Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 May 1946 — Page 15

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THURSDAY, MAY 2 1046

ken Medic ‘Overcomes Near-Impossible to Save Boy,

‘M. NICHOL Times Foreign Correspondent WITH THE MUSKOX MOVING

FORCE, near Edmonton, Alta, May 2-=A 4-year-old Eskimo boy owes) his life today to a chance visit by a Canddian army. doctor ta an iso-| lated post on the northern: ininge

SITET ES I IRICEN LT:

Lb HIITALE

V7»

By DA

of the American | 8 | continent.

Capt. Robert Croome, officer for the force.

The full story

Lz

The doctor is medical § Musgkox moving jof the operation!

Capt. Croome per- Ji formed under

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nearly impossible circumstances is.

Mr. Nichol one of the more remarkable chap-| men,

in Arctic medicine.

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J [youngster obviously was fn critical

Po om Angulalik was called to

The Muskox force, plowing north appendicitis. From the boy's ragin. snowmobiles, had planned an ing fever, Dr. Croome believed it overnight halt at Perry Tver.

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“ |said, pointing to the Joye: abdo-

eluded all the ‘instruments and! {dressings he would require,

| «8. Sgt. Fred Way, army public ‘relations, was assigned the job of | holding a flashlight. '|other light was a small 25-watt)

|

|a fire for hot water.

| briefed his assistants. He explained

| ments “pliers,” thing that looks like a hacksaw,”

| they began the operation.

On an land in the river mouth two men Ti the city engineer's de. | Newmar on tid

is & trading post run by Stephen

Angulallk, an Eskimo who knows partment were awarded wage boosts} ; and one Indianapolis citizen was There were welcoming: ceremonies. employed at $180 a month as. An An elderly, crippled Eskimo with afistiument man. on the W. Maris cane walked sombe am the i fy on Harry Southard was named -| each.” Dr. Croome began a round Pervising engineer at $4200 a year, $200 over what he was receiving as grade separation engineer. Formal- {

a smattering of English,

Muskox men, sh hands With

of native huts and snowhouses, checking for {illness In one he found the boy. Th

condition.

Dr. Croome found immediately} |

the child had a serious case of | pneumonia, But that was only the

translate, - 3 Operation. Nesomary “He has pain,” the interpreter

* Dr. Croomé guessed it might be

might be ruptured already. { By radio, he asked for an aircraft | ‘to take the boy to the hospital on| {Southhampton Island, Weather {made this impossible. Dr. Croome

3

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ly a $3240-a-year city bridge en- delayed by refusal of nine residents! gineer, James W, Newman will" “Yé= to move from “their houses | hat. ceive $3600 annually in Mr, South- must be razed, : ard's former position,

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checked the boy's condition again and decided an immediate operation | was the only hope.

Dr, Croome’s snowmobile ins]

Dr. Croome chose his medical orderly, Sgt, Ed Williams, as anesthetist. .

The only

bulb, operated by“ a windcharger. Lt. James Croal, of the Canadian |navy, was made “surgical nurse.”

Work 3 Hours At-three in the morning ‘the men. began cleaning up the main room of Angulalik's shack. They lighted

As they worked Dr. Croome!:

he would use terms his untrained helpers could understand. Lt. Croal said he labeled - tmatrus. “screwdriver,” “that jor “the rummager.” At 6 a m. {| Por almost three” hours, Dr. Croome worked over his tiny pa{tient. He discovered an intestinal {obstruction was the cause of the trouble he was racing against a diminishing supply of anasthesia, When he wasn't explaining his next move, Lt, Croal said, the doctor sang softly, mostly “Mairzy Doates.” He larded it with asides, i like “I hope the little guy doesn’t, | die.” By nine the job was finished. Lt.' Croal said only then did he realize | | the tension under which they had been working, | Dr. Groome stayed with the boy, Hn his problems weren't yet over. In the afternéon the youngster | | tore some of the surgical stitches in a fit of coughing. Later in the day, however; it was { possible to fly him in a ski-equipped | | Norseman to Cambridge bay, where

|

| ing.

{ ing ‘force. that doctors say the child is fit again fo return to his isolated} ‘home. ~

| ‘Copyright, 1948, by The Indianapolis Times bo and The * Chicago Daily 1 News, Inc.

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