Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1943 — Page 5

IAP MEDICINE PRECAUTIONARY

Soldiers Carry Preventive Kits but Hospitals Are llI-Equipped.

By FRANK HEWLETT United Press Staff Correspondent WITH ALLIED FORCES AT THE SANANANDA FRONT, Jan. 16 (Delayed) —The Japanese take all precautions to keep their soldiers in fighting trim, but are seemingly indifferent to their treatment when they are sick or wounded, information gained during the northern Papuan campaign indicated. An Australian medical major who has made a special study of the Japanese soldiers’ health said their

: leaders “appear very keen about the

preventive side, but they don't seem

to give a hoot about them after they are sick or wounded.” : To support his statement, he pointed out that every Japanese soldier carries quinine, a mosquito net, a water purifier and vitamin tablets, but his hospital equipment is meager. Some fairly complete Japanese medical field kits have been found, and the equipment they contained generally was of inferior grade. The major recalled .that even the anti-tetanus serum was outdated, and bore markings showing that it was effective only until 1939 or 1940. He said the Japanese were supplied with an abundance of creosote cap sules used in treating dysentery. Field dressings carried by every Japanese soldier in a first-aid kit are inferior to allied dressings and have no waterproof cover. An American said he learned that each enemy soldier carries peroxide and fodine and vitamin A and B tablets; & coal tar preparation for treating Insect bites, a cod liver ointment, morphine and anti-tetanus vials, bandages, adhesive tape and splints.

" INTERN GERMAN WOMAN

CHUNGKING, Jan. 21 (U. P)— (Delayed) —Hildegard Brenneke, aT, & German, was arrested for internment today in Chungking after an eight months trip, by truck and foot, across China from Peiping. She brought news of trouble between the Japanese and German residents of occupied China.

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unior Chamber Chooses Paul C. Smith To Represent ‘Legion’ the

By BETTY PRYOR United Press Staff Correspondent CHICAGO, Jan. 22.—America's outstanding young man of 1942 is named * on.” He is a soldier, or a sailor or a marine. To represent “Legion,” the United States Junior Chamber of ‘Commerce last night picked Paul 8. Smith, former managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle, who resigned a $9000-a-year governmen job to enlist as a private in the United States marines. In naming Smith as the young

man of the year the Junior Cham-!

ber of Commerce agreed that the

wr

head man of 1942 was any man|

“who fights on land, on and under the sea and in the air that freedom shall not perish from the earth.” Smith, 33, was chosen from a list of 10 outstanding young men of 1942 compiled by Future, the “Jaycees” official magazine. He was given the. organization's distinguished service award at its annual founder’s day banquet last night. Last fall Smith not only resigned from his $9000-a-year job as assistant chief of the office of war information, but also resigned a lieutenant commander's commission in the naval reserve to become a marine private. : “A hell of a lot of people have got to learn to win this war—how to use a bayonet,” he commented then. “There's nothing wrong with being a lieutenant commander except that I couldn't run a destroyer, which is what lieutenant commanders are supposed to do.” Before joining the OWI Smith served on the Roosevelt farm tenancy commission and farm security board and was confidential secre« tary to Herbert Hoover. To complete their annual list of 10 outstanding young men of the year, the “Jaycees” chose: Ellis G. Arnall, 35, Atlanta, Ga., new governor of Georgia. Paul Brown, 34, Columbus, O., Ohio state football coach who was named 1942 “coach of the year.” Robert K. Burns, 33, Chicago, midwest regional director of the war labor board. Dr. Herald R. Cox, 34, Billings, Mont.,, who evolved vaccines to immunize man against Rocky Mountain spotted fever and typhus. Theodore R. Gamble, 33, Port-

CZECH PRISONERS IN NORTH AFRICA FREED

LONDON, Jan. 22 (U. P.)—Dr. Jan Masaryk, Czechoslovakian foreign minister in exile, informed the Czechoslovakian council today that all the Czechs sent to North African concentration camps had been released.

Spokesmen for the International Brigade, which fought in the Span-

ish civil ‘war, estimated: that. 65,000]

prisoners were being held in North African concentration camps. They were held, it was said, in

Paul C. Smith

land, Ore. assistant to the secretary of the treasury and war bond supervisor.

og

Man of 1942 Pa., president of the Heinz Canned Food Co. now making army field rations. : George J. Newman, 34, Ft. Worth, Tex., vice president and general manager of Consolidated Aircraft Corp., Fi. Worth. : Lieut. Col. Chesley Gordon Peterson, 22, Santaquin, Utah, youngest lieutenant colonel in the United States army air force, now commander of an American air squadron in England. ’ N William M. Shepherd, 35. Pine Bluff, Ark., president of the United States Junior Chamber of Commerce. ' The board of judges which picked Smith for the distinguished service award comprised: William Green, president of the American Federation of Labor; Robert M. Hutchins, president of the University of Chicago; J. Edgar Hoover, director of the federal bureau of investigation; Herb Graffis, author; Dale Car-

negie, lecturer and author; Eric

Johnston, president of the Chamber of Commerce of the United States,

CHARLES EMERY'S SERVICES TOMORROW

Services for Charles LI. Emery will be held at 2 p. m, tomorrow at the Harry W. Moore Peace Chapel with burial in Oaklandon. An Indianapolis resident most of

his life, Mr. Emery died yesterday at his home, 2318 N. Adams st. after an illness of 20 months. He was 39 and a native of Castleton. Survivors are his wife, Mrs. Helen Emery; two daughters, Miss Virginia Emery and Miss Barbara Jean Emery; two sons, William and Raymond Emery, all of Indianapolis; three sisters, Mrs. Minerva Glass of Frankfort and Mrs. Bessie Delaney and Mrs. Anna Hackney, both of Indianapolis, and two brothers, Pvt. Marvin Emery with the army in Australia, and George Emery of Indianapolis. :

HERBIE LEWIS TO SPEAK

Herbie Lewis, manager of the Indianapolis hockey team, will speak at the Junior Chamber of Commerce luncheon in the Hotel Wash-

Henry J. Heinz, 34, Pittsburgh,iand Durward Howes, publisher. |ington Wednesday.

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eight concentration camps in Al-|

geria, nine in Morocco and others {more recently established. ' The spokesman said the prisoners include 15,000 to 20,000 Spanish Republicans deported from France, and now “slave labor,” 5000 to 10,000 Jewish ‘refugees, doing “forced labor” and 10,000 to 15,000 antifascists of various nationalities sent to North Africa by Vichy.

FIVE U-BOATS SUNK’ IN INGRAW’S SECTOR

RIO DE JANEIRO, Jan. 22 (U. P.).—Vice’ Admiral J. H. Ingram of Jeffersonville, Ind. commander of U. S. naval forces in the south Atlantic, said today that five enemy submarines had been sunk in the south Atlantic in the last month and that the crew of a surface raider scuttled their ship in prefer-

ence to fighting “our overwhelming

forces.” He praised United States-Brazil-

ion co-operation and said that hel

hoped to have bases established soon at Dakar, French West Africa and at the Freetown in British West Africa colony of Sierra Leone. He also said that American forces now are stationed at’ Bathhurst, in Gambia, another British African colony. “We are getting more submarines in the South Atlantic than in any other part of the entire Atlantic front,” he said. n

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State Deaths

A daughter, ter Mary ‘Sarvivor: Brother, the Rev. James ; brother, : wson. : ANDERSON-

N Edward D. Schapker;

NEW HARMONY—Mrs. Clara Garrett, | 55, Survivor: Daughter, Mrs. Glen Gourley. «| Mrs. Josephine Simmons, T4. OAKLAND CITY-—-Mrs., Sadie Skelton, ;} 71. - Survivors: Husband, Ed; sons. Glenn Ray; |and Vestel; brothers, Sherman Kinder, Marion Woolsey, §7. PENDLETON-Lewis Speck. PETERSBURG—Blake A. Lamb, 61. Survors: Yivara: Wife, Lucy; son, Louis; daughter,

+] PRINCETON—Frank H. Stunkel, _89. is Survi Mary; « som, Victor;

— PA BOMB JIPAN' IS a ON YANK SC 0 eyvivars: Husband, Frank. and a son. Vaught; sisters, Mrs. : HONOLULU, T. H, Jan. 21 band, George, and a daughter, . g — EPPO elle ;| Everett By ! P.) —Regular b)mbing of Japan Wite, a san, two daughters and & sister. ; . Zula on the schedule of allied leaders BI eridan T. Roberts, 175.1} the Pacific, but there are Survivors: Wife, Ida: : : Haney; bromers, Corin aud Shwe. ny . vos: why it cannot be done at prese : Edgar Flake, 60. Sur- , Mrs. laf Capt. R. A. Ofiitie, aviation off vivors: Sons, Voris and Vern; daughters win Schaaf; sons, Doris . Murl : : | Wi Earl; brothers, Johm, Joseph, jon the staff of Admiral Chester Dona Vandevemter. | oT: sister, Mrs | orien, Edward and Henry Gutiweller. | Nimits, commarder-in-chief of I NILLE-Outo D. Pumphrey, 62.| LYNNVILLE—Burless Day, 47. Pacific fleet, assarted toiay. Wiles; 8% Shilren: sid. A MOUNT VERNON—Mrs. Agnes Holm Ofstie, addressing {he ann NTHIANA- Mes. Belly Gibson, 80. Ards: rothor Joseph Wilton: halt brother, | meeting of the Honoluu Cham ENGLIBIE Sohe Dotsoh. YO. Horace G. Wilson, of Commerce; siid that some EVANSVILLE—James W. Husk, 84. Sur- Sons undoubtedl;! were (lisappoin vivors: Son, William; sisters, Mrs. Cy because Japan |s not ret bom regularly. “I assure you that ‘bomb Jap is on the list, but for ‘he pres : there are reason; why ii can hard= ly be a matter of regulir routine Ofstie said. :

507 LOST IN AVENGER LONDON, Jan. 22 (U. P)—Th admiralty announced thst 507 of cers and men, sirving on the air craft carrier Avenger, were presums rs. m 4 TENNY _|ably killed when the ship was 2 Gates Moare, ar aSarvivers: wh vivors: Staers, Mrs. nid o> Phar. pedoed during landing at 1 . hs Tom; riss, Mrs. Ella Burden and Miss Janie North Africa.’ The loss of the shi

k A htiders. T Swift; brothers, Sid. .. Lucy H. Rikhoff, 71, Survivors:' WINSLOW—Samuel Hugh Shaw. was announced in December,

vors: Wife, er, John Stunkel. ! | D-—Chester Fenwick, 32. Sur- , | vivors: Parents, Mr. and Mrs. 8. R. Fenwick; sisters, Mrs, Opal Coe and Mrs. Ruby Opperman; brothers, Orval and Thomas.

pad Mrs. Higusi brothers. d ean } paren . an Mrs. Delmar Simmons. i *

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