Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 1 August 1942 — Page 3

PELLEY TO TAKE §

"BRIEF LINDBERGH

QUIZ

IS PLANNED

Expected to Answer ‘Only a Few Questions’; U. S. Rests

‘After Exhibiting Allegedly Pro-Axis Documents

Seized in By EARL

Charles A. Lindbergh will be the first of eight “special”

Noblesville. RICHERT

witnesses subpenaed by the defense to take the witness stand Tuesday in the William Dudley Pelley sedition trial

~here.

Lindbergh yesterday accepted service of the defense

subpena in Detroit.

The government concluded its case against Pelley yesterday and Federal Judge Robert C. Baltzell adjourned court

until Monday.

.

The former Silver Shirt leader and two associates, Miss

Marion Henderson and Lawrence A. Brown, are being tried on charges of sedition in connection with statements made by Pelley in his publication, The Galilean, which the government charges to Xe false -and detrimental to the war effort.

Pelley Remains in Jail

Pelley, who is being held in the county jail because he has been unable to post bond, was to meet with

( his attorneys, Oscar Smith and

A m

‘were

“Floyd Christian, in the detention

room at the federal building today to map defense plans. He had asked to be allowed to go to a hotel over the week-end in company with a U. S. deputy marshal, but this request was refused. Pelley said he planned to take the witness stand himself next week and that he had “more than 27 witnesses” in addition to the eight he subpenaed Wednesday. These eight, all scheduled to appear Tuesday, include such well known isolationists as Maj. Gen. George Van Horn Moseley and former senator Rush Holt of West Virginia in addition to Lindbergh. Lingbergh will be asked only a few questions, Pelley said. ~The prosecution linked Pelley with Gen. Moseley, one of America’s foremost fascists, in one of its closing moves yesterday. Oscar R. Ewing, special assistant U. 8S. attorney general who is directing the prosecution, read to the jury an excerpt of a carbon copy of a letter seized by the FBI in a raid on the Fellowship Press, Inc, plant at Noblesville last April.

Letter Dated Jan. 14, 1942

| The letter, dated Jan. 14, 1842, was to Col. E. N.” Sanctuary, New York army reserve officer and antiSemitic author, who was indicted with Pelley and 26 others on charges of conducting a nationwide conspiracy to obstruct the war (effort. (This is not the charge 1 Pelley is being tried on here. At the end of the second page these typewritten letters WDP/mc. The excerpt stated: “I had a gorgeous 36 hours with General Mosely at Atlanta. week before last and I find that the general concurs in 99 per cent of what you and I believe. We have a valuable ally in this most impoftant military man and, as I told you, his military carcer' is really just beginning. “I believe you have no small military career yourself and I trust the time is coming when all of us can operate freely and openly to restore the Republic which meant so much to us as boys.” In this letter, Mr. Ewing also quoted Pelley as explaining to Col. Sanctuary that he changed his secular Roll Call to the religious Galilean to prevent its suspension.

Employee Testifies

Miss Margaret Carmichael of Noblesville, an employee of the Fellowship Press, testified that when she had written letters for Pelley she put the “mc” such as was found on the Sanctuary letter as her identification mark. Mr, Ewing read excerpts from carbon copies of three other letters seized in the Noblesville raid to the jury. One to Dr. J. R. Brinkley, the late goat gland specialist, which allegedly was written by Pelley on Aug. 14, 1941, contained this statement: “I think the time has come to consider that everything I have done up to now has been preparatory to the real gesture of starting something that literally sweeps the U. 8. and drives the Luciferians into the two oceans. Not only that but I hope it results in a renovated and purified America. “In time I am not so sure that it isn’t going to go beyond the confines of America because already I find myself a mightier personage in both Japan and Germany than my own breed here in the United States is yet willing to accredit. My ‘drag’ in Japan is so great that it it were not for the war stricture I could launch a branch of Galileans there overnight. I have letcers from prominent Japanese soliciting that I do some such thing and offering to give me every practical assistance in it. “As for Germany and Europe, did i tell you that just before the war oroke every member of the Nazi court, including Herr Hitler himfs had read my book, “Behold ” and was classing it as exactly the type of religion which

~ Nazi Germany could embrace.”

“Larry” and “Brownie”

The other two letters from which dr. Ewing quoted were allegedly r.ititten by Pelley's aide, Lawrence Pr Brown. - They were signed d “Larry,” respectively. | Bes to ea)

Hitler will be in Moscow by May 21, 1942, and I hope he is right.” The other, written Feb. 13, 1942, to “Dear Mr. and Mrs. Hatfield,” said: “Chief expects one more bottleneck to go through—and a charge of sedition—but expects it will backfire in a great big way.” The reading of the letters created a sensation among the courtroom spectators. Mr. Ewing led up to the letters by calling FBI Agents Douglas Williams and Bliss Morton to the stand to show the jury what they had obtained in the raids on Miss Henderson’s home on N. Pennsylvania st. and at the Noblesville plant last April. Both agents held large cardboard boxes on their laps and from them pulled copy after copy of German, Italian and Japanese publications. Some of the pamphlets bore German titles. ! There were two translations of speeches delivered to the Reichstag by Adolf Hitler on April 28, 1939, and Feb. 20, 1938.

SPEEDWAY TO HOLD OFFIGIAL ‘DIMOUT’

Marion county's first “partially blacked out” test at Speedway next Tuesday night has been officially designated as a “dim out.” Floyd Farley, civihan defense director for the community, said a “blackout” can be ordered only by the army. Street lights will remain on and automobiles will be permitted to move, Regardless of the designation, some 60 air raid wardens will be on patrol tc see that all residents and store lights are extinguished when 10 short blasts are blown on the Prest-O-Lite factory whistle at 10 p. m. One long and three short blasts at 10:20 will signal the “all clear.”

NAVY UNIT AT BUTLER NEEDS INSTRUCTORS

The navy issued a call for more instructors to serve at the Butler fieldhouse signal school as announcement was made that the schools complement would be doubled to 800 students next month.

Former navy signalmen or quartermasters are wanted and applicants will be interviewed by Lieut. H. C. Sigtenhorst, school commander, at the fieldhouse from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. any weekday. Ratings from third class petty officers through chief petty officers will be assigned, according to qualifications. Applicants will be immediately assigned to the school following reenlistment.

NAVY SETS AUGUST QUOTA AT 2000 MEN

Navy recruiting offices in Indiana today started the August campaign for another quota of 2000.

~The July enlistment goal of 2000 was exceeded by 304. The last day of the July campaign brought 113 recruits from all over the state, set-

{DRAFT TO CALL

‘Considerably Larger’ Number to Be Sent

From Indiana.

WASHINGTON, Aug. 1 (U. P).— National selective service headquarters today included in the August draft call an undisclosed quota of 1-B registrants—men with minor physical the groundwork for wide-spread use of such draftees to replace physical-ly-fit men for active duty. Although this is the first nationwide call for 1-B’s, the army has inducted many of them in smallscale experiments and found them useful in light manual and clerical tasks. Officials estimated that about 1,000,000 men of military age soon will be classified as 1-B, providing

a huge reservois for limited military duty.

A

Reasons for 1-B

National headquarters instructed local boards to include in the first

because . of defective teeth. Bad

1-B classifications, topped only by defective eyes which caused 15 per cent. Others were hernia, 12 per

musculo-skeletal, nine per cent; feet, six per cent; heart and bloodpressure, four per cent; mental and nervous, three per cent; and ear and lungs, two per cent each. The

up by dozens of other minor physical defects.

Only One Disqualification

Only those 1-B's with positive serological reports of vénereal diseases are definitely excluded from induction for limited tasks.

Army and selective service officials said future procedure for calling limited service men will be based on experience in the August call, and a permanent policy will be formulated’ soon.

Indiana, which contributed some 1-B’s during July ‘as part of the small-scale experiments, will send a “considerably larger” number during the August call, selective service officials here said today. The exact number was not disclosed.

VONNEGUT SCHOOL 9 ALUMNI WILL PICNIC

The alumni association of Clemens Vonnegut school 9 will hold its annaul picnic tomorrow at Brookside park. Members will meet west of the community house near the wading pool. A basket supper will be held at 5 p. m., followed by a short business meeting at which officers for the next two years will be elected. Present officers are Paul M. Stiver, Columbus; Mrs. Florence Cross, vice president; Miss Cecil C. Ellison, secretary, and Peyton Parrott, treasurer. Miss Agnes Mahoney is school principal.

DISTRICT 43 OPENS AIR WARDEN SCHOOL

An air raid warden school for district 43 will begin Monday at 7:30 p. m. at public school 10, Carrollton ave. and 13th st. The school will continue each Monday night. Robert D. Westfall, chief air raid warden of the district, said the school will include that portion of the district from the east side of College ave. to and including the east side of Bellefontaine st. and from 10th st. to 17th st.

MORE 1-8 MEN 3

‘defects—probably laying]

call men not previously accepted |:

teeth caused some 13 pér cent of|

cent; veneral diseases, 11 per cent; |,

remaining 23 per cent were taken :

nations.

PREDICTS NEW

McPheeters Is Bulter Graduating Class Speaker.

x 3 A new order of life is being cree

(ated throughout the world, Dr. C. A.

McPheeters, pastor of the North

| Methodist church, told 48 graduates

of Butler university last night. at

& [commencement exercises in | the

This picture, retouched by order of the wa: department but the first of its kind ever approv=d for release, shows how fully euvippel U. S. infantrymen occupy special-designed seats alongside mobile equipment in a new, giant Curtiss commando (C-46) military transport, the world’s largest twin-engined airliner, and was made during tests by Curtiss-Wright corp. to determine how quickly ground or paratroops and mobile units including “jeeps” or field Bf tillary can be shuttled to critical points in widely scattered battle zones uf the united

REVOCATIONS OF LICENSES ASKED

Blue Says Three Drivers Are Subject'to Epileptic Or Mental Faults.

Prosecutor Sherwood Blue today asked the state: motor license bureau to revoke the licenses of three Indianapolis drivers whom, he said, are subject to epileptic seizures or mental handicaps. He pointed out that clinical records show two drivers who now hold operator's licenses have suffered epileptic seizures in public and that the third’ driver, who holds a chauffeur’s license, is on parole from the Central hospital for the insane. Mr. Blue's investigation of known drivers suffering from dangerous physical or mental handicaps followed investigation of the fatal downtown sidewalk crash in which three . persons were killed and 14 others injured. The driver in that accident, who had been subject to fainting attacks is scheduled to be arraigned in criminal court on manslaugliter and ‘perjury charges next Wednesday.

142-YEAR-OLD BIRD DIES

LONDON, Aug. 1 (U, P.).— “Cocky,” the 142-year-old cockatoo of the London zoo, died today and keepers said the strain of night air raid alarms and ack-ack fire

were contributing factors.

signal replies.”

ting an ail-time recerd for navy ne listments.

Here Is the Traffic Record

County City Total 1941 .ovv0ennnenee. 39 40 79 1942, veisereis MA 51 75

—=July 31— 29 | Arrests 7 | Dead .. FRIDAY TRAFFIC COURT

Cases Convic- Fines Tried tions Paid Speeding ....... 13 12 $158 Reckless driving 4 3 41 Failure to stop at through street 0 Failure to stop at signal

Accidents

Drunken driving 3 All others ....., 21

Total ........ 41

MEETINGS TODAY 29th U. 8. Infantry association, me y Hotel Sen all Ry Migeuing Greenback party, nominatio f state ticket, Bre (On HA Troy on p.m :

Steam whistle air raid warn demonstration, city, 11 a ing

Slash society, —— y ashingtos Toy focal ty g, Hotel Washing

Speedway por club girls, exhibit,

Speedway high school, all’ p

MEETINGS TOMORROW

8. Infantry association, conventon, oie Severin, Ah to

iana Ast: rooked ef 15 0 meeting,

After Whistles Blow, Fill This Out . City and county defense officials want to know the effect of their steam whistle air raid warning demonstration today, so they

ask that you fill out the following questionnaire and mail to the Civilian Defense Office, War Memorial.

1. Did you hear the SIETAIEY cote eresrrriretRessisiori vinesirns 2. Where were you at the time they sounded?....e.seeeevessocnsess

3. Did you hear them (a) SSIRLUY?vieansies (b) faintly?....eee0.

Mark it “attention air raid

»>

000 00000000000000100000 0000008000800

38, re-

Lambda ¢ hapter, Se Nu Tau, rush party, Longacre park, noon. Indianapolis residents formerly of | Posey and Gibson counties, picnic, Garfield park, ail day.

von. “Loni high school an of day

MARRIAGE LICENSES

These lists are from official records in the county court house. therefore, is not responsible for errors in names and addresses.

Carl Lowe, 34, of 1438 E. 11th; Dorothy Lee, 23, of 516 Mills Kiefer Lazarus, 42, of 2242 N. New Jersey; Sara Lisker, 29, of. 905 Union. John Graham, 38, of 618 W. North; Patsy Sanders, 37, of 618 W. North. . Sol Nifouse, 22, of 1141 S. Illinois; Angela Nabnias, 18, of 1118 S. nos. -Earl , Thompson, 60, of 1815 High Scho] rd.; Lula Cooper, 52, of oto Colege. Eugene Rainwater, 21, of 5710 E. 17th; Imogene Nichols, 20, of 2234 Park. John Harris, 35, Gary, Ind.; Elisa Garia,| q 27, Gary, Ind.

Tirey, 43, of 1104 Nao Charles Fenton, 21, . Harrison; Virginia Murray, 21," of 46 N. Sherman dr. William Schermerhorn,’ 42, New York; Anne Elder, 21, New Augusta, Ind. Philip Graus, 27, Ft. Harrison; Helen Wykoft, 26, uf 60127 Norwaldo. Richard Christ, 34, Ft. Harrison; Marion Kearney, 28 Landsdowne, Pa. Bernard Korbly, 24, of 425 N rd.; Patareka Epler, 17, of 5845 E. Mich-

igan Richard, Julian, 23, of 2653 N. Harding; Viola Alltop, 21, of 1344 W. 27th. George Breeding, 32, of 1224 Park; Dorcas Lowes, 28, Acton, Ind. Welter Anderson, 23, of 1826 Northwestern; Bertha Clardy, 22, of 345 W. 11th. Harold Hunt, 31, of 834 8, onde; Hilliam Hemphill, 1, of 834 8. Donald ],

The Times, |°

Clarence Jerrell, 53, a oblesVilie; Ruth | odist

. Audubon tio!

BL a. d;| Sarah Ali

Hoard Rexrode, 21, of 2215 E. Garfield Marie Haynes, 23, of 2145 E. Garnia Ar, cnald Louden, 21, 1867 New st.;

Martore Lynch, 17, 2108’ Singleton.

BIRTHS

Girls George, Genevieve Nearpass, at St. Vinen

Harold, Marcea Hefner, at Methodist. Pueys ‘Eileen Rightmeier, at 3 onodist. Merle, Ethel Petty, at Colem George, Pauline Hobson, at loan. Arthur, Roberta Parrish, at St. Francis. Lewis. Margaret Niecen, at St. Francis. Alvin, Inez Caulk, at St. Francis. Howard, Pat Bullis, at St. Francis. Nathan, Vanessa Equels, at 908 Harlan. Raymond, Opal Hoover, at Emhardt. Louis, Iva Tracy, 436 W. 30th. Boys James, Nettie Mitchell, at Cit

Robert, Juanita George, at St. Vincents. cr ene, Juanita Lowery, at St. Vin-

Se ard, Mary Kennedy, at Methodist. Raymond, Beaulah Willoughby, at Meth-

Phillip, Barbara McCuinn, at Methst.

Arthur, iy Jonas, at Methodist, John, 8y gue, at Coleman. Roland, Yaris Ellis, at St. Francis. Howard, Eva Williams, at St. Fr William, Emma Habig, at St. Francis.

Daisey Lachkovic, at - cis. Curtis, Nellie Stinnett, at” Emhardt. Bernard, Dorothy Hengen, at Emhardt. Richarq, Louise Pohlman, at 3164 Sta-

ors, Isabella Parker, at 1331 W. Henry.

DEATHS

Charles Abner Shedron, 61, Lh, chronic 85819 E,

dia H hes 74 Tie at - bral Remorthage: 533 Bing, cere Jimmie Dale Crisp, 11 ‘months, at City,|

ey, 70, at 917 E. 85th,

8t.| De

Ready fo Die 1

0 Years Ago;

Today's His Wedding Day

NEW YORK, Aug. 1 (U, P).— Ten years ago. when he was 70, Sidney Z. Mitchell, millionaire electrical financier, bought a cemetery plot and selected a tombstone. Today he is gelting married, “I figured,” said the 80-year-old retired ‘board chgirman of the Elec-

tric Bond & &hare Co, “that I'd

get a little more happiness out of life before I die.”

A cheerful six-focter with tanned skin and hair more brown than gray, Mitchell added that he didn’t feel 80, or even 70. “It’s like ctarting life all over again and it's mighty pleasant, can tell you,” he said. His Pro. spective bride is Mrs. George Palmer, 62, of Old Lyme, Conn, wealthy widow of a New England textile manufacturer.

“If I get started talking about her,” Mitchell declared, “I'll never stop. She’s pretty as a picture.”

Among those at the wedding will be Mrs. Palmer's three married daughters and Mitchell's son. Mitchell said he met Mrs. Palmer many years ago it Lake Wales, Fla.,

45 RAID WARDENS 10 GET ARMBANDS

The graduating class of 45 air raid wardens of district 21 will receive armbands and other equipment at 7:30 p. m. ‘Monday in the WPA building at Riley park. The class completed defense training = six weeks ago.

Albert Gulligy and Mrs. H. L. ant district waitlen.

The air raid wardens are:

Mrs. Florence Andrews, Mrs. Belle Andrews, Albert Bish, Willowdale Burns, Robert Burns, E. A. Blankenship, Ruth Bogdon, Bli Bogdon, Mrs. Grace Caldwell and Grace Danigls.

James Dee Grounds, Albert E. Gullion, Harvey Hardy, Jolin Hampe, Ora Hughes, Gertrude Kirn, Carl Kinsley, Robert Lechner,” Grace Léchnbr and Edward Miller.

Esther Miller, Hessie Mossinger, Irene Kinsley, Frank | McGuire, Noma Harry Overtree,! Guy 1 . kins, Dorothy Purvis and Cecil Purvis. L. Richards, Ma'y Roberts, Henry Shirley. Thelma Schroeder, Dorothy Staab, William Staab, Mary Shipman, os short, Leonard Veatch, Adam Wagner, Purvis

1 is district warden Schroeder is assist-

Wilson, Marie Kirn, McKeever and Henry ’

Bloom.

IN INDIANAPOLIS—VITAL STATIS TI CS

Emily Sosbe, 50, at Methodist, embolus. Racheal Ferris, | 59, at 605 Grant, car-

cinoma. Ora Lucas McDaniel, 48, at St. Vincent’s, undulant| fever. Gerald Melvih | (Warner, 5 months, at City, bronchopne¢imonia. Frank Hahn, 64, at 1922 W, Minnesota, carcinoma.

OFFICIAL. WEATHER lll: 8, Weather Bureau,

(Centr:l War Time) ’ 5:13 Sunset

Sunrise .

TEMPERATURE Aug. 1, 1941—

Precipitation 24 hip. ending 1 3» a. m. Total precipitation since Jan. Excess since January 1

The following idble shows the temperatures in other cities: Station— hd Atlanta Bismark, N. D,.

8 .| Cincinnati .

Cleveland .. nver Evansville ... . Indianapolis ..... ..cee0.e Kansas City, Mo. Miami, Fla Mpls.-St. Paul

Ol Pittsburgh San Antonio, Tex. St. Louis ... Washington, D. le

where they both have homes. He described her as a “good friend” of his first wife. An Alabama farm boy who rose to millions, Mitchell said he got back from Florida late this year and had been husy ever since. “You know,” he chuckled, “a bridegroom has a lot to attend to.”

STRAUSS

SCOUTS TO OBSERVE PIONEER CEREMONY

Pioneer day will be observed tomorrow by the Boy Scouts at Camp Chank-tun-Un-Gi. Guides at the pioneer museum will be Henry L. Stenger and F. O. Belzer, who founded the exhibit in 1922. The afternoon program from 2 to 4 will be followed by campfire ceremonies at 8 p. m. Antiques from the museum will be used by the scouts to portray “A Day in the Pioneer's Life.”

Sweeney chapel of the graduate

‘|school of religion. It was the first

summer school commencement cers emonies in the university’s history, “These convulsive forces at work now are not destructive,” Dr. Mc=

| |Pheeters said. “Rather they are cre=

ative forces forming a new order of life.”

Predicts a New Order

Looking to the future he pre« dicted that “these next 50 years

, {you will find unusually interesting

and worth living. Tomorrow's order and peace will be made by - those whose names are not known today.® Pointing to ihdividual responsibile ities. Dr. McPheeters told the grade uates:

“Each on has two responsibilities —to make his personal world, over which he has absolute control, the best world he can possibly make it; and to do his utmost in helping influence that larger world in which he lives to be a better world tham he found!it.”

Phi Kappa Phi Elects

Seventeen students who gradue ated from Butler last June were named last night as selectees to membership to Phi Kappa Phi; nae tional scholastic honorary organie zation. They are Carl Franklin Andry, Florence B. Angell, Wilbur Stover Barnhart, Paul Alfred Care mack, Isabelle Eddy, Jeanne Adams Goss, Bertha May Hasseld, Mare guerite Regene Hilbert, Jeanette Hill, Edith Hinman, Bue gene R. Hupp, William J. Kirchoff, Nellie Lucille Peake, Elizabeth Pet=

Carl Stout and James Anthony Weber.

RAVENSWOOD HOME BURNS Fire believed caused by a burning cigaret today destroyed a one-story

frame cottage at 7242 Fitch ave, Ravenswood.

Entire contents copyrighted, 1942, L. Strauss & Co., Inc.

i 7 | Vol. 1—No. 3

I

Dear Fellows—

i city officials went away

moan. . .

ing all at once. . .

once. .

No? . . . Well, well! . there for weeks. . .

cola: George A. 24%, is training school on the U,

GUESS WE'LL HAVE to start Number 3 of “What's Cookin’” with . °. million—two hundred and ten. . two hundred and ten for the letters, the

flurry of who said what and why. Noisy, though, as all get-out. . all concerned at the moment over the pressing crisis of the siren vs. the steam whistle as our official air raid warning signal. . . . We tried out a giant siren on the War Memorial Plaza day before yesterday and our

. Taken over the Field House, they did, rebuilt the inside and only

E. Hickman (2104 N. New Jersey) has graduated from the Navy school of photography at Pensacola. . . . There are. two of the’ Meihaus boys (5025 Broadway) in the Navy and a third one’s coming has just received his ensign’s wings at Pensa-

pus, and John E.. 20, has enlisted in V-T, e+ +. AlS0 an. ensign now. is ames W. :

Saturday

Barnitz Corpus

. Thanks a}

. The’

Dewees

personal visits and other direct expressions o f approval and appreciation for this newspaper within a newspaper. . . . But more of that later. .. . The town’s been on the quiet side all week, except for t h e customary

parents

Angeles

. We're

pook-poohing and

saying it was not much more than a low . Personally, we think they're leaning toward the steam whistle. . way, this morning at 11 o'clock, twenty seven big factory whistles were to start hoot- .- Eventually, they say, we’ll have 45 or 50 whistles all tooting at . Lucky guys are the plant supts. _ Who get to pull the cords. . .

ww

What's Cookin’ in the Navy— |

DID WE TELL YOU about the Navy signal corps training school - at, ‘Butler?

. Any-

. Whooie!

week. . . They've been out -

nery. . last night we were passing by and there up on top of the Bowl were about 25 of ‘em wig-wagging with flags to eachother around the rim of the bowl... And everyone of‘ ‘em was dressed alike. In shorts, no less! Frederick

(407. N.

coma).

Purdue. lations: - Shelby)

up. Robert B,, 26,

an ensign at the of Minnesota cam-

all of us, won't you, Lieut. . .

Aug. 1,1942

(2310 Harlan)> who graduated ak Christi. . . . Back home on fure

lough for a few days is Petty Officer Merrill

Jr. (Bridgeport). He’s stationed at

San Juan, Puerto Rico. . . . Seaman Second Class William Edgar Jones of Pearl Harbor celebrated his 26th birthday by phoning his

(2878 N. La Salle) and to say: “This

Navy job is the best one I ever kad!” . . . And, say listen, fellows, the chap whom & lot of you met when you enlisted has moved up, too. former Pontiac man) has been promoted ‘to an officer in charge of recruiting at: Los

Lieut. Leland D. Blanchard (the

and Hollywood. . . . Say yoo-hoo for . Old Pal.

* Kw

What's Cookin’ in the Army—

RICHARD WHITE (2913 N. Talbot), whose dad works over at: The Star, writes us a complimentary note from “somewhere in Northern Ireland and goes on to boast about living in an old Irish castle, which he _

says was built in 1776.

plumbing! . . Sergt. Warren - Q, Huxley (3410 S. Rue

ral) is back in Ft Benning after a

short furlough. He's in the anti-tank side. . . Gordon 1. Claghorn (6500 E.

sw

Lewis, Wash. .

And Pvt. John CC, Rochford (964 Ellenberger pkwy.) graduated from. Chanute field's air force school this

... Pvt. Charles H. Robson (2821 E,

13th) has been transferred to Tyndall field, Fla., for a five week’s course in aerial gune .. . Second Lieut. Albert J. Lamb (4349 College) is at battery officers’ class of the field artillery at Fort Sill, Okla. . . . And Robert L. Harmon (2445 N. Pennsyle vania, will soon be sitting in the. power ~~ turret of an army plane, we hear. He 8 Just “graduated from the Harlingen, Tex., gunnery school, a specialist in flexible gunnery. . . . And from Northern Ireland, too, comes ward of Sergt. Technician Robert G. VonSts

Grants. The missus heerd_ he is

now a tank commander with the 1st armored regiment. Give it to ‘em, Bob! . . . It's "now Second Lieut. J. R. Mann (3540 N. Tae He graduated this week from cheme ical warfare service at Edgewood, Md. He used to be varsity track team menager g

. This week’s Cupid-congra To Capt. Richard L. Burkhart ¢ of Fort Bragg who's just bec

engaged to marry Lucille McNeill of § ; ford, N. C. Fort Bragg’s right close to B Jorg, you know!

WORLD ORDER

§ | The Rev. McPh

Marian

erson, Elizabeth Randolph, Emmet

Serghe

10th) is stationed in Fort

-

. . He says = nothing about the