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Show .TiTf ritiiiiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiTiTTiiiTf rirt iiriiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiifttitriTif niiiiiiiiiitii 11 1 1 rtttriiiiinii jiii j j jiiitiiiiiiiiiiif iti j 1 1 ill 11 1 1 tiJiniiiiinitttEi i J I Jiiiiiiiilll(lllt I Health and Beauty j By 41 until lii inn DB. SOPHIA BBUNSON iiuiuin miinii f tag epidemic of plague could break out among human beings. It is a well known fact that in laboratories it is possible to increase in-crease the virulence of any disease germs, thus causing them to become be-come more deadly. This is done by breeding and culture and is understood by bacteriologists all over the world. The Japanese have in their employ em-ploy Professor Doctor Yineii Mi-yayawa, Mi-yayawa, who is director of the department de-partment for infectious diseases at the Tokyo Imperial university. He and his staff' of assistants spend their time experimenting upon how to make disease germs more virulent and deadly, and then how to spread among the people with whom they are at war, in order to spread epidemic and destroy de-stroy large numbers of the population popu-lation as quickly and as cruelly as possible. GERM WARFARE 4 War is getting more fiendish, brutal and cruel all the time and there are no human feelings of pity or compassion apparently in the breasts of our enemies. The sole idea by which they are motivated moti-vated is to kill, to exterminate by any means whatever, no matter how much suffering is entailed upon a helpless people. Japan claims to have a secret weapon which is described in a book by Barclay Newman, a 1928 Princeton graduate in biology. He says that the enemy has planned, and wherever possible, will use bacterial warfare. Newman New-man tells of six Chinese towns upon , which the Japanese dropped rice, wheat and fleas infected with bubonic plague or black death. These, he said, were laboratory s tests. c Chinese medical records show a few cases of the black death after each raid, but so far they have not become epidemics, as the Japanese Jap-anese intended. However, it is not too late for such dire results to follow. It has been discovered that rats with bubonic plague are being found in Changteh, where the Japanese scattered infected rice as far back as 1941. Immediately Immedi-ately following the scattering of the rice, there were seven cases of bubonic plague among the people. peo-ple. These were the first ever known to occur in the history of the city. The greatest danger comes from the presence of infected fleas. These insects leave the bodies of sick or dead rats and continue to sprad the disease among the ro-lents. ro-lents. Thus in time, a devastat- |