuring Warren Hull with Keye Luke.

AT THE ROYAL“Romance of the Rio Grande,”

sizzling romance packed with thrilling action, starring Cesar Romero with Patricia Morison and Lynne Roberts, is now showing at the Royal theater.

Coming tomorrow is “ The Devil Commands,” eerie mystery-murd- starring Boris Karlo ff with Rich­ard Fiske and Amanda Duff.

Housewife Writes, Prints, Publishes BookC L E V E L A N D , 0 . (U P )— Mrs. Rosalee R. Phillips, who

believes that the w ay to ge t a th in g done is to do it herself,has published a book which she edited, set in type, printedand sold herself.

Much o f the paetry which is in the volume, “ N ig h t L i­gh ts ” also was w ritten by the 21-year-old woman.

The prin ting was done on an old handpress in the base­m ent o f the Ph illips home. E ven the cover p icture a coloredphotograph o f C leveland ’s term inal tow er was taken, de­veloped and printed by the young publisher.

W hen the job was fin ished the woman, acting as her own sales-m anager, arranged w ith downtown bookstores to sell the volume.

FIRST AID— A Soviet doctor applies a bandage to the leg of a wounded Finnish prisoner somewhere in the northern theater ©i the war between Russia and the Axis. Finns report recent gaitu in Karelian area. Passed bv British censor.

H I L OMnwiiii — ........... irm

Today Only 2 :80— 7:30

TODAY — 2:30-6:30-8':80 )

1,000 an d I SIGHTS!ALEXANDER KORDA prc,cnl«

r w.'i/i SASU s,v "aFPH»NT Bar i{n fKhni'oIor ‘ H dcaied fhftf Unn«l Artist,

Screen Epic! 'A lso NEW S FLASH E S !

Copr. iy41 by O.i'.irA Fralure Syndicate. Lie. Tm. Ret'. V. S. Pat. Of.'.— .'.II r}ff2:Ls reserved

S T ’

~~iCopr. 1911 b y t m t c d F e a tu re S yn d ic a te , ln c .| f

^ I ’M 90RRV, FELLA’ , DID ^ I wyAKE NOU ^ EAGW MOW*kjotmimg to be s c a r e d o p ? <

^TMERE? w MAt 'D I TELL YOU? I A ikj'T a b a d GUY w Me m y o u g e t ,

TO Kn o w m e .

s u r e ? y o u An ' m e a r e p a l g ,'^ l it t le PELLA'? TME BEET PALE

t m e r e e v e r W AE? ,

Wp\c\C

, M A R V G A v e >M e : a d i m e E o r e /S O D A — 13DT W A V s h o u l d X s P E M D i T . 2 ' - - r ' i - L M A K S ■He r “T R e A T m e

, T o A S O D A -

^ X 'L L T A K & V A M IU L A -

’’ sS M ooK ee — I - ’ M&LAT> I U O UM D y b a l e t * a a e r A v < & T H A T 031 M S i n & A v e . y o u — X

Me e d s o <v \e ^ .S O A P — .

A V Y - S H U T O P /

I'O^. 194t by lYdled Feature Syndicate. Inc. Tm . iu g . U. S. Pat. Off.—_AU ri^lWs reserved

ilkgeFouc T H E H A W A I I M A I N I C H I Tuesday, August 26,1941

Crescents Leaving Tomorrow For l-l Ball TonmeyMainichi Sportorial

An All-Big Ten backfield, led by none other than Tommy Harmon, the modern Red Grange, , will lead the All-Collegians against the T-formation of the Chicago Bears in the annual charity football ,game which brings together the best college gridiron stars of the past year

aga in st the professional championship team . Th is gr id class­ic will be played on Thursday, A u gu st 28, a t Chicago.

T h e backfield beside H arm on w ill be F o rres t Evashevski, team m ate o f Tom m y a t M ich igan ; G eorge Paskvan o f W is ­consin, and G eorge Franck o f M innesota. These fo u r w ere th e central figu res in the B ig Ten footba ll pow er fo r the past tw o years.

O ther starters a re : : Ends Edd ie Rucinshi, Indiana andD a ve Rankin, Purdue; Tackles N ick Drahos, Cornell andE rn ie Pannell, Texas A . and M . ; Guards A rg ie L io , G eorge­tow n , and Tom 0 ’Boyle, Tulane, and Center Rudy Mucha,W ash ington .

T h is charity footba ll classic was started back in 1934 w hen the Bears w ere held to a scoreless tie by the collegians. In seven gam es played thus fa r, theN ationa l Football League (P r o s ) has a one gam e advan tage o ver the A ll-S tars , w inn ing th ree as compared to only tw o fo r the la tter. Tw o gam es end­ed in ties.

Th is yea r ’s roster o f A ll-Collegians is led by N o tre Dame and Texas A . M. w ith each p lacing f iv e men. M ich igan, Ind i­ana, Stan ford, N orthw estern , Southern C a lifo rn ia and Rock- hurst o f Kansas C ity landed th ree each.

T h e rem ainder o f the A ll-Collegians w ho w ill take part in the annual gam e oth er than those m entioned above a r e :

* q: ♦

F U L L B A C K S — M ilt Piepui, N o tre D am e; John K im ­brough, Texas A . and M ; Norm an Standlee, S tan fo rd ; Don M cK eever, St. Benedict’s ; G eorge Kracum , P ittsb u rgh ; Bob M orrow , Illino is W es leyan ; Jasper Davis, D u k e ! Bob Peoples, Sou thern Californ ia.

* * * *

H A L F B A C K S — H ugh Gallem eau, S ta n fo rd ; B ill M cCan- non, N o tre D am e; A1 Jensen, Rockhurst; O llie Hahnenstein, N o rth w es te rn ; Bob Saggau, N o tre D am e; Dean M cAdam s, W ash in gton ; Charley O ’PuOuke, Boston C o lle g e ; H erm an Roh- r ig , N ebraska ; Len Eshm ont, Fordham ; Jack Banta, South­ern C a lifo rn ia ; D ave A llerd ice, P r in ce ton ; R a y M allouf, Southern M ethod ist; Jackie Robinson, U C L A ; Jim Thom as­on, T exas A . and M . ; A r t Jones, R ichmond.

* * ♦ ♦ i

Q U A R T E R B A C K S Bob P a ffra th , M innesota; PeteSchulte, R ockhurst; Paul Christm an, M issouri; Jack Hayes, N o tre D am e; M arion Pugh, Texas A . and M . ; W a lte r Matu- szczak, Cornell.

* ♦ *

E N D S — John McGee, R eg is ; Pau l Severin , N o rth Caro­lin a ; E rw in E lred, M ississippi S ta te ; Ed F ru tiz , M ich igan ; D on V osberg, M a rqu e tte ; Stan G ra ff, S ta n fo rd ; K en P ettit , Iow a. j

* * ^ *

T A C K L E S — E m il U rem evich , Ind iana; Tony R u ffa , D u ke; F red H artm an, R ice ; Chip Routt, Texas A . and M .; M arshall Shires, Tennessee; N ick Foran, St. Bened ict’s ; Ted Pavelic , D e tro it ; M ike enich, Iowa.

* * * *

G U A R D S — Joe Lokane, N o rth w estern ; Bob S u ffr id ge , Tennessee; B ill McMahon, R ockhurst; N ick K erasiotis , St. A m b rose ; M ike Buchianeri, Ind iana; W arren A lfson , N ebras­k a ; M arion Asa, B rad ley Tech ; Ben Sohn, Southern C a lifo r­nia.

SS ♦ *

C E N T E R S — Jack H all, W arrensburg, M o.; Bob Oster- man, N o tre D am e; Chet Gladchuk, Boston C o llege; Pau l H ie- menz. N orth w estern ; Bob Nelson, B ay lor; K en W hitlow , R ice ; R ay Apolskis, M arquette.

BIAll Softball Eliminations To Start WednesdayOLAAS PLAY AMATEURS IN FIRST TUSSLE

OF ^ ELIZABETH,

M.J. 'WON THE WELTERWEISHT TITLE FROM

JACK

BRITTON-

Tliey Discussed ‘Gentleman Jim’

ONE OF MICKEY'S ROOTBRS

THEN WAS A i-V R O LD

BOY WHO'D BEEN BORN ONLY

A FEW DOORS AWAY FROM W ALKER-

ON JULY 29 THIS SAME BOy

WCOCHRAHEPUT THE SAME ELIZABETH, N.JBACK ON THE PUGILISTIC MAP 8/

w in n in g th is SAME WELTERWEIGHT T IT L E FR O M F R IT Z l Z I Y I C /

Pistr. l»y United Feature S 'ndicate, Inc.

HALAIS LEAD IN PING PONG

B A R E LY NOSES OUT W A N D E R ­ERS IN MATCHES, N AT IV E S

> SLAM M ERS W IN

' The second set of matches in the HRC boys table tennis league play­ed yesterday morning at the Hilo Center game room find Halais barely nosing out Wanderers three matches to two to maintain their leadership in team competition.

Slammers downed Hilo Center I by 3-2 and Natives stopped Hilo Center I I 5-0 in the other two sets of matches.

Halais now have a record of ei­ght individual matches won and two lost, and are followed by Hilo Center I, Slammer^ and Natives who all have won six and lost four records.

Match results follow :

Halai won Wanderers 3-2:— G. Kuniyoshi lost to T. Yamane 17-21, 15-21; D. Yoshimura lost M. Mu- ramoto 18-21, 19-21; J. Matayoshi won M. Yamane 21-19, 21-19; T. I Shinoda won H. Matayoshi 21-13, ! 19-21, 21-18; E. Hirotsu won on de- | fault. j

Slammers won Hilo Center I 3-2: | O. S. Kim lost J. K im i 14-21, 21- j 14, 12-21; S. You won R. Medeiros 21-15, U5-21, 21-18; J. K im lost S. :' Silva 14-21, 21-16, 15-21; T. C. jChow won G. Brown 21-8, 21-13;ID. Pacheco won on default.

Natives won Hilo Center I I 5-0: : C. Kekua won I. Silva 21-18, 21-12; j B. Hamanaka won V. Baker 21-17, 21-17; C. Ahulau won S. Aratani ( 21-19, 21-16; K. Haina and B. Sou- | za won on defaults. |

HRC Boys Golf Meet Slated for ThursdayHRC Boys Golf Tournaments

will be held at Hoolulu Park on Friday, August 29, at 8:00 a. m. Entries are now received at the HRC Office for the following di­visions :

Age 10 and under Age 14 and Under Age 17 and Under

Entries should be in by Thurs­day afternoon.

i U O R LEAGUEBASEBALL

N ATIO N AL LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results

St. Louis 6, Washington 3 Washington 3, St. Louis 3, 10

innings, darkness.Chicago 9, New York 1 Boston 1, Cleveland 0

' P W L Pet.New York ....... 128 83 33 .656Chicago .......... 126 67 59 .532Cleveland ......... 122 63 59 .516Boston ........... 125 64 61 .512Detroit ............ 124 58 66 .468St. Louis ........... 122 54 68 .443Philadelphia...... 122 53 69 .434Washington ..... 121 52 69 .430

AM ERICAN LEAGUE Yesterday’s Results

! All games rained out.

P W L Pet.j Brooklyn .......... 121 78 43 .645,St. Louis .......... 120 76 44 .633Cincinnati........... 118 68 60 .576Pittsburgh ....... 119 64 55 .538New York ....... 118 57 61 .483Chicago .......... 122 52 70 .426Boston ............. 119 48 71 .403Philadelphia....... 119 35 84 .294

C A R L S IT H IS GOLF TITLISl

1 , SHOOTS P A R GOLF A T COUN- ) I T R Y CLUB TO COP OPEN 3 I CH AM PIO NSH IP

I Shooting par golf, M. L. (Budge) jCarlsmith garnered his tenth Isl- iand of Hawaii Open golf champ- jionship last Sunday at the Hilo 1 Country club links.

I I Scoring a brilliant 38 and a 37, iCarlsmith led the field by two I strokes at the half-way mark, but : in the second half he shot a 37 and ' a spectacular 32 to card a 144 as I compared to 151 for H. J. (Sonny)I Henderson who was second.I Other top notch golfers, includ­ing Jimmie Ihara, Seichi Mukai

'and Koshi Matsuoka, found the going tough as these Japanese golfers placed third and tied for j fourth, respectively. [

A ll players mentioned above were the pre-tourney favorites.

The scores follow:j ---------M. L. Carlsmith 38 37 37 32— 144

(H. J. Henderson 40 38 38 35— 151 |J. Ihara 40 37 40 38— 155 jS. Mukai 42 40 39 40— 161 |k . Matsuoka 39 41 40 41— 161 I. W att 42 42 40 39— 163 H. Oda 41 42 40 40— 163

:M. Currie 41 43 40 41— 165 iC. Conway 46 41 40 41— 168 |G. Hironaka 41 40 44 45— 170 j j . Herkes 46 42 42 42— 172 IE . Fujimoto 47 43 39 45— 174 In . Imamura 44 44 42 47— 177 |d . Gomes 46 43 45 45— 179 jR. Padgett 46 44 46 46— 182 IF. Yoshikami 47 45 43 49— 184 J. La fferty 49 45 47 48— 189 K. Hisanaga 48 52 52 51— 193

No returns; F. Cota, R. Conant, M. Yoshikami, A. DeMello, Ri C. Blackshear and S. Matsuoka. *

I B AD M INTO N CLUB G I V E N B YE TO EN TE R IS LA N D *

F IN A L S

Hilo Badminton Club was g iv­en the bye and Manag;er A lejan­dro A legeria ’s Olaas w ill meet T. K. Pang Ching’s Amateurs in the first of the Hilo Zone elimi­nation matches tomorrow, Wed­

nesday, August 27 at 4:30 p. m. at Mooheau Park, according to draw­ings made at yesterday’s meeting o f representatives of teams enter­ed in the B IA U softball tourna­ment.

W ith six teams to be selected from a field of eleven entries in the Hilo district. Manager Willard Porter’s Hilo Badminton Club were given the honor of landing a berth in the island finals, as defending champions. The island champion­ships are slated for the weekend o f September 6 and 7 at Hoolulu Park with two teams from Kau joining the six local qualifiers in the play-offs.

F ive Eliminations The other five finalists from the

Hilo zone w ill be determined by a series of five elimination matches to be played at Mooheau Park daily, starting with the Olaas vs. Amateurs contest tomorrow.

Thursday’s match w ill bring to­gether Mitsuto Nishida’s Waiakea Mill Redshirts against Doro Take- da’s HRC picks, with Takeo Go­ya ’s Wreckers meeting A lex Soar­es’ Loopers on Friday.

On Tuesday, September 2, Son­ny Henderson’s HELCO ’s take on George Murai’s Hilo Sugar A A combine; while Peter Hayashi’s Shinmachis take on Eddie Fujita ’s Hilo Center stars on Wednesday, September 3.

4-Island Tourney Slated The five winning teams, togeth­

er with the Hilo Badminton Club, will represent Hilo in the island finals, from which one or two teams, together with the Hilo Bad- ihinton Club will represent Hilo in the island finals, from which one or two teams w ill be selected to play in the 4 Island championships which will be held on the weekend of September 20 and 21 at HOO' lulu Park in Hilo.

According to chairman Raymond Yuen of the B IA U softball com­mittee, teams will be limited to a roster of 16 players, exclusive of coach and manager; and any ga­mes in the Hilo zone play-offs which are called o ff because of rain or darkness will be played all over again.

Season Tickets Issued Season tickets for the island fin ­

als and the 4 Island champion­ships, in a combined form, are be­ing sold by the participating

j teams with the understanding that I teams eliminated in the Hilo zone ! matches will have to pay an ad- ! mission fee for the island finals; and that teams that drop out in the island finals will pay half price

I in the 4 Island championship gam­es.

As all teams are bolstering their i line-ups with senior baseball lea­gue plaeyrs, who are barred from the regular HRC senior softball league contests, the B IA U games are expected to be fast and excit­ing affairs.

P i’esent at yesterday’s meeting were Willard Porter, A lex Bell, Do­ro Takeda, Eddie Fujita, T. K. Pang Ching, George Murai, Mitsu­to Nishida, Carmelito Arkangel, and Toma Tasaki.

NET PLAYERSiI

TANGLES WITH CHINESE ON FRIDAY NIGHT

Kramer, Schroeder Retains Net Crown

CHESTNUT H ILLS, Mass., Aug. 25— Jack Kramer and Ted Schroe­der successfully defended their National Doubles tennis crown Sunday as they defeated Gardnar Mulloy and Wayne Sabin 9-7, 6-4,

, 6-2 in the finals.1 In the women’s division Sarah I Palfrey Cooke and Margaret Os- I borne won the doubles title by de- I feating Pauline Betz and Dorothy I Bundy 3-6, 6-1, 6-4.

Mrs. Cooke later teamed up with Jack Kramer to cop the mixed doubles title from Bobby Riggs and Miss Betz 4-6, 6-4, 6-4.

Rare Copy Exhibited of National Anthem

P H IL A D E L P H IA (U P ) — Part of 75-year-old W. Ward Beam’s legacy to his daughter, Camilla, is a yellowed copy of the National Anthem 'known to be extant.

The first edition of the Star Spangled Banner was displayed here during the anual celebration of Flag,Day. ,

“ I ’ve been offered $1,000 for the 3ong,’’ Beam said, “ but I won’t rell it.” -i

BOBBY RIGGS IS NO. ONE W ITH F R A N K KOVAC

SECOND

N E W YORK, Aug. 26— The seedings of tennis players in the National championships opening at Forrest Hill on Saturday was announced yesterday.

They are as follow;M EN — Bobby Riggs, first;

Krank Kovacs, second; Don Mc­Neill, third; Ted Schroeder, fourth; Frank Parker, fifth ; Wayne Sabin’, sixth; Jack Kramer, seventh; Gardnar Mulloy, eighth.

W OM EN— Pauline Betz, first; Sarah Palfrey Cooke, second; Do­rothy Bundy, third; Helen Bern- hard, fourth; Helen Jacobs, fifth ; Margaret Osborne, sixth; Mary Arnold, seventh, Virginia Wolfen- den Kovacs, eighth.

A ll seeded men must play in first-round matches.

Seeded first among foreign play-

M AN AG ER IG N AC IO L E A D S STRONGEST BIG IS LA N D

TEAM

Eighteen players, accompani­ed by Manager Manuel Ignacio will comprise the Crescent Turks aggregation, champions o f the Hilo Senior baseball league, who

will leave for Honolulu on tomor­row ’s steamer to take part in the annual Inter Island baseball cham­pionship tournament at the Hono­lulu Stadium, starting Friday ni­ght.

According to an announcement made by Manager Ignacio this morning, the Crescents w ill add six outsiders to their regular roster to strengthen their lineup. Outsiders making the jaunt are: from Ha- waiians. Sonny Kaukai, Roeding Sarsuelo and Edwin Teves; from Pirates, Minoru (Dopey) Matsu- moto and Doc Noguchi; from JAC, Kazuma Hisanaga.

Regular members o f the Cresc­ents team making the trip are:

Manager Manuel Ignacio, Assist­ant Manager Ben Silva, Coach Ma­nuel Enos and Mascot Lawrence Ignacio.

Players are: George Thompson, Baroy Bonga, George Perreira, Joe Estrella, Joe DeSa, Clem Ra­mos, Wendell Rocha, Holi Correa, Jackie Perreira, Tony DeSa, Fred DeSa.

Backers are; Tsugio Tanaka of Olaa and Joe Murphy Neves. A lex Desha, president of the Hilo Senior baseball league, w ill also be on hand to take in the tourney as the representative o f the local circuit. Neves and Desha are slated to leave here on Friday afternoon’s plane.

Schedule Released According to the schedule re­

leased on the tournament, Asahis will take on Oahu Plantation A A tonight with Navy playing Kauai on Thursday, August 28. The A r ­my team which was supposed to play Maui has dropped out, thus, giving the Valley Islanders a bye in the first round.

Crescent will take on Chinese, Honolulu champions, Friday night, August 29. - I

A ll winners of the first round games will play in the doublehead­er on Sunday with the winners meeting for the championship on Monday night.

A ll first round losers w ill auto­matically be dropped out o f the tournament.

Starting LineupThe B ig Island representative’s

(Crescents) starting lineup was released by Manager Ignacio this morning. They are as follows in batting order. George Thompson, at center if eld and first man up; Clem Ramos, shortstop; Sonny Kaaukai, second; Baroy Bonga, rightfield and clean up man; Holi Correa, catcher; L e fty Perreira, pitcher, Kazuma Hisanaga, third; Tony DeSa, first; and Wendell Ro­cha, leftfield.

The Crescents who has been playing great games throughout this season should make a good account of themselves in the Ho­nolulu tourney. W ith necessary o f­fensive punch added by the addi­tion of a few outside players, this year’s edition is, without a ques­tion o f a doubt, greatest team ev­er to represent the B ig Island.

The Turks w ill be meeting a tough customer in Chinese in their first game, but a victory for the Crescents over the pre-tourna­ment favorite Tigers will not come as a surprise to those who know the real power of the local lineup.

Fishing Story Unlicensed

H ELENA, Mont. (U P )— Conrad D. Bue, assistant engineer for the U. S. Geological survey, has a story of a fish that didn’t get a- way. Reason? He didn’t have a fishing license.

ers for the U. S. championship starting Friday was Ladislav Hect of Prague. Francisco Segura of Ecuador was ranked second with Littleton Rogers of Ireland, third an W. H. Choy of China, fourth.

Tom Sharkey. Iclt. a id .lack littekcn, heavyweight contenders in the kerosene days, meet at Olympic Club roundtable in San Francisco to dHcuss late “Gentleman Jim” Corbett, whose life is to be filmed. Joe Corbett, pitcher with old Baltimore Orioles and a brother of great

fighter, was guest of honor.

ANOTHER KING FROM ELIZABETH

NO)/EMBEft I ’; ;

MICKEYWALKER

BUYUNITEDSTATESSAVINGS"b o n d sIND STAMPS

P (M )E F E N S E

aウぺ

•r*

*hhc

-

氏が發表した所に依れぱ此

げCW4

J,,

にふ

s

.

,せ

.

.,は,r

めん

の月賦拂ひ商品購入統制法案

ハマィ

てきょ

,,

つぎ

は布睡には適用されないV

)

の!

g

く語った

i

f

が r-;>

パ ニく

桑港にあろ合衆國リゼープ

yんか

-

T.

(

ヮ•パ

銀行ょりの通告に依ゎ布桂

日 毎 桂 布

は で 船 て ろ 勇 T ァ り 本 :? m • に 事 i f3 5 本!J し派は ろ 滿 j jて ミ 本 ?願レj、こ本? 三 无 [ 來 ",な 語 ' 寺ぐ!'*?駆 ト美び任£ り學ミ’ 駐さ斑:J寺 * 日し勇‘す す ,校t 在?,成す*r、 十/ 日!!ら明冬長!開?:師しノ 曜ま本:^事を朝1 ミ敎むよル < r 語ご:f ヒし使し今え、 他e 學 で な a て 。 圓 別 : の 校 i つ 着 き 敵 i M す院ミ m. i - た の 任 : 天; I 詰づ 任ミての便ズす美ぴラな

( 0 哦 火 )日 六 + 二 月 A 年 六 + 和 B ( p ^ l )

A lcoho l17% by Volume

Pepeekeo Bus Service T. OshiroPepeekeo Phone 15w29 Hilo Phone 2212

Leave Pepeekeo Leave Hilo

ペペケオ發 ヒ ロ 發

7 :00 a . m . 七 時 午 前 9 :00 a .m . 九時午前

7 :3 0 a . m . 七 時 半 1 1 :0 0 a .m . 十一時

10 :00 a. m . 十 時 1 :00 p .m , — 時午後

1 : 0 0 p .m . — 時 午 後 3 :3 0 p .m . 三時半

2 :0 0 p .m . ニ時 5 :00 p .m . 五時

6 :0 0 p .m . 六時 9 :3 0 p .m . 九時半

Special bus late on Saturday nights oiJy.

社おし拂まか力t 米r. 長そホふ採?,傲國テ ハ ノ 事 け f:iまで謎r , ル に さ 行 !會を ラ ル 規 ,れ ふ にン 市 定 ?ト商ミ於》 • の さ 八 品 父 k、 ュ 產 ミ れ ヶ の てフ業 2:た 月 !^贩'え月5 • 金 が 以 ぃ 歡 賦 - ベ 触?おさ内Vミ統ミ拂ま ン 會 ?ミにに制 f•ひ ナ fcfcお關そ支L案?の

月賦販賣統制案

布®

L:

適用ゼず

無產黨ょ心配召さろな

V

^5んぐわつ

東京ニ--六=發〕

本年九月

サ1

日,五ヶ年ぶりで亞細亞

せい

1

かい,

K

rレH<

S

西

『ル::

J

が現れ

かい

> しH

V

£

,

<定<

ろ。此の带既独の觀測には世

か-

^がくしャ

9J.,

ゐん

かく

界の學蓉が動数され,總ろ角

•や3

くむがく

度ょりr

黑ぃ大腸J

に科學の

f

aくてい

ii

メスか向けられら,東北帝大

からも¥

£ig

ilr

iiK

もん

a"*

みけ.*'じゆしなノ

よつ

文め敎按が支那各地に出張そ

せんもんてきけんきそ

んかい

れ事門的に研究して天界

なを

J

の謎を解く事-、-なつてみ•ろ。

ニ、

y

つレH

v

u

i

レん》

<r

度の日她ぱ带旣独の中、線

|><那I;

い-cv

l:;u

ムくけん

of*

おき

大陸を纖斷して福建省から沖

雕愿の|^想3を經て

ぱウ

なかむゆたい

に残すらので,中村敎授ぱ大

T

7

ほぅしや

りラ

ん9

7

腸力ら放財されろ微粒f'T

研冗

;z

めなんし

し-**

んそく

の爲,北中南支五i

所に觀測

«9

ん.1%

i

象t

i

?

く•♦*£.,<*

ゆたいゃ

5

地點を§

a

さ义ぬ喂敎授はお腸

を包iの奇態rn

n

たi

に♦

かん

-

体をキヤヴチする爲漢ロから

や•,卞

.のぱ

オはん

楊子江を迴ら

Kn

キ0

の小半

4i5

ぢん

島に觀測陣地を設けてそれぞ

C

6

たいで

,

てミ

V

よてい

れ黑い太陽5挑戰すろ豫定で

さタ

U

tかもら!,じゆ

あろが之れに先がち中村敎授

IV

ぐわつち、,*

ンハィすシ

ぱ既に去ろ二月ゎ甸上海,南

瓶,0,

0

,北京

Ig.r

•てん

->•

ゥ;

かい

奉天,新京方面に出張して恃

9

cc*

レよ走く

じr

みて.>タ

旣日独觀測地の實地調査を行

つてゐ6

©

.痛

©リゥマチス

©

©肩腰の痛み

©

©

臓病

おの諧病で苦しむ人の爲めに施银致します

キノオレ稱三四ヒロ泡防署近く

ドクトル

(

電話ニ七九七

)

三年も五年も再發の

キカンシ性せき

f

苦しみを止め早く快方に誘く

那採巢の

I

藥を初めて發表す

那揚子江沿摩に産す

^

花科の植物や印ぽ支那產する

し*

;

といふ®

ぜんそく

,獲

にn

ジレ,キヵンシ.料.^,^るたんSH

I

でt

i

lんせきf

で3^

にf

i

なりi

けてf

it

®

になる射

la

にがしも

らなだは??

t

の禁縱廣襲の綴あり譲にならぬ縣くねめられょ綴は

fik

ですが左の仕is

ですどんなi

i

なもおM

めする•

教S

X ts

00,11

十1

1

雜八3S

3

«

i-Ti

東京IS

麻布區森元町三/十

總賣棚元坂

本洋行藥品部

けミゐん

W

4

<わん6

い<51

*

x

»こ*

敎a

ミ共に歡迎會を催す事’、-

ほんぐわんじ

よく

に,,

©こt

よ* ノ、一

r

Lん

三-

!

mn曜午目一時より新

にんこはらかいし

せr-1:55

任小原開敎使の說敎かあり、

•J,

,

だんレゆさい♦

同ニ時より数團主催の各附艇

t

体5^ピの歡迎$^か"

i

されろ

害であろ

ぉ盆精靈送り

水難者の0

ズロれっぷり

;明照院

ヒn

市明照院でぱ來ろ九月四

(歡七月十三がに當ろ)

MV

£つ

r

后七時ょり九月七:

r

にかけお

ぱんつぎ.

盆.法要を次の如さプ0

グラム

i

*

こS

に依り執行すろ事,、;なり各信

たい'んないザ.リはつそ*

こS

能に對し案-S

狀,

送すろ事

ぐ>

なつた0

Aれ月四

(

働七月十三日、

木)

午後七時ょゎおつ,、>め

Aれ月五

(

歡4-四?

金)

S-

后七時おり2め,大にの婆

<

0

わいか

5!,10*^

ぅミ、

7は

供養•御詠歌奉唱塔婆回向

ぜ,けミ

說敎ぐ

わつ

r

f

Aれ月六日(

舊十五u、土)

J

いミ

*

午后七時おつV

.

•め"大塔婆

<

V

かそ

供養,御諫歌奉唱堪婆回向

せ,けミ

說敦ぐ

れつ

r

f

こもしも

ム^月七日(

舊十六日•日)

,、.

>

め,大

くや

5

>

wザ

じt

供養,午前れ時,ヤシ島に

てsi

靈送りだぴボ職S

JIiS

日独觀測に學界動員

黑ぃ太陽に科學戰

五年振りに亞細亞に發生

がめろ,强敞ぱ何V

-

言つて

あ?ひぐん

>

なんぐんし

も朝日軍だ,支那人軍は至

寶投手シヨーをマウンドに

ろに違ひないが,我が軍

は彼の球をホつだけの實ヵ

をもつてゐろ。

-、J自信たつぷりに語つてゐた

オラア本願寺へ

小原師わオ來任

満天美勇日校長,兼務

Iラア淨4~1

故羽旧師册三回忌'

ii

節の能くォラァ淨七院に於

ては!

咋二十b

!h

午后一時か

ら故r

代羽S

断の一ごトニ'同!&

を營んだが,性ての敎へ

.

,

1

ひミ

-

^

子で今はか派•し世に*つ人 々

を挪め5

?

徵のM敷

?^ょり

t

け、

けい

iiiMf'

せい

li

いごん

多敎參詣して非常に盛大に勤

修した0

司含替挨接高木孫一

挨扱

h野

法話

小林師

デ'/:j

の接!!

よろ

f

,

J

じん

..5

ルひ

5

たちゐ

夜特に故人を億ぶ人達’か居

殘】

ってど野山,

配んで『

S』

のi"

にて夜の更くろも知らす語

り合つた0

ぱコハラ小林爲

ろくしは

< わ-きミ,

麓氏の羽旧師三十三M忌の悼

句であら

追憶の碑ぃかめしく若紫風

慮のI

日に節

!!

S

S

のぎ花にi

もれし

ひゆめゆめおなつ

在りし日の夢夢を追ふ夏の

_

\

H

定期往復

ハカラク發

午前七時、十二時半、午移ニ時

午前十時,十二時半,午後ニ時

同ニ一

時同五時

.遊覚旅行についてはモへアウ

園前にて自動車主に御和談

下さい

画山パス

布睡住友銀行

\

\

11

11

時効偉大な家庭常備築

d

- T>

m

^1\メ

*^

をs

にお進め致ます

リクマチス"神經痛

":

肩のこり、腰の痛み、打身,3;

傷,ふ

みぬき"火傷、パィキ*

\

、毒虫の刺傷K他

一S

のばほ病、

に特効があります▲使用法…

痛む所へ少し當お變に

なれぱょろしく、旱きが早く决してべタウかぬのがキ

A

力•メの特長、御注文の節左記へ申込ドさいますれは

早速御屆

致ます布時總代理人

原ダラIギ前

村弁賣藥所

ヒロ き!パーT

in

滋養第

の常食して

玄米、キ搞米、玄米マシ

を御すすめ致します

健康を保つ上には滋養分に富んだ常食を選定すろ事が

必須條件です。是非御試し下さい

飛機

S

人々

ホノルル住旧代藏氏ミ山本常

13d

は料夕の飛便で來廣の

像定であろG

ト年記今i

のil§

を!ぴ

Vi.

5

-やiよし

,j

<

T に*ぴん

島中の當山势子娘は明日便に

て歸府さろ

弁上正克君披露宴

ごぅし

tみえのぅへ

irv

かつくん

當市孰附弁上正克おv

>

パパィ

コゥ仁弁二;重キさんの結婚披

4-1

二日(

七)

午后六

時半ょり弁上家にぼて"

J

され

たがm私

-览

であつた

A司言眷挨扱济本ホ大郞

A新觀新婦紹介K中

A請曲

富永藏三

<1

仁弁家挨掉並に親族紹介

<1

村一

來賓代表德城信ニ

<1

謝辭井上家代理畑

出賢

A萬歳三唱

のi

りでi

lf

f

g;

いて第一一

式に移りおそくまで

娠ぱつた。1

徹療法講演會

<

<1

時日明廿七日(

水)

午后七時ょり

<1

場所じ&

大正#'靑年館

<1

講演者一

徹療法創主

徹師

1般御來聽を飮迎ず

主催ー徽療法後援會

いので大鍵ぎV

-

なり此の旨啓

3

は’?

*

^

察に報告されたもので,啓宫

K

1

★ひそうさけつ

は直に現場に赴さ捜索した結

’、一

をすt

力ラ海岸で發見した,

依つて本人ぱ大%

にさらわれ

たもの♦

ニ思はれろv

>,

因にぺ

a

l

は搬ボ+

A

年間ォI

ヵラ

ざいじ,?

ょし

に在住してろた由

全布桂野球霸權を目指し

本島代表ク軍明日出發

ィダナシm

監督自信たつぶり

號 0 十 三 千 九 第

本ル末ょりホノルル,スタデ

ァムに1

てSS

されら

V場すろヒ

n

•シn

ァ野i

りIグの優勝

蓉クレセント軍はマネジャ

I

マヌH

ル•ィグナシオに伴な

はれて则S

ぞ歡の便織で出府

出場すろミなつたが;

C6

はクレセント軍を中心,、

J

して

-ぎ軍ょり^名の補をダぱひ+

八ものIS

k

かm發すろ。卽ち

マネジャ

エム•

ィグナシ

一オ。副

I

咖督ぺン•シルべ一

n

1チ,H

ム•ィネス©

スコツト,

H

ル•ィグナシ

ジョI

デ•

トムソン。バ

ポンガ

0

m

ジィ?ホレラ0

ジヨI

エスツレラ

0

m

I

デサI

O

夕レム

ラモス0

H

ンドル

ロシャ

I

O

ネI

コレア。ジヤナI

•ポレ

ラ0

トネI

5チ

サ_

0

フレク

ド•

デサI

O

布時軍よ

b

サネ

I

•カウカ

0

B

1デン

0

"

H

?ト

I

、ジ

I

•ネ

スb

&

I

•デ

I

b

15

m

’か

S

フライデI夜ホノルルル表支

I

は次の通りであろミイグナシ

If

初陣の陣容:

(

)

(

)

(!

!)

(

)

コレァ(

捕)

ポレラ(

投)

(

)

I

•ト

)

|

(

)

i

叉も⑩の犧牲

比島人ぺP

溺死

咋日ォー

力ラ海岸で

敦た

«

<こ*^よ

化ヒ發察

宫の報告に依れば

?

sL

►つ、)

rj

昨:!!

•ぺ

ロ| (

さい

4i

•,じんろ,

5}々ミしゃ

)

-^勞

|ヵラ配?|に|^ぃて溺&した

戰作の部腦主む園を統總ーラトプt ろけ於に地基戰前戰ソ對

r

ン」

自動ポを御求めの際には至極使利な方法で

御金を御W立て致しますから御相談下さい

fc ロ第‘信託會社内

布娃フス會社

共謀詐欺⑩疑で

有田仁藏起訳

,

宫川‘

住旧兩氏

,?-

脅迫

パ 味 る ス の 累 J:起* S 眞Jc五 ュ 三 ぱ ピ ル 正 す さ ョ 日 5 共ゐジてニの善しょ德ミ日を り の ク 調 T 眷!J拆そ嗽: 太た郞?ッ戸ミ -* » ル 午 。れ ッ 午 。犯 ろ ュ 起 ,千 上 六 永 ミ 米 ;1 担 ミ 都 1 杳®同' : さを郞ミ氏 ••キ瀬せ f * 豫 ぐ 前 て た プ 後 。嫌::事f リ 訴 * 弗 ]:變プ氏しの關? 絕t の 'レ告デ樣T れ强そ氏しよス德き五:審 け 後 ,ヒ 街 ?:八 疑 り よ 1 さ か 仁 こ よ 三 係 £ し 强 U 每?:發レ ’ た 請 f .夫 ふ り プ 永 ?百判え通?に ロ 七 時 者 ■!&所kの れ 脅 * け 人 ミ を た 請 ?:の に ラ の 着 き 妻 ?,九 レ 0 ) 鹿]:享e 信乂起》市しニ三 ミ 報ラ調ミ合!:嗎ミ氏し一がMS 5 に 西 【と 接 ミ ン で 断 よ 百 ス ニ で の か 拆 そ 有 た - * ト しの 杳 ,奶 取 isよ 千 力 に い 接 き 原 ま す ド あ し り 六 業 2 人 •"あ定きあさ田た番ミ分でて如 -;告チ國オ材r ,り 弗 ::ィ 三 ふ し 新 i:ろ , つ た モ 十 者 ■バ ろ め つ れ r i 地、當 , 去, < 發!?グ せ 一 ,ル 戸 、’ すこ松31害!?ジ て 撒 力 四 弗 );住1結* ^,すこた た 藏 t に 市 ' ろ で を ラ し 千 ヮ ァ 瀬 せ

が 氏 し 、 ュ 他 e 疑 ぎ 百 、 田" 託?有$ボ ° 旨 ミ が て 內 2 ニ あ 待 * ン 嫩 弗 ]^ヒ の , キ も 因 き 9 の に 四 窗 そ f * し 旧 た ン シ ホ 昨 き 逮 ?^ビ 十 ろ つ ド I T 合2:ァ安*坂き ッ に , 連} :て ト 川 ?;代* て は ド ヤ ノ 日 ミ 捕 ほ シ 一 が て • に 計 1*•ヮ部べ cU

米®々防强化

輸出許可品目を發表

W,,

0

7

aウ

t

ねい2

V、0ラ

【東

0?ニ4-六

: 1:發

外務省通

商局人電"ルーズV

ルトガi

c

t

*

ヶ.sl*t,f*r、

もわは、,

15

9

領は國防强化法に基づき左記

ひ-

<4>>-

^

ょかせいか

じね

品!!!

を赚出許

"?

制.下にS く旨

3

i ts つ T

去 <>ト

九日發表した

0

.ァスフ

アルト,I

鐵金}

§、•

J

貝V』

出して非常に娠やかであつた

化つアツプル*夕ラツカ_

パナナあの競技かあり,

でivs

isg

をii

したがi

S

ぱiisg

rm

,li

ぎチq

s.、

三i&-

l?

美S

の§<鬆

g

賞したじ

ロ法眼寺

盆法要

九月中旬に

當市法眼寺ではれm

-H

I,

四のザHにEり

!の

、一んし

1

i

}

如く厳修すろ事になつた

©九月+三日(

奮七月二十ニ)

午後七時ょり

孟蘭盆法要

塔婆回向(

御詠歌)

施餓鬼法

御接待

©九月+四日(

奮七月廿三日)

i

塔婆间向(

御;詠歌)

擅信徒新亡精靈回向

中食接待

砂糖相填

<

月サ六日

j斤三仙五

1

嚼七+弗

.生用

日本語學校の新學期が切迫し

ましたが學生の使用する

便

各種多量に印刷して居b

ます

此の隙多少に拘らず御注文を

御膨ひ申します

布唾每日社

3,,

*>,-

は>7

ぢよぐわい

ぱ此の統狐法から除外され

£5 ず

,■

I

ら努であ6

てわわ

,

\

-J

めひ

ふな

我々は夜の試合には不刷れ

<■&、•せん

たい

t

であろが節1

同戰たろ對支

なじんせん

かSW

い.,

じし

A

-^ろ

Hitler and Armv Chiefs on Russ Front

At the headquarters of Adolf H it le r , somewhere^on-the-eastenvfront, Der Fuehrer and his top-ranking commanders pore over m aps of the Nazi-Red w ar situation. On the left is M arsha l W alther Von Brauchitsx^h. At r igh t is Gen. F ritz H a ide r.

もの々j

思はれろ,、

)

報告して來

KJU

i

ザん JB

た,卽ちお報iii

に依れば前記

ひた

5

じん

9

C

*

*よ*,ぴ

<'ぅ

比島人べHI

ぱ去ろ日曜a朝

5を

けん

®

U

魚釣に出掛け其の晚歸宅しな

伊藤家出立宴,

,よP

ホ一ムス 一KLド在住の伊ぽ蔽

きた

ぐわつ

C-**ごご

則氏は來ろ<

!E:

三4-tC

午后六

碟村

,止

け,とん

たに

VjA

ミ婚すろ谷崎タツ子さんの

.C ん

♦よ*

5

出立の{„乂を催す事ミなつた。

盛大なる遠遊含

當市にあろホワィト裁縫ミシ

よ*,さ

9

ンの洋裁學校では去ろ二十四

rc

サンギ1

11-

哩半の海岸に遠

遊曾を断個種々なろ余興が綴

M

マクア聯靑

明晚募金映議

浪曲一

代男を上映

ハマ:ク

§1

六時半ょりミA時半ょりの11

间に一旦つてホノカア谷本罰sk

i

s

f

f

fz

’、>になったか、

『: ig

1

攀-ls

£p

:s

のけヶッ3

り刷きで氣ぱ

取常なもので歉g

が^

i‘され

てゐろ0

i

い*

V

むら

因に礎村正务氏ぱゥM

スタン

ステ,.トギ*命If

臉の勸誘服で

ぁり,矿is

F

。^

事務を恥敝ゥてろる。

エ藤夫人安產_

ヒaだ;ホ

:!: isc

£?

km

はせ

1

日夜ト

一is

?:-の能

さ男兒を分勉勇臺v

>

名附けら

れ母子共に健全であ’

ov

>

!

傲療法

講演開催

明日大正寺で

1

搬船飢断歡游部1

艇5^

M

だi

ヵナダ,メキシ

ni

li

て四百ニ-

Mil®

の請習を開

さオアフ

,力ワイ

,

モn

カイ

マウイ等に於て百三トニ间の

請習を開き醫首から兒放され

た雜i

i

者を'ポかしてi£

i

を嫩

;ート七^

n

市大正寺青年脅®

に於てr

1

徹療法の断ぜk

理i

ミ讓し

て一般i

演をなす*, i

請無

れラ

*i

す.っ

n

S

ゆい

料多數の御來齒を歡迎するV

なは

5

Sた,,>

^

めん

尙當島に於てヵウがIS

にて三

<わハか

•,し

.

4

f

み、

かた

回の講習をなしE

Z

腹,tu

t,

n

り,

便移症iS

HIiiiiiig

いちじ

&

こ•r

<わ

,!^

箸しい効果を表し目下ヵク

パハラS

5

本語學

-$

にて請

ち.,

V?

,れ <

し‘^

巾であろが會1

同練ぢ中ミ

5ひ事

' K '

ft:.息 ;

C M’ AlCOHOt-ijjltSt IY VMlWMC - ド

\,. HAMyPACTUfiED l-fiOrTlEB |Y. 4

m ^ m m m m limHILO, HAWAII^ T .H .〜ふ, *

, i a t i 樣 造 通 米 0 そ造i!

Nishiyama Bus Schedule Leave H A K A L A U Leave H ILO

7:00 A.M. 10:00 A.1VL12:30 P.M. 12:30 P.M.2:00 P.M/ 2:00 P-M.

8:00 P.M. 5:00 P.M.

For Excursions, See Owner at Bus Station_ Mooheau Park

H A W A II FlJNAiNCE UU.

米國政府の礎獨が冗子卯ょe

を附けろ!

全な資ら上

9んは

,->

S

5

t

.ね

•、二言へぱ當市ヮィァ

がい

ちよちご

スH

スエ街のアメリカン貯

农,2

しつ

けふ

<<Jr

<わ:るんかにふ

贷附け協會の會nE

に加入すろ

こと

さ,けふ

<わ:

してんし

事であろ-、>

同協會ヒn

支ぽ支

^人靑が保S

i

は語ろ,s

i

協あ

V

わじ

r

A

3ん

は過U1

九四一年度上年期の

貸t

對断をしたが,營

旧H

ぱ頗るで、

*

之は斷

iipig

なろ

:;;1 g

:?

li

l:

に財の艦

15

ほS

は.

,

i

りょはも

方法に就て考慮を抑ひつ、あざ.,

ろかを證すろものであろV

)

け.W

めけそ,しはいじん

協會總支配人フランク•ウ一

I 氏は其の ステ一トメ

ント

定期パス發着表

、カ

フ發午前

5

U

:^

:.銀

座1

1七

:..:

CI

0

1

N

に述べてゐら,米國政府の機

u

f

ち上

5ん

n

關か保證すろ貯金は如何なろ

-

>

^

3いて

SIV:,

あ,、じ

{せい

國際的最悪事態び發ホ*するも

IS

ぐがル!^ろもので.扶地の於

ほ‘,

0

t

T

5

Aん

法Sしては利子も高く頗ろ安

ザAい•,り

全有利であろミ認めてゐろ,

F IN AN C E CORP., LTD.Kamehameha Ave. Phone 2644

D lu P £ d S ^ d a y ^ U l . e••Courteous & Careful Driver"

Kohala and Hilo Leave KOHALA 6:00 A.

PHONE 2*W 642 Leave HILO 1:00 P. M.

De Silva’s Union Station PHONE 24S8

LAST STOP - Hawaii Mainichi

>

n

II

ごDフ定期往復

n

ハラ發午前六時j

情話ニヮィト六四ニ

II

A

ヒロ發午後一時j

電話デシルパユユオン~

ステIシヨンニg

iiir

~

最後出發所布吵紐日社~

ロチヤパス

1

1

-

1

1-

!■

^

^

k

J

L

V

/

L

7

^

Ex-Waitress Dips Into Movies

Ready for a dip is Juanita Starke, starlet who has made a little splash at Warner Bros, studio. Her press agent says she is a former waitress, who was discovered by a talent scout while collectiiwr her

unemployment insurance.

(日曜 Sk)日 六 十 二 月 A 年 六 + 和時

la s t t a n k — The crew of a German anti-tar;k gun jubilates as their shot stops the advance ot a Russiein tank column by disabling the last Soviet tank, according to German caption on this radio-photo from Berlin. However Russians claim +Heir tar'<s, d®f9nses have halted Nazi blitz.

(

宗敎,經濟,I

,水陸海の

七It

かぁりゲ度のis

談に當ウ

てゐろのぱ主•ニし例のフオン

けいざい

-

ち?

€わ/

•、一

H

ント•

フオーゲシ司法長官だしかし

てゐるのはフオI

ン•ホ一フ

ストラーチンミいふ經濟部.

し▼

ぅ1

,9

?

商局長だこれかなかくがつ

じん

ちりしたまさにオラング人の

て、けい

¥

s

こん♦レ

奥型V

-

もいふべき男で今度の

會商か煮え切らなかつたのぱ

ォラング人の勘い斯 に

よろものではな く彼らヵ國

をii

せす,

後の勝利を得ろv

>

信じ切つて

ゐろこミによろのだ

らんいん

'ey

かぅした蘭印を和手にして

Sq

をされた劳澤全Iの努が

f

ラか

こは

U

には頭が下ら,小林さんに

は通l

i*

か必要だっゎてか潔

さんは日i

思ふ,、)

ころを得意の英語で

述べられ5

15^

もK

語でIS

に不便はなかつだ,しかも

重'I案件については®すi

俯’、mS

接談判を!

i

請したほ

どで肚の坐り方は?

k

澤さん

ttd

tい

1い

•r

はて

の力•力一枚もニ枚も上手で

)

■>,>

?<'

つ.,しん

あつた(

東京通信)

けんは人

XI;

け.

わ、.

現に本島 一

J

;!協

しやかけ

J-T.

ん-ん塞

ドル

荐で掛金溢斯なり一

チ恥H

すr*

もの

り數M-

前の支拂ひを受けた者

'か多数あり,航して殆どポぱ

入をホ込んでゐる,ヒ®支化

の??配人の#木保だはi

協S

にモ^年のlE

驗を以てぎ';

しんせつていねい

に規

SJ.

旧摩をモット

I

ミして

絕体安全出来る

投資V)

貯金法

加入す2

調

私ギ今回ニ1+

五回目の布味島訪問に隙し宵標のピャノ

の修縫又は調節の御用命に應じます

ヒロ市電話ニニ三九

エネスト•ギジキ

內島航路發着表

ヒロ着

水曜

:!!…

ヒロ發ぽ午後

ロ着…

土曜日同午後四時發

ヒロ着…

日曜日同午後四時發

內島汽船含社

r ょ-:'J

ミいふミ,靑年の1

人は,

忽^斬け出した。かミ思ふミ

ゃがてゼあぼの請歡,

へh

つて返した。をして,まだ居

術??

MゃS

e

年S

の人たちに•報告をした。

r

それ行け!』

マ-いふので、總勢十四五人

が,一

團V

一なつて押し寄せて

来た。

この不意打に> 驚いたのは

かず

44

,•、み

風間肌の不^どもでぁろ。

實ぱ,柳太郞一人にすら!:

まれてすを出しかねてゐたミ

ころへ,5^嫩.8だゃ> 5^

年酣

一^^い

^^が

^押し寄せて来て、ぐろつミ包

圓されてし-.つたのだから*

いまぱ,^ろで袋鼠であろ。

rS

澤のおつかさん,此騒ぎ

は1

職どぅしたのですか?J

S5

鄉isK

の1

故!!

r

しつかりやれ,萬鹿!』

.

1i

は感ぎした0

-U

もの

斯ぅならミ•

與太をどもも

默つては居られない。

r-:k

奴のすふは,化ね嘯だJ

rw起:

s

をいつて,胡‘Msさ

ぅたつて,&

目だぞ!』

しかし駄目なのは波等自身

であって,ポて年たちの

!:

應を煽つてしiつた0

r

默れ0きさま等こを,非$

時^-本の年の面ょごした

r

名器の家を條辱してみろ。

それこそ,我々か承知しない

ぞ』

叫んだ,かミ思ふミ,ども

らから火蓋を切つたかV

)

も分

らゃ111入5亂れての撤歐か|,

まつてしまつた0

多断に無勢の上に,舰しろ

1

ガは,訓練された鬪士ぞろ

ひ,

1

方も無統制の?

ども

それに如

!:

に與太あでら,It

市內某商店で女店員一名至怠募集

希望者は布®每日社事務局へ中込

れたし

t

v

tn?

家庭の仕事に經驗のぁろ膜一名至

急白人家庭に於て募鬼す高給を支

拂ふ"但し泊り込みの事希望者は

電話七九0

四へ問ひ合せられたし

冗義の太陽

(

K

無0 ±雄上

K

(

百五十四)

鎌後の若人

その喊,mの

、奶

一いまそれ'か,ちょラど終つた

ぱかりのこミであつた。

をの請演を聽さにib

つてゐ

た'|e

^

;

のニニ一人か,

O'

i::?s

りかけらミ*

,

j

家の‘戸外で,M多,勢

なにや

らガヤ騒いでゐろ。脱

ぐMのis

-

’、

)

け_

•そ

'か

を一

ほ盤いたのであろ。

そこで,巾の一人が,素ぱ

やくソッミ猶へ這入つて来て

おろ'

してゐろおかねさん

から,事情を聞き取ゥて•

の化年にそれミ耳打をした0

おa

こる

大きな鼓で,おかねさんに間

ひかけたa

すろミ*猛が,化に代つて

眞劍なi?

を,振りしぼつた0

r

皆さん,僕は猛です、金次

郞のぽの猛です。1

T

のm征

も5?

らす,ゥ力/、暮してゐ

たのですが,今度初めてそれ

メど别って,驚ぃて歸つて来た

比iO

さんにホ譯がありません0

これまでは•

ゆに心配ばかり

ー胁けましたが,

度ミいふ今

»

おと

.プトし

4

つせいはは

度こそ弟の出征に勵まされ

て,僕ぱ悔悟しました。これ

一から一

ね懸命になつて"

sT

のぽ

1?を護ります0それだの

に此仏等が來て,また僕を誘

惑しょぅミすろのです』

r

ょく,分つたJ

それで*ミ-鋭後の靑年だJ

i

h-

こそひ

r-

*'

はく

取扱つてゐらので好評をぽし

ニ V,

さい:

せいふ

ニん

か.4

國隙情勢K

-

だの昨今にも拘ら

かにふしゃを

.,.

し?*

や加入をが財加してゐろ(

しんめを

S

3

ハは能木保氏)

平井嚷の舞踊

につポし

r-M

ょ’-,かぃてんごぃひ

-

r

5

船のliiT

許はl

ii

M

S

M

r

まで^

に&i

むか

いょ

をもつて迎ぇられてゐろ'か愈

パ®ろ九月

一,ニの.:

5

夜にS

りガ斬‘

i

にi、

'^し

催されろがg

十名近くの!:

?■-

は5?

や必死の稻?0

に飽I

I

<r

けr'c

く旣にプログラムもめ定し

5もじつす

^>=>め

なか

夜共實にポ晴しい割當で中に

ガrsm

ものしよ

も大切り出し物の初H

特我

りJ

,、ニ ra

m『S

人形』

ござみのか

ホいじゅつ

の如き:

ag

逃してならない藝術

味たつぶりな出し物で云ぱや

もかな當夜ぱすし詰め觀衆を

おは

ニミ

して大いに醉はしめろ事は疑

!,、け

ザ-そじしんぶんふでそろ

につけん

前邦字斬間ぱ策をぉぇて日本

I:

断の矿啦S-*

まれのだS

ビ斬

しせい

0,、

v

<

u

すろ順なろ姿勢を造るに役サ

りざ,すぅれい

つかを力說獎勵したものであ

*0«

W

X

U

ろが全くその通りで女らしき

女を此^ろ

ぜ4:

§:件

じょし

セやたも

-fv,

を女子を待つ親達にj

考を促

あ♦*

S

せい

したい一事であろ(

天野牛)

^-E島旧かね

多年改良に.邁進

三大•

露£¥

i

▲ロイド系n

-

ドアィラA

I

二十

▲ ニユハンプシヤ■レ■ド

+パ仙

f

ォスヒナ一だ五仙

▲白

4;^削

レ■ヴホ>

I

料三十仙

ン‘鑑別離一羽十五仙

多少に拘らず御注文下さい

パパ弁n

クマハルア

二三白六話電六七I11SI5

傷!!養田小

©

ホノカア發i:!午前六ゆ十五分

©

(

)

j

一時

パI

抑太郞も,猛もまた,I

たちの統後に燃ゆる意氣^^^

れにぱのやうに、感激せ す

には居られなかつた®

頑迷不適なる蘭印の姿

H

ラチオの後に必す英國國歌

タゲィアに

t:

タくねんで

つたミきミ昨年出かけたV

•き

みちが

かは

では見違へるほど變つてゐた

街V-

いはす,村7-いはや,國

sif

ぉr

しくi

され,

廣場にもJ

lK

原にも後杭ががち

お*

M

I

I

大きな穴が掘つてあろ、はじ

めぱ何のこV

>

かミ思つたら飛

行機の着陸を防ぐため•じわか

つた,ゴルフ場にまで穴の掘

つてあろのにぱその神經過敏

さに芳潭さんも笑つてをられ

た,その他飛行撒の狀

i

おょぴ日本船の寄港などにつ

いて,

n vs..

逐?て制限が:

I

られて來た,蘭印の兵ルは陸

¥

は常S

ニ厥断M

,

It

常ぎ跪

’、こ

盛んに市節戰の演習をやつて

ゐろ{t^

軍は大したものではな

ぃが,倫敦に♦仏のぴた飢傲が

*

こは通信を思ふやぅでないや

ぅだが,媳督府の空氣ぱ配か

ら隅まで英米依前の色がiii

0曜のラデォの0

恥後にはォ

ラング國歌を放;

^すろが,

それに0

いで英國の國歌も

,就

にぱオラング敏旗•、一英國旗

^

义し

てゐ6海岸ゃ市輒にはトー

チヵや囊を築いてゐる,

それでをかしかつたのぱト

1

11?ト

^-六

のぬ5

c

のが"斬?I

配ではi

蟹の餘興1Jぼ

::!

rてゎ;

大會をやらぅV》

いふこミに

なつて土

を持ち込んで準

,,ぜん

•、ニア

マ*か飛んでゐろ聞く-、>n

i

領%

僻ではぃょく防案を

はじめたV

いふのだ一

同大

笑ひだつた

そ,,ミく.*

ニ.7

’i

ふぐそ、,?

総督府の構成は總督、副總督

の-卜に法

"⑩

新發明の獨逸對戰車砲は美事ソ聯の戰

0^を砲擊した

日 毎 唯 布

tilK

いへ

常時やお譽の家くらゐのこ>、)

は知ろ害である,それがため

C

A

©

心に十分の引け目のmてゐろ

て♦

?

,、ニ J

ろへこの弼敲に出遇ウて

はたまらない,いやはや散 々

^^ー

さ目に遇つて、それこを,後

をも見すに、逃け去つたので

ぁろ0

さぅした統後の人たちの,

義侠に燃ゆろ援ルに,おかね

さんは,涙を流して感謝した

f

J1

i-

C

C

c

f

1

.

1 c

(. i.

(. .i.

w

c i.

i. c

n.

ね;;た

5

aい

rHV

、i

ね*"

ぅこらんいん

いか

し>

熱帶の碧海、欲らH

メラルドの飛

•の如く、眠れろ斑蘭印

V-

は如何なら島

V

かいらんか

へんぱラ

1

1

ミ.Iぢ

こん<£ハ

か世界動亂に變貌すろ蘭印の姿ぱ?また,)

れらの島を統抬し,かつ今同わ

たいへ,

C

T

fc

そ5

ミくふ

おも

;*

はふれ

r><

ねんぐちこ

o

f

が化表マJ

析衝の矢面にがつてろる總督府の主なろ顔觸ぱ?..昨年十月小林

ぜんけんずい^そ

かのも

わた

•人

0ん

ょしざ

^し

-ii

5

ひiwr.、

全播の隨行ミして波地に渡つた全權のパトンが,芳爆使節に移つたあ•、>引續

たいイ

•>

3

*

わつしょ*

らい

や-*;?

3い

らもいん

3

きバタヴィァに滞在,去ろ四月初^?歸

#^^-

I

,

VI,

•、わ

b

M

<に,V

Sん

9

もつてゐた拓務省海鳥第二課疫川本邦雄氏に注視の蘭印を聞く

女給でつたジュァュタ,スタ,ーク讓は,映盡女優ミしてワナ一

ブラダー會社に入社すろ卒なつた

P B i r © i mC 3 £ l ^ « « メ 5そ 紐 ぎ (6 ’ Broadway〉 w W i S ^ & _ _ X

THE MITSUI BANK LTD. S 里 § な

J i J - I 金 I 金 I 金

- け'び =限,, ぽ ?級 ^ ^ ^ ' {

ピオピオ街策ニ五-i

ハ七

助§

B5

"い$

產 多 は 訣 秘 の 功 成 鶴 養

を 雄 ご 雌 の 維 S 鶴 の 系

要 必 が 事 ろ て 言 て け 分ヒ

定期パI

サI

ビス

心配^御無用です、商ちに弊社へ御出下

さ-

3>

御便宣をも與へ致します

<3

滞つた貫物代

A醫

A車修絡

<1

A家

A休购€

3:

A往

<1

拂Aタキス

<1

其の他諸支拂.

.

.

.を

一掃して信旭をS

復致しませぅ

カメハメハ街

ヶI

、ピー、チヤング1

1

階ニ號室

フィナンス參社

滿

れ買物をすろ時は?

る 誇 を 味 美 ま 豊 養 滋

' ] パ I^ E M I3

S E 1 T E M i l A ¥ 0 »

號 四 十 三 千 九 第目 f t 睡 お (日曜火)B 六 十 二 月 A 年 お + 和 昭 (ニ )

もVJ

くめい

.

P

ん-sw-

て旁

(

いふくめつ

求めて壞亂中の敲兵を溢減し

つつあろ

方陶方地

•}

•かむらかひなみさい

i.,

4#

デの

ぱ圓村,陰並•资藤•昆野,

?0

!!,

Is

さ人せいレ

,-^^5*** きん

づれもルM省墙附近で二十三

%

や„みじつ

け'ないじミりんふん

日の.ゆ日にかけ頓內A

.

揉顾粉

碎热大なろ觀かを收めた。

敵の抵抗を排擊

包園網,ど塵縮

牙城「

北樓山」

に迫ろ

o

cにてニ4

-

河北

&

城化於に®跟すろi

i

ポ嫩

はぅゐ

下共産匪約五千を包圓' 14

-S

jJ

もふつ>,、

,

-IP"、

9.

日拂隐を明し猛攻の火蓋を切

つた我律m以アi

.

li

肌に排剩しっ-

はラゐら

.?

めつ

0§<

y,

rじつ

S

ふこくて

A

包圓網を默縮して同:

n

夕刹敵

のik.

妮北视"ルをぢろ

-!

ハキn

至ぃキ0の1

に肉進し波の

ほ5

せいねいか

*

さんが,

*

いん

砲靜は大けの山\1£

股々ミこ

なほ

C

S

だましてら,⑧サ二日ょり廿

にIt

っほミlii

’,が

* 4;

くわ

五日までの同方:曲の綜合戰染

9

ミー

は左の如し

艦|3|炭

体こkn

0

!

トS

*わ<ひん

H-

り•<■

だん

ぃ 1

继品手彈

一二七四れ其

n

1,r

の他多數

荒驚軍も參加

軍は地上部隙のE

獄に-

tii

れん

.-

3

つしん

.

Tkr

へ-く

わ’*'ち

-iv

•■',く

連=

新察冀邊區の要地を猛度

してゐろが,傲野部隙は:bw

(

gg

七十ャこを:

f

f

i

n

f ど

i

g

2

C

,を

.

J*

擊これを炎上せしめ•光岡,

,ボ歡お精鋭ぱ让

K*、一

ザa

-

>

a

5つ

ai

んく

五日午前新察冀邊區f ;

へん協

s

i

i

i

i

i

(t?gg

^:恥

4y»れ

これに猛烈な重ほ撃を浴びせ

iS

i

附S

に鶴らしめ、Ik

がけ

3|

5

«

,、いサレはく

川部隱ぱ倒ぱ關(

保定西化八

のsf

sk

sll

觀の_i

隙ぎをEi

嫩斯がな肋

を與へた

【 CO

ゆ-

i>£

ハね15〕

ボが斷

i

のSi

がi、ii,

i

s

:

?

^メ

-u

ニもろ;かぃせんり,しはす

部緣はサ六日隨海蔽の耍衝|!

♦<

li

tf/一けM

かん

^4ぅれ

-<^

鶴に對し第三次ほ撃を敢行糧

まつし

‘,

へいたん

-r>f'

ニへいきこ

精逛兵

^^丘ハ器庫など

B;しふ

わんザんぱ<さい

を急盤してこれを完全に爆碎

した"-

i

の^爆

^

しよ

だいく.;:?いねニ

ケ所より大火災を起した

ソ聯向比島物資

一般許可發表

昨日ふり育効てなる

utji

つひたぅべいこく

マュラ廿六日發〕

比島米纏

辯務in

事贤,断は仕六'

Sず資のソKI:

け輪mri

る1

股許可を仕五i

ょり有効

VJ

なつた3;:

措S

かいせんいザんひた

•,

は獨ゾ開戰以前は比島の對ソ

.

-?ひ

'rt'

9うじふ

おそ

輪Si

品が獨逸に流入すろを恐

れて鼓4

=.

してたのを解臉した

ものでS

航僅に麻,挪子油な

一元化!

現地理事招聘

〔55ぉ

让<

れ歡】

ばi

にi、

確實にして最も信用あろ

自動車保險ぱ)

代f S

I事へ

A

j

是非御相談下-ぃ

生命保險はジヨンハンコック

生保をお選び下さい

ヒロ市ボルケン、ヴラ■ぞ建物

日布商事會社

代理人笠弁猛

電話ニニ六七郵®1

一八六

ら ぱ 統 ゆ 次 輪 '*め 應 ?ろ れ 尙 ?1[制ブ> 入!^輪ゆ、:i;つ し 派 : ろ 調 U を,組i 、:i 統ミて遠‘ミpm の 整 ?關空合き組i 制:ぐ域ミ物ズ で を ミ の 合 さ の ,主!i 輪ゆ 日5 ね'?の 運 义 の 一 配 [モ躲ミm き 本 ミ す 連 營 iミ結ミJC':給ミ海?.統ミ 海: .ろ 絡 (ら並'ま成?化A im m i制?, 陸?点;[提て. に を を iT 物ての 物ミか携?內 の 輪 ゆ 盤 ? 邀 l ir iみIこ 地 '■て し 適 ;人£備ひ 輪ゆ受S就; 輪 ゆ ろ , ’【K 地 ''Iニ m き け て /じきが漸n ヒレニ尉!

組合では遠城輪出のmi

ダ性に

みi

歡の撒衞撒撒i

毅恥啦促虹を!?ろべく,だ:

i

トA,

九の.

-S

,上海-

厦門、溪m,

靑Dなどの现地

tS'i

ぱ燃の料斬をi

けふ

y

<めいかい

3:,

ニ5

め協譲餅を開他すろ事ミなつ

た0

故永久王御遺稿

レn

l

の歌

索京ニ4

.

六日發】

故北白川

宵永けん§

n I

‘込まれ永S

に御ボ飯を

忍ばされろ事ミなつた"御遺

作の】

つは!殿下が赋傷で斬

V

,ぐみ,>た

作り遊された『

駐ま単の歌J

サ i-ss^’i

膨の?

IFIr’

c

他の一

つは『

liliM.::,:

にて』

たい

•♦••おんが

.、がくニ;

^^京

け、r

じゆしんと

/

r.t

•よ

、プルさ

v$\/

数授信t淸が謹作曲し1

! +五

Jj

ら.r

•も‘,ぐ

5た

H n

n

ンピアで駐単め歌ぱ

伊歡武雄が謹謝8-8|^赋か繼

0,

勢神ざは木ノ下保獻德

ミ.,,,ゥねん

2^.、?>*、

.

:,

f

•んそ

,

^^京

::ま

B ‘4NK OF H A W A I I

貯金ぱ救ひの良手ヒも言ぱれる程貯金をず

れぱ常に裕福でぁS

、皆樣も早速當行で貯

金をお始めになるやぅお將大めします

預金、送金、其の他一般銀行業務

布桂銀行

ス夕I

フレI

ドが

ナンハワンです

主婦樣方の御期待に添ふベく豫て

大陸に注文中でぁつたスライス•

ミシンa

>

到着、いょスライス,

プレI

ドを每朝各御家庭の腾部に

提供するとV

J

が出来まず

今後ぱ一

層のスタープレI

ドを御

利用下 さレませ

死殁者

論功行賞の御沙汰

金鶴動章拜授者千五百名

れ局さて行 *ゾれ對;壁:| ^輝 ミ で ’ 分;:みつ病/死しニ死しニ - 1 に 今 ;Cら + 功シま た な ニ m 第れ戰で東 U 、軍):准g 將 す は の た 魔 哨 -if名?•ト 1 - ニ 當 さ 雕 ぴ 七 ぼ 斬 東 f ,ら + ハ 五 論 2參え京!营をう fsJ tセし校i 事义事'•'の に は ,P H九 年 2 り は に u t 賞すニ京!

今えぴ七陸?雖 功 f & f i i * 三 ち 官 を 腐 で 錢 ; :ちを大總ミ名 ?‘ 日5 八恩た陸?陸?午 ^ の ニ 问いこEU軍5;だゾお の六名 ?i金 え 下 か で 勤 ?、死しか障?IU,, ま 月 §;m 車):¥ X 前 て 御 九 i, 恩た陸?午一、關る那* 賞す陸M ] で 報 し 士 レ あ 務 " 殺'ミさ各,く ニ 病 /で一 . じ Mi m o 沙Unlf:7\

¥ 义前て係事じ御船發ミあ illえ m ろ首い ■ >れ 地 S千 死 し の 時 汰 ナ 支 し 日 5 の 省 ! 0 15?•敏 : 沙,將1 * ^ ろ 章 ? 其: ,ミ す こ 内?に S ニ 期 " よ し 筋f-り內 1 ぁ都 ®發光U 時じ冗ホ^^汰た兵::畏*シ 德 i s そ で 都 地 、活U ミ 千 間 I りたニ 發ミ閣 t ら 事 。"焚1,り内 JUnほ 存 あ Ak?• き 賜 し 四 の そ ミ 歸 ,躍T六四に昨く ! # を+ 表-;賞?せ 變 ;:设!;に發閣ミ ' ^ 翁!^ら ??;t邊I の 三 六 内 I の 內 [^遺|:巾ミ名?>百貝さ年 ; ?ぱ九さ動义ら残ミき fだ表プ賞すミ論たせ眷 !(■で 想 七 冗 四 譯 S大n地、5 T ふ で 九 り W 昭れロ1それ局;れ 香 ^邊§ し さ 動 え し 功 ぐ に は に 名 ?名Ji名;:ぱ 部 * の な 幸 ヤ 病 /十戰て月けロゎ目**たなニ論たで

もの

し5

ほてい

<

わ;:

«

<

た荐は塚州•保定會戰"I

:

せ人

5-か

ぜ?

ジブ

掃蕩戰などに參加した弁關隆

E3

I

(53

七t

11)

S

3しよみざリ

9> <r

’フ

當初昆城線附近の戦举などに

ゅうせ人りきミク

はんだへいだんく

':

§

ぐんじんせミくわんの

ぐAをく

ろ軍人(

將官を除く)軍

'ぬで

5んし

'✓ん甘うじ®し

そのうち金親動章を授⑩され

ものこ、

,

ち’.-じゆはい

おにたけ

た者は功四中殺を拜した鬼武

1

?^佐以ド千五百2

±

ニ^

でうち^l

i

巾佐を始め五4

-S

めいたい

f

5

くん

名に對{て特に拔IS

の武動を

?

慕せられて殊動5

-

の御沙汰あ

らせられた

-

殊動章

こ5

4*,

じゆ

功四小絞

S&

0

SSnこ*!'"

たん

Vt<*

功五單光ひ

i

んゐ

おみち

准尉千野庄治

-T,

功四旭四

併暇智

1?

s

<

功四旭五

ち•T'fQ

ミよじ

#i

V

中尉豊鳥傳男

<{^

功五單光せ.r *

0

>

くらを

少尉板本盒雄

a

たん

功五琪光准

射勵服

13

ニ!

z

i

たん

功五單あせ

,,fO

tS

オかけち

#IT*

ろミ

少尉良#川長三郞

C

5

たん

功五單あ

ひろちらり

普長室町盛成

*

8W

辦激斜S

ぐんで

,

いけた

,池

H

六M七ぐ

Wn/

らゐ

L

-

£

功六旭<A

功六旭< 八

ユぶろ

tl

0

仁.

平俊

o

j

^

2

5ヘ

5

いと

*

0

*c.,

■M

笠兵齋藤與三郎

せ*

r

じゆ

功1:

校.

0

海ii

四大尉植眞微

たん

^ん/

r,,

ミよじまつねろ

,,

|:^島

|5

in

芳Ik

へ上

!兵

V保S

幸K

,同W旭

れたい

,

3

6

0

^

冬ざ

.ヮ

同w同

木一

こ*

f>功

五せ•

••&

はせがは

hi

?<

もM

ぐ.

いしだ

いはを

元軍曹石®

岩雄

を*

r

たん

<&<•

同R舉た

んん

•Cl:

准尉高橋光重

断六爐七II

•J5

*>i

.ゾ

4

^

9

2つねょし

S

?同

同,

づかけんろ

5

軍曹戸塚賢

s,7

ざ,

V

tかじ

5

5

功六旭八

r>

いは

i

1>

伍長岩

ffl

»

?

<C

5

J

5へ

441

5さき

上等兵山守政輝

7

を,じゆ

功三中緣

ち5

>

レし

1

たつみ

中佐加島立已

<

功四旭五

Ui

す•、き

*

riig.

功四少絞tiゐ

5-n

たた

?

大尉坂田大八郎

-},,

9W^<

功四旭六

しの

iJ

らねいにろ

5

こ*プ

V

功五單光准

尉I

星!?

,文

功 同 f 功 f 同f 同 す 同 ミ-■ ■- —L,旭き 旭"

軍 义 七 伍 ュ 軍 ? 七 准 ミ 小 ま 同 す曹? m m gr

山: 荒 を raた 野 の # 1 旧*本? 弁 ゐ 装 け 本 ? 田た中• ミ姿さ元 武 ! ^ 太 * " 文 ミ 明 美 m MO? m 男 を 治 文

1

1!

功六§

矿ぜ

S

功六旭七上

功w旭四

きたむら

1さ

功六旭七i

3?g.li

,二,

«w.7

?

レと

5

.

上野の秋を飾る

美術展覽言!

興亞奉公日は無料觀覽

«v-

7

J

.5 U

もはつ

ちか

^

^

づぃた辦の:|滅歐1:ル4に^;?|

ぴじ

S

ゐん

くむ

J

;

-

Tふラ

美術院、ニ科曾,國風などに

もV、

か♦くさ

< ひん

•ん-しふ

は目下續★作品か搬入されて

一をり近日中にそれん\審査も

t

5

5へ⑦ふぴじさ

終り九月I

B力ら上野府美術

ゐん

せいてんらん

<€::

ひらそへ

S

院で一

齊に膨覚會を開きと野

»

9

い.

9

<

こんねん

の秋を色どろ,特に今年から

はか本i

術お,ニ断I

.ikい'/

.,>•

-

5

/

*

13〜

こ5ぴ

Sも開會第1

日が與亞奉公日

にあたろので美術あの主

2ぅ

0ウ

y

<9

いこ

.、

-.It

から當日を1

駄社會の愛好普

むれ

’2>-■'か

こ.^

のために無料公開すろ事V

つた

米製急降下爆機

泰國へ十機賣却

タイラ■ト紙の報道

-<み

»つ

tそ〜

【盤待け六H遊〕

當地タィラ

a''*

V*

ベい

Iv

サい

1ト紙の報道に依れぱ米國政

たいこくたい

,

.

fかそか

tf<けキ

m

府ぱ泰國に對し急降'トほ擊機

はい

**TJ

とと

?..•

V

しi

をK却する事に同意した,然

だい

< わハ

♦-<

>

ちか

してこれが第1

®分十機ぱ近

たい二くミ

•,

<

a

く泰國に到着するもの,、i

看ら

れろ,尤もこれ等米機ぱ旣に

マU

ラまで輪送されてたもの

だが泰國をめぐろ國際情勢の

ら一&

同^にi

めら

れてたものであろ

空陸の鋭錢爆たり

1

大擊減戰展開

大行山脈に共產軍を包圍

度かの皇討伐にルかれつつ

てんけんたの

め:,

みすたも

も天驗を賴みに命脈を保つて

来たものであろが,今や彼等

も今次の徹庭的覆減戰にょり

&E

後の蓮命にS

達した譯であ

敵退路を遮斷

遂次擊碑中!

戰况は最高潮じ達す

封す(ニ四團ミせ力 1 て 鎭义左f レ の ら 1 1-6 線てffl* a r 兵::;/バ结くろ 附ふ- 断 Iね l i iM ニ , 近ミ明ば約 T部" 1- m i に ' ' " U W m K ち い ぽ - 社i;百 は • IUえ づ 隊 鋭 ; ^を サ せ m z れ は 擊 ミ 四 六 德 1 も猎ミ献歉日,劇r ヒf to!!断方志び月きを社お 路 ろ 地 、[1:1だ+ 包き鎭; を 側 S區く >-v九圓ゐ射ミ

They Discuss Increasingly Critical Situation

Colonel Samuel L. Howard new commanding officer of the Fourth U. S. Marines in Shanghai, discusses Far East situation witk Rear Admiral Seiji Takefla, commander of Japanese special naval landing party in

Shanghai, during courtesy call Paid by the American officer.

パ レ エ - ス エ 官 令 司 隊 艦遣派 東極 i 米 し關に局危 束 極

たし談懇が督提田武の屯,I主海上ご氏トーワウへ車 父 を え 省 ミ の が 共 ;新]!;【IU し 大 J••一 碌 う を き 戰 :の 失 《ごん衝 [地、 ,產え察ミ西r ,て行て轉え強;納U に東ミ み ひ { は 盤デm ミ勢?冀*省,ニゐ im しイヒAめ で 雜 ミ 东 * 志:i ゥ 、 皇H 巧 西 力 J邊2 化さろ脈ミ共;す た に 1&:?こ 行*Vつ ミ 軍 义 ひ の の 【慕く西;t ,に 產 け 我 な 解 ;系?ト MU ♦ )荐if愿 に 共 ?扶ふの部,從ミー単 ) [た 軍 英 i,六 脈ミつミ次レ ^らう産ミ殖ょニ三,來?•大 を め ぱ , i n 日 に た も の f iミ単):に ッ i]U 河*.纖ミ包? ,河,赫そ煌ミ發ミ 幡 が そ 討 な -な は 努 わ こ 東 1北?減S園ろそ化?々 車 ):*^ 跟 ’ の 伐 ?く 中 ミ め 射 -m 共;戰 义 し の 治 ち の を 中 ? し 新 活 5に义きめ :?て れ お 産 を 初 と 安 た 大 完 X Ki!t て察ミ動 ' :氣M 1U恥 ゐ 各 §よ 車 H iir 秋び華まを戰n ボ 大 r:

¥幾‘く 赏 力 東 ミ ミ た 々 ぴ ぱ 開 : の を 一 架 け J: m

太獻サ六日發

新&

冀一

てきせんめつ

o<

四万の敵を纖減すべく河北,

タん廿

st,-rJ>rH

4V.,

れウさんがどせんてん

山西宵境に壯烈な山岳戰を展

かいそ

>

わがせい.?、

はいそミ

て.^

開中の我精鋭は,敗走すら敞

ひたいろ

しや;

i

んふ、フさぜ

<-14

て.*B

與退路を遮斷衬餓線內の敞を

ちくじけ

>

5

い.*V/,

い.

♦♦

逐次嚷碎中で-今や劣ほ地區

せん

Hvi

9いか

-,て、r>

たウ

の戰况は最高潮に達せんミし

どの配ソ昏服がぁった.か

輪船股をi

いたため輪m

m

來なかC

V

たものであろ。

H aw aii M ain ich i Sha, Ltd . P. O. Box 1477 Hilo, Hawaii N. Tokushlro,

I Business 2 d 0 9PHONES jKditorial 2250

Subscription Ratをs In AdvanceDaily One Month $ .90Daily Six Months S.OODaily One Year ......... 9.00

號 25十 H 千九第(日曜火)日?t 十 二月八年 六十 和 昭

米國都政院認可

於領布®

h

口ホ

布唯毎日新聞社

£

ま事所二八0

®

•'群編輯局ニニ五0

郎函1

1g:

七七

51

11

1

#

--五仙

前}

1

タ月九.H

g

-

ぜ金)

六♦BrluJ

年t

れ弗

英:

S聯合軍の前には

ィラン軍は無力同然

(Q

ンドンサ六日發)

消息通筋の觀測に依れぱ國境ならび

に海上ょり侵人を受けたイランは英ソ聯<

2

軍の前には敝

でなく少數のイラン軍が抵抗を試みたごも謂はれるが兵

力一個旅劇のイラン軍では英ソ聯&軍を支へるこごは得

’A.6

いご見てゐる、尙獨逸が急速に援兵を派遣するこごは

現段階の戰况では不可能マ』

見られるが獨軍が多大の犧牲

を拂つて沙漠戰に鉢を向け近東に於けろ英ソの背後を衝

くごしてもトルコ、エデフトょりのニ途しかなく之は實

現困難ご見られろのでイランの運命は旣に決したかの感

があ

る0

ぎ敦计六5:1?^】

英政府公表

に依れぱイラン進駐のゾ聯軍

SSjC

めん

しん

n

i

カサスガ面ょり進擊し

®

歡はゥH

-

ペル歡斬歐接

挪のもV

一に南部イランへ進駐

した,i

ts

ik

れい

<

£

令宫チ^1

プリI

•ア,

ハスノ

ット下の艦嫁をぺルシ

ヤ灣-J配S

してゐろ。

【is

H

I

T

*

>5も

Cわ-?

ロンドン電か同地有邊筋のiin

めい

つた

€*ス

’、一して傳へろ所によろミイ

しんにょ

♦塞ぐんたい

ランに侵入せろ英ッ'-

1

事に對

せA

ぐんていニ

,*^

しト

I

万のイラン赤単,か抵抗

しつ、あり’、>識ぱれら'か明か

でない,お範のと陸^点はイ

ラン仏斷鐵道の起点た6

ぺル

わん

ft*

いお

*、タ

シャ縛最恩部のパンダルシヤ

プ>ル灣および若での地点で

あろ®

伯林サ六H

發】

デイI

• H

ヌ•

ビ1

?^信チへラン情報に

しんじふ

れんぐん

よろ,、,•イラン侵入のッ聯単は

ft.?

かいね人かん

東方力スピ海沿岸のアスタラ

ふきん

ちi i

こsz*

©

、,

附近および巾部國墙ナキチェ

バンの1

ニ地なからイラン領内

しんこ

に侵入.

0

そのぅちアスタラよ

り侵入した赤軍は力スピ海が

ひに斬デし

險ぱポアルグ

ピ一ルに向ひ义ナキチH

パン

せきぐんて,

から侵入した赤軍は鐵道沿ひ

にタブ®'ツクに向けそれ

しん

5:

ち5

なは

進擊中である,倚タプリッッ

9

>

^ち

uv^

はィラン北部地方の要衝でチ

へランに次ぐ大都市,人口約

十八斤,北%

,アルズユアのナ

キチャバンに〒ろ鐵道の起点

であを©

伯林サ六日發】

デイー

•エ

ヌ,ピ,通信ァンカラ電にょ

れぱイランに侵人した英軍の

1

部ぱイラクの力一

キン地方

ち‘!'ミ

の駐屯事で目ドイラン國內を

猛進眼巾でぁろ,

カユキンぱパグダッド,力

ズピン

S

道上チヘランにあ-

?

?

£

4

ろイラク,イラン國

墙上の

要衝でニ,)

ょり

ハ.マダン,

カズピンを經てチへランに

至ら振獄ぱイランの

經濟產

上の

飯脈でぁろ,iS

にカー

1

キン化方レバングス

.C

いぐん

に駐屯中の英軍もイランに

進妬した0

.ま

退

3

進駐目的^極軸勢カの打倒にも

ロンドン

LJVttr

ねいぐ

Ciis

六:::

發〕

•JI.C

r„vlf

y

\

こ3 け A

五U英ソ-*2

國がィラン攻撃

ぐんか

,

いた

<*•

いそ

を斷行するに至つた理由し

よ の て ろ 經 ?、英? ミ過をソ 七 を ,m 發は'ィ 巾?あ'ラ旬ミi ン 英Iパこ間iC ソ が の• m國け交な ぱれ々く ィ に 渉 ?

‘1

b-J

f

L

,こ<

d,一二?

Tu い

ラン政府に尉し卽則同國在留

ドィウじんオ

.

.,

だい

3くげ

-^

獨逸人の数,ぞ大削^すぺきこ

9

.

7これたい

2,’

V》

をt

女求し之に對しィラン當

日米打開の鍵?

使

3

5

^|の

'

微妙な日米關係下L1

兩氏何を議す

華感頓せ六日發〕

ハル國務

flc<£

C

V

し-

<2

んB

しや‘わいけん

宫ば:

±3

五日の新聞記咎待見

4C

’C

いし

S

し塞

に於レてチヤIチル英律れの

r

.

r

れん

廿g:

日の放送演說に関連して

t

f

けんすい

1-

^京,ヮシントンに現在

倾I:

かの"

Ef

体晰&

案かi

lls

されてゐ6か』

しつもん

た:.

> いんめい

ミの質問に對し!

切言W

をさ

けm

にだの!

§

く殺た

去ろ让ニ!日,金

VJ

野村4

使

ミが非か式に<

£該

したこ•、>

が現在の傲親を|^^職オ<.3

型的なものであろ,、こllE

ふニ

‘1.

以外。余,、

J

して諸君にホ

-M

けろこミぱ大してない

次いで, 1

記首の

rSy

は■

にP

かがg

的提案をしたかJ

しつ-©ん

v-k

の質間に對しても

め;

£

談を

i

やつてゐろV

こ客ふこミ以外

*•

♦を

でき

何も5

^

し上けろこミは出来

ぬ』

,、•述べた,さらに英i

が泰國

らんいんちそ♦ウぐわ

t

f

おょぴ蘭印の巾か化につ

き:::

U

Oy

ンい

b

i

本の同怠を求めんv

>

してゐら

’、•

の入』

敦'S

嗽に針しても批割

y

、ミ

をさけ左の如く述べた

H

ネ2

のi

題解也はすべて

米國が仏S

旧新し艇ったお

にも,、.づぃてf

れねぱならぬ、然して’此の

B

て、けんそ

>

-

*て

bよ

^本的原則に照らし<5。せれ

ぱWI:

な, 0

®

昵勵,iら£ザ

て明,nに

-ろ

r

寒次

に〈

ル長宮ぱ

crはんべいこく

日本は來國のゥラデオス

®

ひんつみ

ti

トツタ向け軍需品積出しに

離し米恥にその艦&を

したか』

しr-o

YJ

の質問-

對してら

r

本if

こミはない』

ミあつさS

片づけた

1

<

けん

*

^てm

kを

i

鳥は原則的にぱ此のホし入れ

しT

にん

A

ザい

り,ドィタ

を承認すろかに3

6

え在§

3

獨逸

じん

,ま

yんc

v>

人の數を減らす-、>共に殘留獨

ィt

ft,

0

)

5

たい

け-<ぢぅ

逸人の行動に對しては厳重な

ろ制限を加へろ義務を認めた-

しか

r

v

T*

づい

.♦

然しィラン當局は獨速政府の

わそたい

3よ

感情を害すら,ニ、

)

を恐れ退去

せしめた&

逸人の?は極めて

f

す.-

<H

ぐねつ

少数であつた、依つて八月ト

i

C

,、

オいふ

ムハ日英ソ•兩國はィラン政府に

9J1>,、

r

いさ

對し同國力の獨逸人を聊かの

遲滞なく退去せしめろやラi

•,きラ

これたい

硬に.毅求したが,とに對すろ

ハと

5

!{J,、

ィランの同答ぱ不满足であつ

これい

wpr

かぅ貫

-7

•、.**

かへ

たので之以と交渉*

?

返す,J

て A

A.9i

Z

ぱ目的に添はすミ認め他の

我段を執ろの4

むなきに至ウ

た,英ソ‘かゲ间:|^

つた5^段ぱ

けク

决してィラン國民に向けられ

たものでなくィランに支配力

を黯?5

せんミする願漸斷を斬

V>

すらものである

k

燃.

り上つれ『

第一一

のパルカン」

戰火

倏約を結んだが,英國ぱそ

P

<

ゐしん

じ;りん

んな他1

E

の威信などは揉醜

しA-し

5ini

めf

して侵人の暴舉を敢てした

のであろ斯くてあ國ぱシお♦

リア>

ィランを襲ふこ

VJU

きん

V

f,》

みら

よつて近東から印度への道

をぺルシヤ灣からn

l

カサ

への道を確保しょぅミ!

てゐろのr

あろ,米國側で

•0

人--ふ

ぱイラン侵入,、'は係りのな

いやうな顏をしてゐろか、

これほど重大なこV

V

か米國

の意向

を:;;;

診せや行ばれな

•4

,、わ

い害はなく、過般のルI

<わいけ

ペルト,チヤーチル會見て

f

m

じじつ

取り決められたこ,

A>

ぱ事實

である

東京サ六日發

英ソ軍は

つひ

しんじふ

?くねい

遂にイランに浸入し,I

I

英ソ

め**'

か1

5く

などの勢力•か微妙に交錯すろ

參ん

2

5

近東に再ぴ戦火:^燃ぇ上つた

ザ人ご

<わ

.C

IMiiJS

前後二回に豆ろ英ソ共同の『

ざい

.

CV

,ドイづじんたいきょ

m

i

イラン在留獨逸ん退よ'要求』

'

に敢然;

||

して立ウた敝i

の國

イランへの線擴大にょりゲ

後の近iS

は如何なる展鳳をコボ

すか,妬ニのバルヵンミ謂ぱ

5ん

W

5

こん

5

1**

いい

らSト

れろ近東,今後の推移を元土

英逾が對イラン政策に力瘤

を?<

れ^

したのは獨ソ酣戰

ミ*

ii

だ,卽ち近東*あミし

て知られろピーバI

•プル

^4,>せん

ツクを軍需相,、一して沙说戰

rv

きん

2

.

>ぐ-<

の勇士ゥM

I

ベルを近聚軍

、5

れいく

-

イシドぐ

A >

れいくわん

司令官から印度事司令官に

移してゐろ,'之ぱ彼の經驗

に物を云はせ,印度から侵

入を企圓してゐた,、J

思ふ,

5::,

ぐんたい

英ソ雨単に尉すろイランの

恐らくイラクのニの!!に似

るのでぱなからうか,&士

クう

2うゆ

*.'

かん

きかいくわ

1^

は52

當勇敢だが,機械化部

たい一ん

く,ぐんい

隙は殆どなく {c

Hif

,、>云ふて

bのかす

た,、

も物カ數ではない,M

イラ

ンの?

S

むのは地形のみだ,

どだのなぃ斷&

、たろだ&、

たi

3U

C

0リ

-f'

ぐん

地帶を5

して英ソ軍はど

れだけ進行出来ろかが第一

だ•

邊ほ方面はffi當進!

>

行はれょぅが、律都テへラ

ンを衝くのは可成のぼ難か

?

でぁら

國はべルシヤ⑧

のバーレン

4S

して麟

徵を主ミすろのでぱないか

お-*

しかか

-

3

ミ思ふ,然し假にチヘラン

が陷落して英ソi

i

撒が"ルか

ksgis

は勿論のこV

J,

シヤ蹄のパンデルシヤプ

I

ルからチへラン經由べ力ス

ピ海のバンデルシヤ

I

へr

くー¥

&

りでp

ii

もだ"

したこ,こぱなからう,イラ

ン,の石油ぱガ体年產千万嗽

v>

請はれてゐろが*之ぱ殆

ど英i

資II

で-^

めt

油航

も英ソ.S

軍擊のだきなぬ

の一

クであろ,獨逸もィ

‘CI

んじょ

ラン援助をしたいだらラが

现在でぱ先づ方法かないだ

らぅ,土耳其を通過すろこ

;;

、一

地^

から見て*

不I'

能だ,鐵S

fs

はィスタンプ一

ルから グ

ンカラまでさへも

填線だしi

速に援r

おを新ろ

こV-

は無理な話だ

此の英ソ進撃はf

&rk

を!

め全近i

に頗る大きな彭轉

を與へるであらぅ

獨軍南下態勢

待,つはn

I

カサスの占領た

米國も當然

獨紙、大々的に論評ず

ペルリS

六SK

〕i

ソ®

tも

•,>

軍のイラン侵入は计五日の獨

紙夕刊に大々脱に揭S

され倾

れも之に論評を加へてゐろが

そのぅちべルゼン,ツアイツ

ジひ

,

,

つぎ

5ほ

ング紙の批評は次の衝り

紘週H

SI

の飢撒ぱィラ

たい

け’^-^^^

くて

け<、!..

i

ンに對す,

0

近的!!!: n

おを並

ペケててるたが,翁々チへ

ランに駅逸m

五部隙か

*、こパふのをロ赏にして

此の罪のないに粥ひかか

つた,チャI

チルt

旧は!;

tも

fc

ブノミりん

サ五日ドィッが他國を躁纖

しいぢめつくして怪しから

ぬミドィプ攻擊の^

説を旧

つたが,チャ一チル兽相ぱ

その攻黎したこ,、一を自分で

そつ

りそのまやつての

けたのだ、土fn

t

其,ィラン

アンガ1

1

ス夕ンの1

ニ國は英

眼の危險を感じて典同防i

ソ聯機無警告で

兵營、飛行場に投爆

ペル9

ン:

h

六: n

發〕

,チイI

• H

ヌ•

ピI

がタプリツ

ッM

l

ミして傳へろ所に^

4-

五日R?

0,無啓ぢでタプ--ソッを8^

擊"

飛ぱ擬ぉょぴお.營に

爆彈か则ドして多少の⑥S

养をぎした

i

れぱ„4ビイランにi

r

ろ態勢ミなり獨逸が四五4

-

万I

の赚を

;^さ

れぱイランー

全±石領し§

度を脅かす事も

iH'si

でぁら,中が筋iS

1.1

ろミ獨は目卞プルガリアに大

車を集紹してゐろミ傳へられ

メ.ぐんなん

U

ラ、}

3

5

温軍の南方に針すろ動きも和

當重視すべきものがぁろ,若

獨軍がイランにすれぱ英

國ぱ印度を脅かされツ聯ぱU収

後のS

i

V.

なろれアシアの地

ぐ-奪おV

J

の齢絡i

s

をぢひ4

れも自國の

-:£

壊を促i

すろ結

巢ミなろので此の方;

g

を繞6

ゲ後の傲膨は搬めて

S5

されてゐ6,

獨外務省言明

制駅i"

ルisiiS

ぱィラン嫩膨

tちつ

y

ごW

けんめい

につき一

!

十五日次の如く言明

した

ソi

のげ動ぱ一九二1

年の

I

V

けふやくゐ

tJ

ソ聯,イラン脇約に進反す

らものであろ,ソ聯はイラ

ンのポを敵ミせすミ稱し

二くしん•しふ

てゐろが,パルト三國侵入

の艇もk

あ暖呢を發してを

れみんっいか

りゾ聯がイラン民象に如何

ニ、, 3«s

S

なろr

作を執ろかは明らか

だ,S

i

イランが厳}^巾立を

標誘してゐろにも拘らや炎

ニいこくしん

)

*

ニ.r

じつ

國が第三國の浸ゆをロ實に

歡S

したのは何&

理か.かな

くボルシェビズムを此所に

il?

したこミはS

洲の平和

イニ

か,,り

に少しも考處をかへてな-

i

银でぁり,その責任は英

國にあろ,獨逸がイランに

武装險を侵んさ:

てゐろ

の歡傳ぱぞ M

無膨で獨

.オじよし

めは

めい

民は婦女子を合せ五百名に

過ぎない,トルコミの盛譲

はまだ^始してない

れろが,トルコは英ゾポ國

V.-

ドィッV

一の間に挟まウていよ

^

な^^翻にぱろでぁら

う,ドイク,、一して近射に於け

ろ英ソの仏後を衝くのは卜,

J

コを通すろか,若く±

5

リビア

から

H

デブ-*にm

ろのニ?5

しかないが戰の現段亂に於

て1\!はぱ現ル難-、>^^られてゐ

トルn

政府は

中立堅待を確言

英ソ兩國大使

II

言明

ユす

m

i

じもぱつ

統育二-:-

六:

n

發〕

デンカラ

ょりの情斯にょればトルコ外

U

?

Cち

fflサラデm

グルは一

十五日•

!2 い

•ニくたいし

英ソ.-

SIS

大使を招致,トルn

ふんそ

5

■つけん

はィラン紛に對し巾立を堅

むね

^!1くけん

を*, ロ

?)

持すろ旨離言した,同時に.

®

大使も义英ソ 'ゆ:ホのィラン進

駐,はィランに就し何瓶

な!:^刚成はぎ4

ぼ意圓を销

すろものでない2

n

跑ざした2

言^れろ

對ソ援助ルI

トの獲得ビ

n

近東を狙ふ英軍進駐,の目的

Coンドンニ 4-

六Si

傲同發】

イランへ進駐した英車ぱクH

1ペル歡船嗽:卜の英本國兵v>

印度あ*、Jよりなり1

部ぱイラ

と' 禮洗の機擊爆下降急鋭新の國英 ジ ー セ メ るす對に相首の氏スクアフリハ

ク國⑥から南部イランへ'進駐

した模i

であろが,他

の一

は海上からぺルシヤ灣のパン

グル•シヤプI

,

;

へ上陸した

ミ謂ばれる,英車進駐L

I

際し

てイラン載ぱ莽ぃの抵抗をk

みた•、'一偉、られろが,その後

の傲鶴についてはまだ何等の

情他がない,イランの丘ハ?

<ぱ

1

断紀酣で拙i

の'

isv

&

をおすろ郎嫁はニ,三偶師ミ

?*i.v

謂ぱれろから英ソ聯合単には

ミ.,て

.C

,2->

こく

到底敵し得ないであらぅ英國

外is

數はイラン乾の

®

2

してドイツのほ冗i

i

除を驅逐

しが断の歡益を擁護すろため

マ,恥してゐろが,おはあ面の

こ.,じ

Lんらミ

ロ實に過や,イラン進駐ぱド

イツのウクライナ攻略開始以

敕獻„ル朔必耍にもVW

づくか

の行動なるニミぱ地3

1

を見れ

ぱ脇めてであろ,

.英米i

t

にぼて斬ソ援ルに關逮

し此の間題が協譲されたであ

らぅ,J

ミは想像に難からす,

英断の犯ひ所か與ソ援舶ルI

トの也設,イラン及びコ|力

チスの油H

確保にあろこ,、>

明らかであろ,卽ち

イランのバングル、シヤプ

I

ルからチへランを經て力

スピ瓶に

H

でバクI

にら

みち

た:*

んじょ

道は

Is

ッ援助ルIトミして

55.

こ,> ろ

9

J

«51

將にポのビルマ公路に和當

すろものであろ

史にイラン進駐にょ

C'

て英國

のk

略的態熟が强t

されがつ

たい

為つ

K

♦.••だい

トルコに對すろ腹力が淋大し

たこミは#

!51

1かない,

,si

政府はイラン進駐ミ

i

時に隣

せつ

-

まび

接するイラク並にアフガユス

タン,サウデイアラピアの

'

海:

ik

ii

針し進駐の!:断を通

f

吿し特にトルコに對してぱ同

ニくりねきそかい

かラタ

3

國の利益を世害すろ行動は一

HJい*

0

むねけいやく

W

取らない旨契約したvy謂は

佛反共外人部隊

武装を完備して起つ

統育二十六ル發〕

ェI

•ピ

w.r

■••ょ,

す;*

ロ*>

★は.,

1

.

パサ|

®

か當:!!?

筋の情報

ミして傳へろ所にょれば?

をi

兀備せろフランスr

反共外

人®

險J

!

IC5

ニ千名は二十八

tもたいせん★乂

っ。J

日對ソ戰線に出動すろ,->

なつた"

同部嫁能揮

k

力ダラール述劇の^

者ユ

I

K

I

ヌ•

G

ング?で

V)

泰政府內閣補充

C

バンコック1

14-

六?

S

發1

i

が府ぱ狐外I

s

デK

ナィデレ

ック,ギヤイナムを外務大臣

けんないむじ

<-w

に,現内務次宫一1

アン•チヤ

ぺン少佐をぱig

大ぱに沿

命すろ

'〕::

二十冗れ發,あ,ピプ

ン?;:如のせ1^を解ぃた

入學案內

1

新學期開始九月一一日

一、英

(

午前

)

1

(

)

j '

小學部

六才ょり

I

-0-

學部小

Li

女學部右同

一、

®

保護者氏名現住所

中途轉入者は前在籍校の

證明書持參の事

ヒロ明照中女學校

I

B

^

I

NO 9034 TUESDAY AUGUST 26 )9 4 lii=~T 一.------------------------- 7

Bntered as Second -dM tfULtter on May 15,1906 at the post office at Hilo Hawaii * ttnder the act of Marcb 3rd, 1879. T H B H A W A II M A IN IC H I» published daiiy except I Aiyndav, by Hawaii Mainlchl S h a ,らtd, Ponahawai St. Hilo, Hawaii, T H

Bombers for Britain Christened

La dy Halifax christens a new Vuitee dive bomber ‘.Vengeance," an- ©ther 'T " in BrUain’s campaign for victory, and below, Lord Halifax inscribed the following message on the tail of the British-bound Jwmber, •*Deax Mr. Churchill: There are hundreds more like

か 出 で で の 堪 。の沮ォ度ドサ石X た 此ニて之シ沒ミゐ聯5i界?:ミ獨ドゾ 進5cろ 差 ,全§ 合S :5 ihしのス油ゅ ;E T の ゐ を 落 く ら ろ ミ の て 逸 ' fft'きぺ 被?意ぃしく 5 見みし側 * 於資し由 I;地ち6 悟ミを英 5結¥ポ :撒 鹏 'を レ し 園 :當£手て同f て よ 面 ;s a i l 'M ぱ 域 ミ , ろ 導 S國えぴ明: " ;にでのリ コ は り の 標 T ゐ う を か を 英 ?に 沿 す ひ く の そ を 驚 U イン I な 何 !?屈f . , ろ ミ 脅 け (T / 来:ま ;お が も 造 ?の 破 a い豫ょt ラ ti* 力い等ら力、今 , の か 獨 T保ほの同 ‘: 通?あ の ロ 橫 サ 懐 を て 知 ち ン 六 サ が 積 ?な 0 ) 然き意ぃす軍X し援义作m ら で は 行 ,,せ ゐ し 侵 ス 、 極;い ミ し 圓 ミ の が 更 レ ノ 戰 X英?う あ 自 き を ん な て 入 :の 對 ! 的-:地 ち こ イ に を 献 に ル を ソ 5 り ら 肋 し : ミ い ゐ の ぎ 0 占t ッ攻ミ域t ろラ出で事じ下 t コ I 開で: 旨し英?ポ : 長 ま す が す こ f :;ぎミ 領ミ作!擊姿な獨!ク た 前 ) :し 】 ト 始 *國そ摘ま國テ明? ;し ろ , こ 園 ' プ か 戰 て に の :斬 の も に 印 ?<力 ミ し が し も の て ソ 世 せ ミ ぱ をで,