Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 June 1945 — Page 17

sorts are about

y (D. Wyo.) is olicies and’ proits members, its 'e officer for a plus subcommitymmittee. tee has been ina month, with

ie investigation, ittee postponed newly appointed Stuart Symingito his business ar Parking, Ltd.

1g factor, in the |

\

te d Ny Presigent Guy M. Gillet his dissatisfacresignation dities.

jon was deferred

oney, inveterate >the committee

elaware federal §

on charges of he manufacture, ers, parts, serv-

Mr, Symington, :

38, as president Park Corp., was rt in organizing pool to keep out | in the court's frank about the vere put in evi “kindly destroy

rance of another §

){ the great imievelopment,”

any"

rking, Ltd, that § { Delaware,” it § ured or sold any § meters; and as §

ties for research

ntly, it is a pat- :

ompany in 1936 §

and Vernon L. 0 defendants in cure domination n in its infancy. mt and Taylor rter industry by rers of parking nt positions’ to hese defendants These licenses 1d conditions of 2 to be refused

ing meter comhe monopoly. .

tigated

1 Mr. Symington | lectric Co, was § flairs committee §

\ with war conThe committee

yton’s testimony |

current investi. ard and its poliportant changes a single admin-

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~~

By WILLIAM: H. STONEMAN Times Foreign Correspondent OSLO, Norway, June '14.—On the surface, the people of Norway look well clothed and well nourished. They seem to have come’ through » five years of Nazi occupation in good style. ! The fact is that the population has suffered immeasurable harm

well being. With . calloused indifference to the elementary rules of humanity, the Germans — partly by violence and partly by carelessness — brought death, illness and suffering to .a large part of the country’s population. Fifteen thousand Norwegians were confined in jail. Half as many were taken to Germany, and of these approximately one-fourth died.

Mr. Stoneman

_ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES _

© to its physical|®

German Bequest to Norway— 4 Death, lllness, Suffering

crease in the autumn of 1942 and there were many recurrences of the disease in® people. who had been cured. The fatality rate from T. B. increased sharply. i ~ » ™ VENEREAL disease, which was well under control in pre-war Nor-

iway, gained a new foothold due

largely to German carelessness. Nineteen hundred ,cases of syphilis

were reported in 1943 compared to 300 in 1940. Pneumonia, dysentery and scarlet fever have all increased violently. The situation would have been even worse if the Norwegian government in London had not managed to ship” diphtheria toxoid and insulin to Norway through Sweden. The Germans furnished neither. The only way in which public health impfoved was in the condition of the children’s teeth. Lack of candy and the great increase in the consumption of cod liver oil

probably were responsible. ? ao n on

» n s THOUSANDS of those who lived to return to Norway have suffered damage to their health which they| themselves tend to ignore “in their spiritual elation at coming home,

—and the average woman between eight and 10 pounds—due to the shortage of food One epidemic after another has attacked the country during the last five years. Due to the slovenly carelessness of the Germans, there has been a serious increase in the incidence of most diseases. 3 & # THERE WERE 23,000 cases of diphtheria in 1943 and 28,000 cases in 1944, compared to 3000 in 1942,

In 1941, Norway suffered the|

worst infantile paralysis epidemic in its history. ° Malnutrition, lack of soap and © imported infection raised the re- # | ported number of scabies cases from the pre-war “15,000 to some 70,000 {cases a year. Tuberculosis showed a sharp in-

Here in Norway the average man |! Norway has lost between 12 and 15 pounds|they were all treated here they

| sian prisoners out of Norway i§ thus

|

HERE, as elsewhere, prisoners were treated inhumanly. Of 1000 Russian prisoners recently X-rayed at Trondheim, 360 suffered from tuberculosis. It is probably that

{one-tenth of all Russian prisoners

have tuberculosis and if

would occupy one-third of the country’s hospital beds. The evacuation »f the 73,000 Rus-

(an urgent matter. Meanwhile, Dr. Karl Eva hief |of Norway's public health ™¥ {and a world authority on the s#bject, has ordered all the hospitals in Norway to provide immediate treatment of all prisonérs who re- | quire it. Fine examples of the Germans’ public health work is furnished by their policy of sending Russian T. B. patients to Dolaerne; a foggy {spot on Oslofjord. And by their ex-

Leeution— ofa reported -300- Yugoslav

| prisoners at the concentration camp

lat Bodoe, when they feared a ty-

| phus epidemic. { Copyright. 1945, by The Indianapolis Times ' and The Chicago“Daily News, Ine.

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