Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 January 1943 — Page 16

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J toe with leather.

BiLLDOS nf

: Canine Sentry Would

Smell Japs Far Out in 2 The Jungle.

58 days In. the Solomons, said

that marines doing sentry duty Guadalcanal need a bulldog. as-

1

‘dog with sensitive nose and|

rful jowls would save sentries lioned in jungle thicknesses from prise attack, Carrigan said, bese | the dog could smell the Japs Carrigan told of an 18-year-oid ine who was chopping clearing ground for a eds “A Blears oud officer slipped behind ‘him, swung an ivoryndled sword and broke the boy's

lider. But the boy flung himself around slashed with his machete at the

Well, he split the Jap’s head like watermelon,” Carrigan said. “But had hdd a good Wlldog beside . he wouldn't .be in the hos-

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Prezident Roosevelt surprised the Speaker of the house of representatives, Sam Rayburn, with a birthday party at the, White House, Jan. 6, and presented him with a new hat for his 61st birthday. Here, Speaker Rayburn tries the new “skimmer” on “for size.”

NURSE'S WAR WORK IS MEETING THEME

Nurses’ responsibilities in wartime will be the topic.of discussion at a meeting of the central district of the Indiana Stafe Nurses’ association tomorrow in the Lilly auditorium at City hospital. Dr. Carl H. McCaskey, president of the Indiana State Medical association, will speak on “The Nurses’ Role in World War II.” Miss Sue Bern, navy nurse from Bloomington, will talk on “Navy Life,” and Miss Frances Orgain, director of nursing education at Indiana university, will discuss ‘Trends in Public Health.” Two hundred graduate and student nurses are expected to attend. Officers of the association for this year are Miss Florence Brown, president; Miss Gertrude Upjohn, first vice president; Miss Ruby Timmerman, second vice president; Miss Lillian Adams, secretary; Mrs. Genevieve: Lowe Beghtel, treasurer, and Miss Josephine Brown, Mrs. Mary York, Miss Ruth A. Boicourt, Miss Mary Walker, Mrs. Florence French and Miss Bertha Pullen, directors.

PARTY SPONSORED BY ALTAR SOCIETY

The January band of the Altar society, St. Catherine’s Catholic church, will sponsor its regular luncheon and card party at 12:15 p. m. tomorrow in the school hall, Shelby and Tabor sts. Mrs. George Wendling is in charge of arrangements, assisted by Mrs. Francis McCarthy and Mrs.

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Causes Leak in Military Information, Army - Is Warned.

WASHINGTON, Jan. 12 (U. P.) — The war department—giving its

{tacit but qualified approval of the

indoor sport of “handing out a line” to the girls—today listed conceit,

| faith, enthusiasm and ignorance as

the human characteristics which trap soldiers unwittingly into. giving military information. to the enemy. : “Conceit is the most common cause. of leakage,” the department said in a lecture on. security prepared for men in training. “Ninety per cent of indiscretions are the results of it, and 90 per cent of us are vulnerable to it.” “Why do we boast Most of us to impress a woman.

Leave Service Out

“There is little harm in it, and, providing you leave the service out of it, you can go ahead,” the soldiers are advised. “The army really isn’t too much concerned about the fact that a corporal is able to persuade his girl that he gave up $50,000 a year when he joined the army or he would have been a senator if it hadn't been for the war, as long as his line doesn’t include service matters.” As for faith, the lecture warns that we are “too ready” to trust our fellow-men and believe too implicitly in the safety of the U. S. ‘mail, and telephone and telegraph services. “We forget that an enemy ‘agent, if he is to be successful and avoid a firing squad, must be such a plausible and convincing person that no one suspects him,” it continues. “In other words, he will look like exactly what he isn’t; a typical ‘American with an honest face, who knows as much about the Yankees and Brooklyn Dodgers as we do.”

Don’t Know Spies’ Ways

The lecture declares a vast number of people are going about the country giving away vital information simply because they are not familiar with the ways of spies. » “Get it firmly fixed in your head that enemy agents are not all parading about in Washington and our military establishments, preparing to waylay a general and steal the plans for a forthcoming attack,” it says. “They are quiet, hardworking investigators who go about using their ears and eyes and picking up a little item here and another one there by encour-

aging people to say more than they should.”

U. S. SOLDIERS EAT 15,000 TONS. DAILY

P.)—The ‘army purchases approximately 15,000 tons of food daily to feed its soldiers, now numbering more than 5,000,000, Lieut. Col. Ward ; B. Cleaves, commandant, bakers’ and cooks’ school, Camp Lee, Va. told a farmers’ meeting here today. That food bill runs to $2,750,000 daily. The American soldier eats about 53 pounds of food every day, Col. Cleaves said, compared with the four pounds consumed by the average civilian.

HISTORY BODY GETS TERRITORY PAPERS

The Indiana Historical society has received the first volume of the official papers of Michigan Territory issued by the U. 8. department of State. It is part of a series, “Thé Territorial Papers of the United States.” The volume received cover the

"ND 0 ENEMY

. HARRISBURG, Pa., Jan. 12 (U.|

cess in more than 100 years.

by the treaties signed yester-

jday in Washington and

Chungking by the American, British and Chinese governments. It will, of course, take

months, perhaps years, to

by the new order of things. China already has taken the first steps in the long process . : of preparing her judicial machinery for the change. Countless details relating to the

doing business’ in China remain fo be defined.

Worth Celebrating

Some edge is taken off the AngloAmerican renunciation by the fact that it comes so late and after most

foreign interests had been swallowed up by the Japanese invaders, ° However, considering that {free China contains more than half of the country’s population, and considering that ultimate defeat of the Japanese is regarded here as a mathematical certainty, there is still plenty to celebrate. Chinese ‘gratification is unmistakably great. .Americans will find it easier to realize what. “extraterritoriality” and its attendant evils have meant to .China by visualizing what kind of country the United States would be under the same circumstances. Imagine New York as an internationally controlled city, garrisoned by the troops of half a dozen powers. Imagine little islands of foreign control embracing the richest parts of Chicago, St. Louis, San Francisco and New Orleans, in which criminals and political offenders might find refuge: from American laws." More of the Picture

Imagine foreign warships patrolling American coasts, plying the Mississippi river and operating from American bases on the pretext of protecting foreign interests in the United States from American attack. Imagine foreigners taking over the administration of the American customs service and postal system. Imagine: foreigners of several favored nationalitiés enjoying exemp-

years 1805-1820 and includes the

administration of Gov. William Tull and three administrations of Lewis ass.

CLUB SIGNS CHESS KING TO PLAY HERE

I. A. Horowitz, international chess expert and editor of Chess Review, will play simultaneous chess against

any number of contestants at 8 p. m.|

Thursday in the Indianapolis Athletic club. This is the fifth appearance of Mr. Horowitz here. The tion is sponsored by the Central Indiana Chess association. Daniel B. Luten is president and H. L. Danforth. is secretary.

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i mares CHUNGKING, Jan. 12.—Emancipation from extraterritoriality is hailed here as China’s biggest international suc-

The Chinese can at least be sure that once the Japanese are ousted from China, they will enjoy real and unqualified freedom for the first time in a century. This is guaranteed

tion from numerous s American Jaws and enjoying the privilege of trial by own special courts. Imagine how you would feel if these restrictions of American sovereignty were lifted and you can understand why Chinese nationalists regard the termination of “ex.trality” as a sort of Chinese magna carta. The new situation poses interest-

Yet there are. at present no American lawyers practicing in free

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