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PRESSURE MAINTAINED

SL0W NEW GUINEA ADVANCE PROGRESS YARD BY YARD,

P.A. Special.

SYDNEY, Oct. 16.

Australian troops in the Owen Stanley Range are maintaining their pressure on the Japanese, but no reports have been received of any further advance. However, the Australian drive is believed to have been delayed rather than halted by the enemy. Fighting in the ranges was less severe on Thursday, with only limited eomhat activity. War correspondents writing from New Guinea say that rapid gains cannot be expected in the present area of fighting, where advances can only be made painfully yard by yard.

Our ground troops were again supported by Havoc, North American and Airacobra aircraft, which bombed and strafed enemy positions in a sweep along the Japanese supply trail. Enemy installations at Salamaua were also attacked. Australia's Air Minister, Mr Drakeford, to-day described the Havocs, which have been much used in strafing operations along the Kokoda. trail, as "powerful and venomous aircraft." They have a cruising speed of more than 240 miles an hour. ! North of Australia, Aileu, a Japan-ese-occupied village, ten miles south of Dilli, in Dutch Timor, was heavily attacked on Thursday afternoon by Hudson bombers. Before the war Aileu was a station for Portuguese soldiers and was the seat of the provincial Government. The targets bombed were a row of . rock houses which the Japanese might be using as barracks. Considerable damage was done.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/MEX19421017.2.42.1

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

Marlborough Express, Volume LXXVI, Issue 245, 17 October 1942, Page 5

Word count
Tapeke kupu
233

PRESSURE MAINTAINED Marlborough Express, Volume LXXVI, Issue 245, 17 October 1942, Page 5

PRESSURE MAINTAINED Marlborough Express, Volume LXXVI, Issue 245, 17 October 1942, Page 5

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