Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 January 1946 — Page 15

1 111

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PEAK CH OUTLAWS" ©

rae FRIDAY, JAN, 4 1946

Marines’ Job in North China

By WILLIAM MoGAFFIN Times Foreign Correspondent SHANGHAL, Jan, 4.~The mission of 53,000 United States marines in North China has broadened consid erably from the original responsi-

y

bility of disarming and repatriat-|

ing Jap soldiers, Maj. Gen. Keller Rockey, commander of United States marine forces in China, told me that the marines had re patriated 90,000 Jap soldiers and civilians, JH This leaves only about 15,000 Japs in the marine’ area — which ‘includes Tientsin and Peiping, north to the port of yiseirl Chinwangtao and . Mr, MeGaffin taking in Tsingtao on the Shantung peninsula, The marines, who arrived in China in October, have inherited three important new jobs, according to Gen. Rockey. “ These jobs are: 1. Guarding the British and Chi-nese-owned Kailin (coal) mining administration in the Tangshan

2. Helping guard the railway and vital bridges running from Chinwangtao to Tientsin, 3. Actually running the railway whose principal trafic consists of freight loads of coal partly for the

Area,

the use of the Chinese, in Shanghai and other areas, North Quieting Gen. Rockey said that the situation was quieting down in the north, with "~ Chinese Communists giving “less and less trouble” Although the marines have evactated most of the Japs from their area, they still will have the job of supervising the repatriation of 800,000 Jap soldiers in the Chinese

use of the marines and partly for}

Grows to Include Railroading].

{area of ‘the. town. This region ex-

tends from the Yellow river to the great” wall, This will be a Chinese task, but Japs will be funneled through ports controlled by the marines. If all ‘goes smoothly they could evacuaté’ 90,000 RE) month, Gen. Rockey said. Asked how long the aiadibes would stay in China, Gen. Rockey sald he was planning on staying all winter at least, In the view of informed techniclans with whom I have conversed, if the marines stay. until all 4,000,000 Japs are: evacuated from everywhere in China and adjacent

# |areas, they will be here at least] & |another year.

"Copyright, 1946, by The Indianapoljs Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.

POLICE AUXILIARY INDUCTS TOMORROW

The Ladies Auxiliary of, the Fraternal Order of Police will install officers at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow in the Lincoln hotel. A dinner-dance will follow. Officers to be installed are:

Mrs. Russell Nicewanger, president; Mrs, Harold Goodman, first vice president; Mrs. Michael Kavanaugh, vice presi dent; Mrs. Harry itaker, secretary; Mrs. Janice Sparrow, treasurer; Mrs, Leona Stiegelmeyer, financial secretary; Mrs. Margaret Berger, conductor; Mrs. Freeman Smock, chaplain, and Mrs, Stewart Coleman, guard. Mrs, Mary Davidson, Mrs. Kenneth Luke, Mrs, Emmett Staggs, Mrs. Alice Byrne and Mrs. Betty Burkhart will be installed as board of directors,

MARINES COMING HOME TIENTSIN, China, Jan. 4 (U. P.), —Pive thousand high-point marine officers and men will leave North China within a few days under a new plan to speed the return of combat veterans to States, it was announced today. The men will travel aboard the former luxury liner Wakefield. A similar number of replacements is expected

to arrive shortly in China.

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ustralian au a. ott 15 Hat, aed been employed by the U, 8, alr Sou have been “smuggled” out of Australia to continue working for the Americans. “Customs officials sald no passport had been issued to the giits, who left secretly in a U. 8. transport plane from Nagle farm airdeome for Manila Wednesday. The girls, who did confidential secretarial work for U, 8. officers, were sald to have been signed for similar duties in America at wages

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