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CONFLICT IN CHINA

FACTS ABOUT THE WAB RUSSIAN INTERVENTION FEARED Out of the fog that has enveloped the warfare in China certain salient facts are emerging. They are:— That the German strategists at Nanking are having their way on the campaign in the north and that the big battle in this area is intended to be fought on the line of the Yellow River, where concentrations are taking place. That the far-flung operations of the Japanese and their lengthening lines of communication have put a strain on the available shipping and have limited their efforts.

That the home strain is having its effect, especially a§ extraordinary measures have failed to cure the adverse trade balance at a time when a profit 'in world activities is badly needed. And that fear of Russian intervention, coupled with the stronger attitude of Western nations, is having a bad effect not only on the plans of the military but on the morale of the Japanese people. Under the protection of their strict censorship and their discouragement of neutral observation of the fronts the Japanese have sent out a flood of reports of victories in the north. At one time they led the home newspapers to print accounts, which were transmitted abroad, that their first success south of Pekin was another Tannenburg and that 50,000 Chinese were trapped. The same sort of thing was said about the capture of Paoting. There a great garrison was annihilated. From Suiyuan and Shansi to the west have come similar reports. Yet later information shows there was no Tannenburg, that only a small garrison was left at Paoting, that no great forces have been encountered in the west. What the Chinese have been doing is fighting rearguard actions with inferior troops. These forces have been relatively large but they have not included the main army of the north and the crack troops from the central and southern areas of China.

Now Nanking is letting it be known that the Chinese do not intend to make such a determined stand as has been made at Shanghai until the line of the Yellow River is reached. They are gathering some of Nanking’s best divisions and are reinforcing them with others from the south. Unless the signs are incorrect the Japanese there will bump into the same sort of opposition as they have had at Shanghai. The Yellow River line, according to reliable reports that have come through military and other sources, was chosen from the first by the German advisers at Nanking and has been prepared under their direction.

Woods’ Great Peppermint Cure For Children’s Hacking Cough.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/LWM19380705.2.31

Bibliographic details

Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 4372, 5 July 1938, Page 6

Word Count
436

CONFLICT IN CHINA Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 4372, 5 July 1938, Page 6

CONFLICT IN CHINA Lake Wakatip Mail, Issue 4372, 5 July 1938, Page 6