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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Defenders of Democracy, by Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Defenders of Democracy
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: September 30, 2012 [EBook #40905]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DEFENDERS OF DEMOCRACY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
-generously made available by The Internet Archive.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40905 ***
DEFENDERS OF DEMOCRACY
@@ -750,7 +717,7 @@ Artillery]
Roll of Honor
- |_Killed in action_
+ ¦_Killed in action_
+_Died of disease_
*_Photo_
@@ -764,7 +731,7 @@ Roll of Honor
ANDREWS, J. C.
AUGHTMAN, JOHN
- |*BACHELOR, HARRY
+ ¦*BACHELOR, HARRY
BAKER, WILLIAM
*BANKSTON, GEORGE
BARNETT, CLAUDE
@@ -785,7 +752,7 @@ Roll of Honor
*CALDWELL, GEORGE
*CARLISLE, HENRY
- |*CARLISLE, MERRITT
+ ¦*CARLISLE, MERRITT
CARMICHAEL, GEORGE
CARMICHAEL, JIM
*CASON, THOMAS
@@ -797,9 +764,9 @@ Roll of Honor
*COFFEE, WENDELL
*COLEMAN, J. W.
*COLLINS, HARVEY R.
- |*COX, FENNIMORE
+ ¦*COX, FENNIMORE
*CROWDER, HOYT
- |*CROWDER, LESTER D.
+ ¦*CROWDER, LESTER D.
*CULPEPPER, OREIN W.
CUMMINGS, HOBSON
@@ -817,7 +784,7 @@ Roll of Honor
*FREEMAN, WILLIAM E.
*FINCHER, EUGENE
*FINCHER, GEORGE
- |*FOSTER, WESLEY
+ ¦*FOSTER, WESLEY
*GETER, WALTER
*GILL, WILL
@@ -923,7 +890,7 @@ Roll of Honor
*TALLY, CHARLIE
*TALLY, ROBERT
- |*THOMASTON, THOMAS
+ ¦*THOMASTON, THOMAS
*THOMASTON, WILLIAM L.
*TURNER, HUGH
@@ -1560,7 +1527,7 @@ Btn. H.Q.I.]
Roll of Honor
- |_Killed in action_
+ ¦_Killed in action_
+_Died of disease_
*_Photo_
@@ -1572,10 +1539,10 @@ Roll of Honor
*BAKER, JOHN J.
*BARNES, D. H.
*BARNES, J. C.
- |BEARD, A. E.
+ ¦BEARD, A. E.
*BLACKWELDER, FLOYD
*BOWLES, J. T.
- |*BRIDGES, JIM
+ ¦*BRIDGES, JIM
*CANADY, HOYT A.
*CARMACK, JOHN
@@ -1588,7 +1555,7 @@ Roll of Honor
*COULTER, ROY D.
CROWDER, LEE
- |DABBS, H. L.
+ ¦DABBS, H. L.
*DAVIS, J. S.
DELOACH, BIRDIE E.
DELOACH, O. D.
@@ -1629,7 +1596,7 @@ Roll of Honor
*LYONS, J. C.
*MANGRUM, WILFORD
- |*MANGRUM, WM. P.
+ ¦*MANGRUM, WM. P.
MANLEY, BERNARD
*MILAM, RANCE
MURPHY, N. B.
@@ -1664,7 +1631,7 @@ Roll of Honor
TAUNTON, JESSE
TAYLOR, C. Z.
*TERRELL, C. T.
- |*THOMAS, BENNIE
+ ¦*THOMAS, BENNIE
*TYSON, THOMAS
*WALLACE, JOHN T.
@@ -1673,7 +1640,7 @@ Roll of Honor
*WATERS, CLINTON
*WATERS, KYLE
*WATKINS, ROY W.
- |*WHATLEY, JOHN D.
+ ¦*WHATLEY, JOHN D.
*WHITE, FLOYD
*WHITE, JOHN D.
*WHITLOW, OLIN
@@ -1694,7 +1661,7 @@ Colored
GIBSON, B. C.
- |HAFFNER, RICHARD
+ ¦HAFFNER, RICHARD
LITTLEFIELD, B. K.
@@ -2218,7 +2185,7 @@ Train]
Roll of Honor
+_Died of disease_
- |_Killed in action_
+ ¦_Killed in action_
ALLEN, GRADY
@@ -2229,7 +2196,7 @@ Roll of Honor
BATES, JAMES ARTHUR
BLACKWELL, WALTER
BLANKS, WILLIAM A.
- |BOHANNON, J. MEM
+ ¦BOHANNON, J. MEM
+BOHANNON, WALTER T.
BOON, GRADY
BRANNON, HENRY J.
@@ -2263,7 +2230,7 @@ Roll of Honor
HORNSBY, AUSTIN M.
JAMES, RONALD E.
- |JOHNSON, JAMES LEE
+ ¦JOHNSON, JAMES LEE
JOHNSON, OLIN
JOSEPH, ELLIS
@@ -2271,7 +2238,7 @@ Roll of Honor
LANDRETH, THOMAS
LANEY, OCIE
- |LAUDERDALE, S. H.
+ ¦LAUDERDALE, S. H.
MANNING, WILLIAM C.
MOON, EULOS
@@ -2285,7 +2252,7 @@ Roll of Honor
O'NEAL, WILL
ORRICK, AMOS
- |PERRYMAN, FRED
+ ¦PERRYMAN, FRED
ROBERTS, ANDREW
@@ -2293,7 +2260,7 @@ Roll of Honor
SMITH, CHARLES M.
SMITH, DOUGLAS M.
SMITH, WALTER LEE
- |STANFIELD, CHARLIE D.
+ ¦STANFIELD, CHARLIE D.
STEPHENS, ALBERT E.
TANKERSLEY, GEORGE F.
@@ -2695,7 +2662,7 @@ Infantry Band]
Roll of Honor
- |_Killed in action_
+ ¦_Killed in action_
ABERNATHY, EDWIN
ABERNATHY, YOUNG T.
@@ -2725,7 +2692,7 @@ Roll of Honor
DIXON, I. GRADY
DIXON, NELLO M.
DUFFEY, LEON
- |DUNN, TERRY A.
+ ¦DUNN, TERRY A.
ENNIS, ROBERT
@@ -3541,360 +3508,4 @@ Passages in bold are indicated by =bold=.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Defenders of Democracy, by Anonymous
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 40905 ***
diff --git a/40905-8.txt b/40905-8.txt
deleted file mode 100644
index 2435f36..0000000
--- a/40905-8.txt
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,3900 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Defenders of Democracy, by Anonymous
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: Defenders of Democracy
-
-Author: Anonymous
-
-Release Date: September 30, 2012 [EBook #40905]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DEFENDERS OF DEMOCRACY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images
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-
-
-DEFENDERS OF DEMOCRACY
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-_To the brave men and heroic women of Lanett, Shawmut, Langdale, Fairfax
-and Riverview, who have gone forth to do battle for the democracy of the
-world: and to the loved ones they have left behind, this book is
-affectionately dedicated._
-
-
-This book is made possible by the generous co-operation of the officers of
-the West Point Manufacturing Company and Lanett Cotton Mills. It is the
-result of the combined efforts of the War Service Station in each mill
-locality to pay at least a feeble tribute to the gallant doughboy who
-enlisted in the cause of right and democracy. It is hoped that, as the
-years pass by, these crusaders and their posterity may find an increasing
-interest in this memorial to their heroism.
-
-Also, it has been thought advisable to preserve a record of the
-accomplishments of all those patriotic forces which contributed their part
-towards the successful termination of the greatest conflict in history.
-
-It would not be amiss to call particular attention to the War Service
-Stations, under whose leadership was fostered practically all of the
-patriotic work consummated by those at home. That these Stations were a
-comfort to our boys--in their interest and solicitude for them--is
-attested by the letters reproduced.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: PRESIDENT WOODROW WILSON _Commander-in-Chief_ UNITED STATES
-ARMY]
-
-
-The President's War Message
-
-Delivered before Congress April 2, 1917
-
-I have called the Congress into extraordinary session because there are
-serious, very serious, choices of policy to be made, and made immediately,
-which it was neither right nor constitutionally permissible that I should
-assume the responsibility of making.
-
-On the third of February last, I officially laid before you the
-extraordinary announcement of the Imperial German Government that on and
-after the first day of February it was its purpose to put aside all
-restraints of law or of humanity and use its submarines to sink every
-vessel that sought to approach either the ports of Great Britain and
-Ireland or the western coasts of Europe or any of the ports controlled by
-the enemies of Germany within the Mediterranean.
-
-That had seemed to be the object of the German submarine warfare earlier
-in the war; but since April of last year the Imperial Government had
-somewhat restrained the commanders of its undersea craft in conformity
-with its promise then given to us that passenger boats should not be sunk,
-and that due warning would be given to all other vessels which its
-submarines might seek to destroy, when no resistance was offered or escape
-attempted, and care taken that their crews were given at least a fair
-chance to save their lives in their open boats.
-
-The precautions taken were meager and haphazard enough, as was proved in
-distressing instance after instance in the progress of the cruel and
-unmanly business, but a certain degree of restraint was observed.
-
-The new policy has swept every restriction aside. Vessels of every kind,
-whatever their flag, their character, their cargo, their destination,
-their errand, have been ruthlessly sent to the bottom without warning and
-without thought of help or mercy for those on board--the vessels of
-friendly neutrals, along with belligerents.
-
-Even hospital ships and ships carrying relief to the sorely bereaved and
-stricken people of Belgium, though the latter were provided with safe
-conduct through the proscribed areas by the German Government itself and
-were distinguished by unmistakable marks of identity, have been sunk with
-the same reckless lack of compassion or of principle.
-
-I was for a little while unable to believe that such things would in fact
-be done by any government that had hitherto subscribed to the humane
-practices of civilized nations.
-
-International law had its origin in the attempt to set up some law which
-would be respected and observed upon the seas, where no nation had right
-of dominion and where lay the free highways of the world.
-
-By painful stage after stage has that law been built up, with meager
-enough results, indeed, after all was accomplished that could be
-accomplished, but always with a clear view, at least, of what the heart
-and conscience of mankind demanded.
-
-This minimum of right the German Government has swept aside under the plea
-of retaliation and necessity, and because it had no weapons which it could
-use at sea except these which it is impossible to employ as it is
-employing them without throwing to the winds all scruples of humanity or
-of respect for the understandings that were supposed to underlie the
-intercourse of the world.
-
-I am not now thinking of the loss of property involved, immense and
-serious as that is, but only of the wanton and wholesale destruction of
-the lives of non-combatants, men, women and children, engaged in pursuits
-which have always, even in the darkest periods of modern history, been
-deemed innocent and legitimate.
-
-Property can be paid for; the lives of peaceful and innocent people cannot
-be.
-
-The present German submarine warfare against commerce is a warfare against
-mankind. It is a war against all nations.
-
-American ships have been sunk, American lives taken, in ways which it has
-stirred us very deeply to learn of, but the ships and people of other
-neutral and friendly nations have been sunk and overwhelmed in the waters
-in the same way. There has been no discrimination.
-
-The challenge is to all mankind. Each nation must decide for itself how it
-will meet it.
-
-The choice we make for ourselves must be made with a moderation of counsel
-and a temperateness of judgment befitting our character and our motives as
-a nation. We must put excited feeling away.
-
-Our motive will not be revenge or the victorious assertion of the physical
-might of the Nation, but only the vindication of right, of human right, of
-which we are only a single champion.
-
-When I addressed the Congress on the twenty-sixth of February last, I
-thought that it would suffice to assert our neutral rights with arms, our
-right to use the seas against unlawful interference, our right to keep our
-people safe against unlawful violence.
-
-But armed neutrality, it now appears, is impracticable. Because submarines
-are in effect outlaws when used as the German submarines have been used
-against merchant shipping, it is impossible to defend ships against their
-attacks as the law of nations has assumed that merchantmen would defend
-themselves against privateers or cruisers, visible craft giving chase upon
-the open sea.
-
-It is common prudence in such circumstances, grim necessity indeed, to
-endeavor to destroy them before they have shown their own intention. They
-must be dealt with upon sight, if dealt with at all.
-
-The German Government denies the right of neutrals to use arms at all
-within the areas of the sea which it has proscribed, even in the defense
-of rights which no modern publicist has ever before questioned their right
-to defend. The intimation is conveyed that the armed guards which we have
-placed on our merchant ships will be treated as beyond the pale of law and
-subject to be dealt with as pirates would be. Armed neutrality is
-ineffectual enough at best; in such circumstances and in the face of such
-pretensions it is worse than ineffectual; it is likely only to produce
-what it was meant to prevent; it is practically certain to draw us into
-the war without either the rights or the effectiveness of belligerents.
-
-There is one choice we cannot make, we are incapable of making: we will
-not choose the path of submission and suffer the most sacred rights of our
-Nation and our people to be ignored or violated. The wrongs against which
-we now array ourselves are no common wrongs; they cut to the very roots of
-human life.
-
-With a profound sense of the solemn and even tragical character of the
-step I am taking and of the grave responsibilities which it involves, but
-in unhesitating obedience to what I deem my constitutional duty, I advise
-that the Congress declare the recent course of the Imperial German
-Government to be in fact nothing less than war against the Government and
-people of the United States; that it formally accept the status of
-belligerent which has thus been thrust upon it; and that it take immediate
-steps not only to put the country in a more thorough state of defense, but
-also to exert all its power and employ all its resources to bring the
-Government of the German Empire to terms and end the war.
-
-What this will involve is clear. It will involve the utmost practicable
-co-operation in counsel and action with the governments now at war with
-Germany, and, as incident to that, the extension to those governments of
-the most liberal financial credits in order that our resources may, so far
-as possible, be added to theirs. It will involve the organization and
-mobilization of all the material resources of the country to supply the
-materials of war and serve the incidental needs of the Nation in the most
-abundant and yet the most economical and efficient way possible. It will
-involve the immediate full equipment of the Navy in all respects, but
-particularly in supplying it with the best means of dealing with the
-enemy's submarines. It will involve the immediate addition to the armed
-forces of the United States already provided for by law in case of war at
-least five hundred thousand men, who should, in my opinion, be chosen upon
-the principle of universal liability to service, and also the
-authorization of subsequent additional increments of equal force so soon
-as they may be needed and can be handled in training.
-
-It will involve also, of course, the granting of adequate credits to the
-Government, sustained, I hope, so far as they can equitably be sustained
-by the present generation, by well-conceived taxation. I say sustained so
-far as may be equitable by taxation because it seems to me that it would
-be most unwise to base the credits which will now be necessary entirely on
-money borrowed. It is our duty, I most respectfully urge, to protect our
-people so far as we may, against the very serious hardships and evils
-which would be likely to arise out of the inflation which would be
-produced by vast loans.
-
-In carrying out the measures by which these things are to be accomplished
-we should keep constantly in mind the wisdom of interfering as little as
-possible in our own preparation and in the equipment of our own military
-forces with the duty--for it will be a very practical duty--of supplying
-the nations already at war with Germany with the materials which they can
-obtain only from us or by our assistance. They are in the field and we
-should help them in every way to be effective there.
-
-I shall take the liberty of suggesting, through the several executive
-departments of the Government, for the consideration of your committees,
-measures for the accomplishment of the several objects I have mentioned. I
-hope that it will be your pleasure to deal with them as having been framed
-after very careful thought by the branch of the Government upon which the
-responsibility of conducting the war and safeguarding the Nation will most
-directly fall.
-
-While we do these things, these deeply momentous things, let us be very
-clear, and make very clear to all the world what our motives and our
-objects are. My own thought has not been driven from its habitual and
-normal course by the unhappy events of the last two months, and I do not
-believe that the thought of the Nation has been altered or clouded by
-them.
-
-I have exactly the same things in mind now that I had in mind when I
-addressed the Senate on the twenty-second of January last; the same that I
-had in mind when I addressed the Congress on the third of February and on
-the twenty-sixth of February.
-
-Our object now, as then, is to vindicate the principles of peace and
-justice in the life of the world as against selfish and autocratic power
-and to set up amongst the really free and self-governed peoples of the
-world such a concert of purpose and of action as will henceforth insure
-the observance of those principles.
-
-Neutrality is no longer feasible or desirable where the peace of the world
-is involved and the freedom of its peoples, and the menace to that peace
-and freedom lies in the existence of autocratic governments backed by
-organized force which is controlled wholly by their will, not the will of
-their people. We have seen the last of neutrality in such circumstances.
-
-We are at the beginning of an age in which it will be insisted that the
-same standards of conduct and of responsibility for wrong done shall be
-observed among nations and their governments that are observed among the
-individual citizens of civilized states.
-
-We have no quarrel with the German people. We have no feeling toward them
-but one of sympathy and friendship. It was not upon their impulse that
-their Government acted in entering this war. It was not with their
-previous knowledge or approval.
-
-It was a war determined upon as wars used to be determined upon in the
-old, unhappy days when peoples were nowhere consulted by their rulers and
-wars were provoked and waged in the interest of dynasties or of little
-groups of ambitious men who were accustomed to use their fellow men as
-pawns and tools.
-
-Self-governed nations do not fill their neighbor states with spies or set
-the course of intrigue to bring about some critical posture of affairs
-which will give them an opportunity to strike and make conquest. Such
-designs can be successfully worked out only under cover and where no one
-has the right to ask questions.
-
-Cunningly contrived plans of deception or aggression, carried, it may be,
-from generation to generation, can be worked out and kept from the light
-only within the privacy of courts or behind the carefully guarded
-confidences of a narrow and privileged class. They are happily impossible
-where public opinion commands and insists upon full information concerning
-all the nation's affairs.
-
-A steadfast concert for peace can never be maintained except by a
-partnership of democratic nations. No autocratic government could be
-trusted to keep faith within it or observe its covenants. It must be a
-league of honor, a partnership of opinion.
-
-Intrigue would eat its vitals away; the plottings of inner circles who
-could plan what they would and render account to no one would be a
-corruption seated at its very heart. Only free peoples can hold their
-purpose and their honor steady to a common end and prefer the interests of
-mankind to any narrow interest of their own.
-
-Does not every American feel that assurance has been added to our hope for
-the future peace of the world by the wonderful and heartening things that
-have been happening within the last few weeks in Russia?
-
-Russia was known by those who knew it best to have been always in fact
-democratic at heart, in all the vital habits of her thought, in all the
-intimate relationships of her people that spoke their natural instinct,
-their habitual attitude toward life.
-
-The autocracy that crowned the summit of her political structure, long as
-it has stood and terrible as was the reality of its power, was not in fact
-Russian in origin, character or purpose; and now it has been shaken off
-and the great, generous Russian people have been added in all their native
-majesty and might to the forces that are fighting for freedom in the
-world, for justice, and for peace. Here is a fit partner for a League of
-Honor.
-
-One of the things that has served to convince us that the Prussian
-autocracy was not and could never be our friend is that from the very
-outset of the present war it has filled our unsuspecting communities and
-even our offices of Government with spies and set criminal intrigues
-everywhere afoot against our national unity of council, our peace within
-and without, our industries and our commerce.
-
-Indeed, it is now evident that its spies were here even before the war
-began; and it unhappily is not a matter of conjecture, but a fact proved
-in our courts of justice, that the intrigues which have more than once
-come perilously near to disturbing the peace and dislocating the
-industries of the country have been carried on at the instigation, with
-the support, and even under the personal direction of official agents of
-the Imperial Government accredited to the Government of the United States.
-
-Even in checking these things and trying to extirpate them we have sought
-to put the most generous interpretation possible upon them because we knew
-that their source lay, not in any hostile feeling or purpose of the German
-people toward us (who were, no doubt, as ignorant of them as we ourselves
-were), but only in the selfish designs of a Government that did what it
-pleased and told its people nothing. But they have played their part in
-serving to convince us at last that that Government entertains no real
-friendship for us and means to act against our peace and security at its
-convenience. That it means to stir up enemies against us at our very
-doors, the intercepted note to the German Minister at Mexico City is
-eloquent evidence.
-
-We are accepting this challenge of hostile purpose because we know that in
-such a Government, following such methods, we can never have a friend; and
-that in the presence of its organized power, always lying in wait to
-accomplish we know not what purpose, there can be no assured security for
-the democratic governments of the world.
-
-We are now about to accept gauge of battle with this natural foe to
-liberty and shall, if necessary, spend the whole force of the Nation to
-check and nullify its pretensions and its power. We are glad, now that we
-see the facts with no veil of false pretense about them, to fight for the
-ultimate peace of the world and for the liberation of its peoples, the
-German peoples included: for the rights of nations great and small and the
-privilege of men everywhere to choose their way of life and of obedience.
-The world must be made safe for democracy. Its peace must be planted upon
-the tested foundations of political liberty.
-
-We have no selfish ends to serve. We desire no conquest, no dominion. We
-seek no indemnities for ourselves, no material compensation for the
-sacrifices we shall freely make. We are but one of the champions of the
-rights of mankind. We shall be satisfied when those rights have been made
-as secure as the faith and the freedom of nations can make them.
-
-Just because we fight without rancor, without selfish object, seeking
-nothing for ourselves but what we shall wish to share with all free
-peoples, we shall, I feel confident, conduct our operations as
-belligerents without passion and ourselves observe with proud punctilio
-the principles of right and of fair play we profess to be fighting for.
-
-I have said nothing of the governments allied with the Imperial Government
-of Germany because they have not made war upon us or challenged us to
-defend our right and our honor. The Austro-Hungarian Government has,
-indeed, avowed its unqualified indorsement and acceptance of the reckless
-and lawless submarine warfare adopted now without disguise by the Imperial
-German Government, and it has therefore not been possible for this
-Government to receive Count Tarnowski, the Ambassador recently accredited
-to this Government by the Imperial and Royal Government of
-Austria-Hungary; but that Government has not actually engaged in warfare
-against citizens of the United States on the seas, and I take the liberty,
-for the present at least, of postponing a discussion of our relations with
-the authorities at Vienna. We enter this war only where we are clearly
-forced into it because there are no other means of defending our rights.
-
-It will be all the easier for us to conduct ourselves as belligerents in a
-high spirit of right and fairness because we act without animus, not in
-enmity toward a people nor with the desire to bring any injury or
-disadvantage upon them, but only in armed opposition to an irresponsible
-Government which has thrown aside all considerations of humanity and of
-right and is running amuck.
-
-We are, let me say again, the sincere friends of the German people, and
-shall desire nothing so much as the early re-establishment of intimate
-relations of mutual advantage between us--however hard it may be for them,
-for the time being, to believe that this is spoken from our hearts. We
-have borne with their present Government through all these bitter months
-because of that friendship--exercising a patience and forbearance which
-would otherwise have been impossible. We shall, happily, still have an
-opportunity to prove that friendship in our daily attitude and actions
-toward the millions of men and women of German birth and native sympathy
-who live amongst us and share our life, and we shall be proud to prove it
-toward all who are in fact loyal to their neighbors and to the Government
-in the hour of test. They are, most of them, as true and loyal Americans
-as if they had never known any other fealty or allegiance.
-
-They will be prompt to stand with us in rebuking and restraining the few
-who may be of a different mind and purpose.
-
-If there should be disloyalty, it will be dealt with with a firm hand of
-stern repression; but, if it lifts its head at all, it will lift it only
-here and there and without countenance except from a lawless and malignant
-few.
-
-It is a distressing and oppressive duty, Gentlemen of the Congress, which
-I have performed in thus addressing you. There are, it may be, many months
-of fiery trial and sacrifice ahead of us. It is a fearful thing to lead
-this great peaceful people into war, into the most terrible and disastrous
-of all wars, civilization itself seeming to be in the balance. But the
-right is more precious than peace, and we shall fight for the things which
-we have always carried nearest our hearts--for democracy, for the right of
-those who submit to authority to have a voice in their own governments,
-for the rights and liberties of small nations, for a universal dominion of
-right by such a concert of free peoples as shall bring peace and safety to
-all nations and make the world itself at last free.
-
-To such a task we can dedicate our lives and our fortunes, everything that
-we are and everything that we have, with the pride of those who know that
-the day has come when America is privileged to spend her blood and her
-might for the principles that gave her birth and happiness and the peace
-which she has treasured. God helping her, she can do no other.
-
-Woodrow Wilson
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: GENERAL JOHN J. PERSHING _Commander-in-Chief_ AMERICAN
-EXPEDITIONARY FORCES]
-
-[Illustration: ADMIRAL SIMS _Commander-in-Chief_ UNITED STATES NAVAL
-FORCES]
-
-
-
-
-_Lanett_
-
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Joe F. Adams= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. George Alexander= Company E 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Loyd Allen= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Will T. Anderson= Company C 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Clyde Andrews= Company B 3d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Chas. H. Barnett= Battery C 6th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Harry Bachelor= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Claude Barnett= Bakery Co. 357]
-
-[Illustration: =Sailor George Bankston= U.S.S. Rhode Island]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jesse Berry= Company C 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Earl Beal= Battery F 53d Artillery C.A.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Edgar Blakely= Medical Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. James Blackmon= 19th Division Supply Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Mark B. Blackmon= Company C 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Willie H. Brewer= Company G 2d Training Reg.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Earnest G. Brewster= Company 39 157th Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Eddie E. Buchannan= 1st Company 1st Army Corps School
-Det.]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Thos. H. Cason= Company C 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. George Caldwell= Company B 324th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Merritt E. Carlisle= Company L 327th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Henry Carlisle= Battery E 21st Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Jno. G. Chapman= Quartermaster Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. T. G. Clements= 2d Provisional Depot Battalion]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Maj. Guy Coffee= Hdqtrs. Company 384th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Tipton Coffee= Y. M. C. A.]
-
-[Illustration: =Wendell Coffee= Ph. M.1 U.S.S. Kentucky]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Ewell Coffee= Company B 17th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Harvey R. Collins= Company B 6th Repl. Reg. Inf.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. A. Fennimore Cox= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jesse W. Coleman= Company B 151st Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hoyt Crowder= 3d Company Developing Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Lester D. Crowder= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Cook O. W. Culpepper= Company I M.T.C.R.U. 307]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Leroy Daniel= Hdqtrs. Company 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Elijah Daniel= 6th Company Development Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Robert Dailey= Battery E 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Winfred L. Deloach= Battery C 7th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Huburt Denham= Battery D 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Radney Dobson= Company H 161st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Gay Dunn= Company B 48th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. A. E. Fincher= 2d Provisional R.R.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. George Fincher= Company B 359th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Isac Free= Mach. Gun Company 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. William E. Freeman= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Wesley Foster= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Will H. Gill= Company C 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Tolbert H. Gray= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Ben W. Griffeth= Company B 34th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Allie Griffin= Company E 123d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. B. Grier= Company G 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Alver Gunn= Company E 7th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John B. Gunn= Battery F 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Richard Hadaway= Company E 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Brinton Hall= Company H 161st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Will H. Hammock= 20th Company 156th Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Robert Hammock= 65th Company 6th Group M.T.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. L. Clyde Harmon= Bakery Co. 326]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Grady Harmon= Company 7 Infantry Repl. Unit]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hobson H. Harmon= Supply Battery 56th Field
-Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Phillip H. Heard= Company D 66th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. James Heard= Company A 59th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Roland Shaefer Heard= Yeoman 3 c. 8 U.S. Navy Yard
-Charleston, S.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Buford Heggood= 118th Infantry Band 59th Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hobson Heggood= Post Military Band Edgewood Arsenal]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. F. M. Heggood= 118th Infantry Band]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Emmit Henderson= Company G 165th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. S. Calloway Herring= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Charles Frank Hill= Battery C 3d Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. John J. Seymore= Company C 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Musc. David Holloway= 167th Infantry Band]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Minor Hood= Company D 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jack Howard= Company 17 5th Reg. U.S. Marine Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jno. M. Howarth= S.A.T.C. Auburn, Ala.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Reuben J. Jennings= S.A.T.C. Marion Inst.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John Johnson= Company A 106th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Frank P. Jones= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Oscar King= Company C 54th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Belah King= 5th Company Coast Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Marion W. Knight= Quartermaster Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joe W. Knight= Marine Guard Naval Radio Station]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John C. Leonard= Casual Co. 63 162d Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hobson Lewis= Company E 3d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Evans McGhee= Company C 3d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Gip. L. McGhee= 23d. Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. James McGlon= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jesse McGlon= 64th Engineers R.O.T.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Curtis McNaron= Company L 115th U.S.G.N.A.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Brant F. Maguire= 13th Company 5th Platoon]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. T. Manley= Battery D 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Luther Martin= 39th Company 10th Training Btn. 157th
-Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Earnest R. Mitchell= Hdqtrs. Company 152d Depot
-Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Lofton Mitchell= Company E 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Cluster Morgan= Company M 70th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Edd L. Newby= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Newsome= Company A 168th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Eugene Oliver= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Calvin Parker= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Henry M. Parker= Quartermaster Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Watson Phillips= Quartermaster Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. George C. Pryor= Medical Dept. 6th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. William C. Raines= Headquarters Band 116th Field
-Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Willie Rogers= Company A 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Charles E. Sanders= Motor Truck Co. 332]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Charles Sedinger= Company D 6th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jimmie Seymour= Company A 101st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Thomas M. Simms= Company E 307th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Grady Smith= Medical Dept. 157th Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joe Smith= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Ollie Smith= Company C 321st Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John W. Stewart= Company H 43d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. James Stearns= Battery C 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Harvey D. Stephens= Company C 321st Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Eugene Stiff= Company G 122d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Charles Tally= Hdqtrs. Troops 314th Cavalry]
-
-[Illustration: =Horseshoer Thomas Tally= Battery D 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Lomas Thomaston= Company A 1st Infantry Regl. and
-Trn. Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Thomas Thomaston= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hugh Turner= Company D 19th Btn. U.S.G.N.A.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James Ward= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Quincer W. Whittle= Company B 116th Supply Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Ocie T. Wilbanks= Company E 20th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Colvin Wilbanks= 71st Company 6th Group M.T.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Robert Williams= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Jesse Von Williams= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Sailor Charles Winningham= U.S.S. Camden Detail League
-Island Navy Yard]
-
-[Illustration: =Charles H. Yarbrough= Ph. M.3 Bay Ridge Rec. Ship]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Dan H. Hart= Company H 123d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Carl Smith= Company H 123d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. William D. Purcell= Company A 306 Ammunition Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Geter= Company 21 R.R.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Chester D. May= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Eugene Herring= Company C 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Robert Hollis= Company K 16th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James E. Robinson= 8th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hobson Cummings= S.A.T.C. Auburn, Ala.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Peppers= Company 39 New Receiving Camp]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jim B. Morris= Hdqtrs. Company 115th Field
-Artillery]
-
-
-Roll of Honor
-
- ¦_Killed in action_
- +_Died of disease_
- *_Photo_
-
- *ADAMS, J. F.
- ALLEN, MARSHALL
- ALEXANDER, BEN
- *ALEXANDER, GEORGE
- *ALLEN, LOYD
- *ANDERSON, WILL
- +*ANDREWS, CLYDE
- ANDREWS, J. C.
- AUGHTMAN, JOHN
-
- ¦*BACHELOR, HARRY
- BAKER, WILLIAM
- *BANKSTON, GEORGE
- BARNETT, CLAUDE
- BARNETT, CHARLES H.
- BARTON, TEBE
- *BEAL, EARL
- *BERRY, JESSE
- *BLACKMON, JAMES
- *BLACKMON, MARK
- *BLAKELY, EDGAR
- BOGGS, JAMES G.
- BOWLING, I. L.
- *BREWER, WILLIE H.
- BREWSTER, EARNEST G.
- BROWN, JESSE
- BRUMALOE, C. C.
- *BUCHANNAN, EDWARD E.
-
- *CALDWELL, GEORGE
- *CARLISLE, HENRY
- ¦*CARLISLE, MERRITT
- CARMICHAEL, GEORGE
- CARMICHAEL, JIM
- *CASON, THOMAS
- *CHAPMAN, JOHN
- *CLEMENTS, T. G.
- *COFFEE, EWELL
- *COFFEE, GUY
- *COFFEE, TIPTON
- *COFFEE, WENDELL
- *COLEMAN, J. W.
- *COLLINS, HARVEY R.
- ¦*COX, FENNIMORE
- *CROWDER, HOYT
- ¦*CROWDER, LESTER D.
- *CULPEPPER, OREIN W.
- CUMMINGS, HOBSON
-
- *DAILEY, ROBERT
- *DANIEL, ELIJAH
- *DANIEL, LEROY
- *DELOACH, WINFRED L.
- *DENHAM, HUBURT
- *DOBSON, RADNEY
- *DUNN, LONNIE G.
-
- EAST, ALBERT
-
- *FREE, ISAC
- *FREEMAN, WILLIAM E.
- *FINCHER, EUGENE
- *FINCHER, GEORGE
- ¦*FOSTER, WESLEY
-
- *GETER, WALTER
- *GILL, WILL
- *GRAY, TOLBERT H.
- *GRIER, JOE B.
- *GRIFFETH, BEN W.
- *GRIFFIN, ALLIE
- *GUNN, ALVER T.
- *GUNN, JOHN B.
-
- *HADAWAY, RICHARD
- *HALL, BRINTON
- *HAMMOCK, ROBERT L.
- *HAMMOCK, WILL H.
- *HARMON, CLYDE
- *HARMON, GRADY
- *HARMON, HOBSON
- *HART, DAN
- *HEARD, PHILLIP
- *HEARD, JAMES E.
- *HEARD, SHAEFER
- *HEGGOOD, BUFORD
- *HEGGOOD, F. M.
- *HEGGOOD, HOBSON
- *HENDERSON, EMMIT
- *HERRING, EUGENE
- *HERRING, S. CALLOWAY
- *HILL, CHARLES FRANK
- HILL, CHARLIE
- *HOLLIS, ROBERT
- *HOLLOWAY, DAVID
- *HOOD, MINOR
- *HOWARD, JACK
- *HOWARTH, JOHN M.
-
- JENKINS, HAMP
- *JENNINGS, RUBE J.
- *JOHNSON, JOHN
- *JONES, FRANK P.
-
- KENDRICK, JOHN
- *KING, BELAH
- *KING, OSCAR
- *KNIGHT, MARION
- *KNIGHT, JOE
- KNIGHT, HORACE
- KYNARD, O. D.
-
- *LEONARD, JOHN C.
- *LEWIS, HOBSON J.
- LEWIS, EDD
-
- MANNING, E.
- MARTIN, CLARENCE
- *MAY, CHESTER D.
- *MITCHELL, EARNEST
- *MITCHELL, LOFTON
- *MORGAN, CLUSTER
- *MORRIS, JIM B.
- *MAGUIRE, BRANT F.
- *MANLEY, J. T.
- *MARTIN, LUTHER
- *MCGHEE, EVANS
- MCGHEE, GIP L.
- *MCGLON, JESSE
- *MCGLON, JAMES
- *MCNARON, CURTIS
-
- NEESE, KENNY
- *NEWBY, EDD L.
- *NEWSOME, WALTER
- NORMAN, RAEMON
-
- *OLIVER, EUGENE
-
- *PARKER, CALVIN
- *PARKER, MOSE HENRY
- PEPPERS, WALTER
- *PHILLIPS, WATSON
- *PRYOR, GEORGE C.
- *PURCELL, WILLIAM D.
-
- *RAINES, WILLIAM C.
- ROBINSON, JAMES E.
- ROBINSON, OSCAR
- *ROGERS, WILLIAM
-
- *SANDERS, C. E.
- SANDS, L. C.
- *SEDINGER, CHARLES
- *SEYMORE, JAMES
- *SEYMORE, JOHN J.
- *SIMS, THOMAS M.
- *SMITH, CARL
- *SMITH, GRADY
- *SMITH, JOE
- *SMITH, OLLIE
- *STEARNS, JAMES
- *STEVENS, HARVEY D.
- STEVENS, OTIS
- *STEWART, JOHN W.
- *STIFF, EUGENE
-
- *TALLY, CHARLIE
- *TALLY, ROBERT
- ¦*THOMASTON, THOMAS
- *THOMASTON, WILLIAM L.
- *TURNER, HUGH
-
- *WARD, JAMES
- *WHITTLE, QUINCER
- *WILBANKS, COLVIN
- *WILBANKS, OCIE T.
- *WILLIAMS, JESSE VON
- *WILLIAMS, ROBERT
- *WINNINGHAM, CHARLES
- WINSLETT, R. D.
-
- *YARBROUGH, CHARLES H.
-
-
-Colored
-
- ASKEW, FRANK
-
- BROCK, BILL
-
- COLLINS, JIM
- COLLINS, JOHN
- CHAPPEL, DOCK
- CHEERY, ABRAHAM
-
- DALLIS, WILLIE
- DUNCAN, JAMES D.
- DUNCAN, JOHN
- DUNCAN, WILL
- DUNCAN, LINDSEY
-
- FITSPATRICK, HENRY
-
- GATES, RICHARD
- GIPSON, CHARLIE
- GORDON, W. M.
- GOSS, JIM
- GOSS, NAPOLEON
- GREENWOOD, ENOCH
- GREER, WILLIAM A., JR.
-
- HARRIS, HOSEA
- HILL, CLARENCE
- HILL, STANLEY
- HUGULEY, DOCK
-
- JORDON, EDD
-
- MCKINLEY, JEFF
-
- OLIVER, WESLEY
- ONEAL, ALVA
-
- ROBERSON, EARLY
-
- SCOTT, LEE
- SMITH, ELIJAH
-
- TOWLES, WILLIE
- TRAMMEL, LUTHER
-
- WATKINS, ROBERT
- WESTON, GILBERT
- WESTON, WILLIE
- WINSTON, JEFF
- WINSTON, ZACK
-
-
-Extracts of Appreciation
-
-"To know that the people at home are squarely back of us just doubles our
-determination to lick the Boche.... Our first Battalion was the first
-American troops to capture prisoners without the aid of the French or
-British."
-
- DAVID HOLLOWAY
-
-July 8, 1918
-
-"I beg to inform you that there are boys here from the largest cities in
-the country who have been here a long time and never have received as much
-as a card from the numerous organizations in their home cities while I
-have had letters from Lanett Service Station and only been here a month.
-The boys all admit that they have to take off their hats to Lanett for the
-spirit the folks at home show in backing up the boys."
-
- HOBSON G. HEGGOOD
-
-"And if it so be I will stand on the vine clad hills of sunny France and
-give my life for a cause that is just and right."
-
- EVANS MCGHEE
-
-June 14, 1918. _Eagle Pass, Texas_
-
-"Our motto is 'Over the Top and give them H--' and you can take it from me
-that is just what they are doing. Our boys are fighting like our
-grandfathers fought back in the sixties and they are making for themselves
-a name which will never be forgotten."
-
- DAVE HOLLOWAY.
-
-September 21, 1918. _Musician, 167th Inf. Band, Somewhere in France_
-
-"And I am glad that I have such a patriotic town to back me while I do a
-little to help beat the Beast of Berlin."
-
- SGT. EUGENE C. STIFF.
-
-July 23, 1918. _Company 9, 122d Infantry_
-
-"I wish to thank you for the interest the Service Station is taking in me
-and I am sure all the boys from dear old Lanett feel the same as
-myself.... We had three battles with the 'Subs' on my last trip and I am
-proud to say we got three 'Subs' out of three battles."
-
- CHAS. H. YARBROUGH.
-
-_On Board U. S. S. Zeelandia_
-
-"We drove the enemy out of places that looked impossible for it to be
-done, tunnels and under hills and mountains several hundred feet deep, but
-believe me we went in after them without any mercy and finally got them
-going so fast we had to put doughboys in motor trucks and hook the
-kitchens on behind to keep up with them."
-
- THOMAS M. SIMS.
-
-November 30, 1918. _Company E, 307th Engineers_
-
-"Again I offer you a rising and unanimous vote of thanks for your kind
-letters. Number 10 reached me this week and did me more good than a check
-for $50.00 would.... You will have to admit that when the world wanted
-Germany licked they sent over the A. E. F. (After England Failed) and
-three days after I reached the front the second time, the Kaiser packed
-his trick clothes, threw his crown into the garbage pail, put on his
-rubber boots and let himself out the back door."
-
- CORP. W. D. PURCELL
-
-November 21, 1918
-
-"You have no idea how we love to hear from home and to feel that you
-remember us. We can fight a _heap_ better when we're reminded once in a
-while that our loved ones are helping us by keeping us in touch with home
-and sacrificing in numerous ways that we may be more comfortable."
-
- GEORGE BANKSTON
-
-July 16, 1918. _The Rhode Island_
-
-"It is just beginning to seem like 1919 to me and it will be a happy year
-I am sure because it means that I am coming back to the only country on
-earth with all my feet and hands still attached to me.
-
-"Don't close the station until all of us are out of France. I would miss
-your letters and I want to see all the folks at the station and thank them
-for their backing and the interest taken in the boys."
-
- CORP. WM. D. PURCELL
-
-January, 1919. _Somewhere in France_
-
-"My chum called to me and we counted two hundred air planes going over to
-Germany and they were all in sight at one time and they made me think of a
-flock of wild geese back in the States."
-
- ALVER GUNN
-
-October, 1918. _Somewhere in France_
-
-"I thank God I am an American and will go down with my comrades if the
-good Lord so wills that I go that way."
-
-Extract from letter dated August 27, 1918, from Thomas Thomaston, Company
-F, 167th Infantry, who was killed before his letter reached the Service
-Station.
-
-"Yesterday was Christmas and believe me we had some dinner--turkey, pies,
-California cake, dressing, mashed potatoes, celery, tangerines, cigarettes
-and one cigar and a few other things I did not know any name for--and that
-makes me think, I thank you many, many times for the Christmas box. You
-could not have sent anything that would have pleased me more and I assure
-you it was appreciated by myself and friends."
-
- CORP. WM. D. PURCELL
-
-December 26, 1918. _Co. A, 306th Am. Train_
-
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE COMMITTEE, _Lanett_
-
- J. I. WARNER, CHAIRMAN
- LILLIAN WARNER, SECRETARY
- J. L. WELDON
- J. H. HORRARTH
- J. A. SIMMONS]
-
-[Illustration: RECEPTION ROOM. WAR SERVICE STATION. _Lanett_]
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE STATION, _Lanett_]
-
-[Illustration: RED CROSS WORK ROOM, _Lanett_]
-
-
-Managing Committee of Lanett
-
- GEO. H. LANIER
- GEO. S. HARRIS
- R. W. JENNINGS
- J. H. HOWARTH
- J. J. JORDAN
-
-TEAM NO. 1
-
- GEO. S. HARRIS, _Captain_
- J. D. ANDERSON
- JOHN KNOWLES
- EDGAR MITCHELL
- W. W. WALLIS
- JOHN KING
- JOHN SIMMONS
-
-TEAM NO. 2
-
- R. W. JENNINGS, _Captain_
- JOHN I. WARNER
- W. H. GRAY
- BRITT VEAZEY
- GEO. HEARD
-
-TEAM NO. 3
-
- D. A. JOLLY, _Captain_
- TOM SWAN
- P. SORRELL
- W. HOLLIS
- GEO. CROMER
- B. PENNINGTON
-
-TEAM NO. 4
-
- W. S. LEATHERWOOD, _Captain_
- C. E. LUNCEFORD
- H. E. MATHEWS
- A. J. WELDON
- J. N. BARROW
-
-TEAM NO. 5
-
- TIPTON COFFEE, _Captain_
- REV. D. M. JOINER
- G. F. PARTRIDGE
- E. J. GILBERT
- R. D. KING
-
-TEAM NO. 6
-
- D. J. CROWDER, _Captain_
- J. T. AUGHTMAN
- H. C. HAMILTON
- C. E. DELOACH
- SAM JONES
-
-TEAM NO. 7
-
- LEWIS WRIGHT, _Captain_
- C. M. BRADY
- G. B. AVERY
- CLYDE BLAKELY
- GEO. LANIER
-
-TEAM NO. 8
-
- SAMUEL HAYES, _Captain_
- K. KITCHENS
- PATRICK SULLIVAN
- KEIL HOWELL
- NEAL HOLSTUN
-
-TEAM NO. 9
-
- W. F. SIMS, _Captain_
- E. R. CUMMINGS
- JOHN BREWER
- JNO. STRICKLAND
- SMITH LANIER
-
-TEAM NO. 10
-
- DAWSON SWINT, _Captain_
- W. W. WHITSON
- SAM GOODMAN
- RAY COFFEE
- ARTHUR HAGEDORN
- L. S. PHILIPS
-
-TEAM NO. 11
-
- J. J. JORDAN, _Captain_
- W. H. KNIGHT
- J. H. STEVENS
- TOM MCCLENDON
- U. S. WATERS
-
-TEAM NO. 12
-
- JOHN HAGEDORN, _Captain_
- C. C. WILBANKS
- LEE HEYMAN
- C. W. MILFORD
- W. R. HARRISON
-
-TEAM NO. 13
-
- DR. J. L. WELDON, _Captain_
- DR. WHATLEY
- J. H. ALLEN
- CARL CROUCH
- H. M. GAY
-
-TEAM NO. 14
-
- T. L. CROUCH, _Captain_
- V. M. WOOD
- AMOS PRIESTER
- J. A. WHEELER
- O. K. WAITES
-
-TEAM NO. 15
-
- O. A. BONNER, _Captain_
- HARVEY WELDON
- LUTHER BOYD
- WM. Z. TAYLOR
- O. C. MCCLENDON
-
-TEAM NO. 16
-
- R. C. STANFIELD, _Captain_
- J. T. WINNINGHAM
- A. C. LYNN
- S. T. JONES
-
-TEAM NO. 17
-
- JAMES WALLACE, _Captain_
- EMORY COFFEE
- W. H. WRIGHT
- E. P. RUTLAND
- PARKER HORN
- A. L. SMITH
-
-TEAM NO. 18
-
- J. C. BERRY, _Captain_
- JESSE LAUDERMILK
- DR. MCCULLOH
- HOMER WILBANKS
- BOB HARRISON
-
-TEAM NO. 19
-
- W. L. OSBORNE, _Captain_
- ED RAINEY
- W. H. HARVEY
- J. E. RIDGEWAY
- JOHN HARRISON
-
-
-Committee of Ladies
-
-TEAM NO. 20
-
- MRS. GEO. HARRIS, _Captain_
- MRS. C. W. WARNER
- MRS. J. L. WELDON
- MRS. DAWSON SWINT
- MRS. BRITT VEAZEY
-
-TEAM NO. 21
-
- MRS. J. H. HOWARTH, _Captain_
- MRS. PATRICK SULLIVAN
- MRS. WILLIE GREY
- MRS. D. A. JOLLY
- MRS. C. E. DELOACH
-
-TEAM NO. 22
-
- MRS. CHAS. STEVENS, _Captain_
- MISS CORDELIA MICOU
- MISS ESTELLE HEARD
- MRS. HOMER WILBANKS
- MISS RUBY PEARCE
-
-TEAM NO. 23
-
- MRS. GEO. H. LANIER, _Captain_
- MRS. JOHN HAGEDORN
- MRS. LEE HEYMAN
- MRS. MORRIS DARDEN
- MISS KATIE SMITH
- MRS. JAMIE JOHNSON
-
-TEAM NO. 24
-
- MRS. JOHN KING, _Captain_
- MISS FLORA CLYDE WARNER
- MISS HELEN HOWARTH
- MISS FLORENCE WELDON
- MISS HATTY KNOWLES
-
-TEAM NO. 25
-
- MRS. S. L. HAYES, _Captain_
- MRS. ADAH STEVENS
- MISS GERTRUDE CROWDER
- MISS GRACE STEVENS
- MISS FRANCES WALLACE
-
-
-Committee Report
-
- Second Liberty Loan $1,650.00
- Third Liberty Loan 53,700.00
- Fourth Liberty Loan 55,850.00
- Victory Liberty Loan 30,300.00
- ----------
- Total $141,500.00
-
- United War Work Fund $2,451.00
- First Red Cross War Fund $1,822.56
- Second Red Cross War Fund $5,294.00
- War Stamps $104,707.00
- Salvation Army Drive $313.40
-
-
-From Lanett Red Cross
-
- Sweaters 38
- Sox, pairs 23
- Pajamas, pairs 21
- Towels 44
- Bed shirts 78
- Bandages 65
- Comfort kits 5
- Convalescent robes 6
- Refugee garments 1006
-
-
- Letters written to boys in Service 1972
- Letters received from boys in Service 423
- Other letters written 291
- Number of packages forwarded 57
- Number of visitors at War Service Station 2515
- Total now in Service: white 164, colored 37 201
- Number of Bulletins mailed 2648
- Killed in action 6
- Died of disease 1
- Wounded 16
-
-
-
-
-_Shawmut_
-
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Curtis Avery= Amer. Military Com. Q.M.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Herbert Avery= S.A.T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John J. Baker= Company C 39th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. J. C. Barnes= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. D. H. Barnes= 5th Aero Squadron Rep.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Floyd Blackwelder= S.A.T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Capt. J. I. Bowles= Company E 106th Supply Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James Bridges= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hoyt A. Canady= Company K 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John Carmack= 7th Co. 13th M.P.C. Embarkation Center]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Elige Champion= Battery E 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Claudius H. Cole= (Marine) Balloon Det. H.A.F.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. W. Conway= Company C 151st Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Cliff Conway= Company F 103d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Marion L. Connell= Company A 48th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Geo. Cottle= Battery D 18th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Roy D. Coulter= Marine]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Jones S. Davis= Base Hospital 21]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jakie S. Edge= Company K 1st Pioneers Inf.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. H. H. Elloit= 20th Co. 5th Tr. Btn. 156th Depot
-Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Howard S. Fling= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Kenon Foster= 11th Infantry Nov. Repl.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. G. W. Hollis= Cas. Company 43 162d Depot Brigade Tent
-Area 4]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. John F. Hollis= Squadron 488 Const.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Clyde Huff= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Floyd Hughey= U.S.N.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Reuben Howell= Company I Development Battalion]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. T. B. James= 40th Co. 10th Tr. Btn. 157th Depot
-Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. M. Jarrell= Battery D 129th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Jarrell= 4th Prov. Company]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Adolphus Johnson= Oversea Casual Co. 24th Camp Pike.
-A.R.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Burl D. Jones= Company E 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Wag. R. L. Jones= H.S. Company 106th San. Tr.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Hiram A. Keel= Company B 52d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Geo. Kemp= Battery C 6th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Mac Lackey= 4th Provisional Co.]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. T. B. Lanier= Bakery Co. 366 Quartermaster Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. C. M. Lawhorn= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. C. Lyons= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. W. F. McCarley= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Wm. P. Mangrum= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Wilfred O. Mangrum= Company D 17th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Rance A. Milam= Company I 327th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Otis B. Newman= Company M 331st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. N. D. Phillips= 243d M.P. Co.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Frank Pitts= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Horace L. Pratt= 801. 343 Q.M.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Harold Pritchard= S.A.T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Lee Ruff= U.S. Navy U.S.S. Von Stubin]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. J. C. Sewell= Company E 106th Supply Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. J. R. Sharpe= Company B 102d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =T. A. Simms= U.S. Navy U.S.S. Mt. Vernon]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Alva Smith= 17th Co. 5th Tr. Btn. 157th Depot
-Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. L. C. Smith= S.A.T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =1st Lieut. A. C. Smith= 301st E. Remount Sqd.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. E. L. Spivey= 22d Co. 6th Tr. Btn. 157th Depot
-Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. J. H. Stephens= Bakery Company 2 Q.M.C. Det.]
-
-[Illustration: =J. S. Sledge= U.S. Navy U.S.S. Louisiana]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Thomas H. Still= Company C 161st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Bugler C. T. Terrell= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Thomas M. Aikens= Battery D 18th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Bennie Thomas= Marine]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Thomas G. Tyson= Company I 6th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Wag. John T. Wallace= Supply Company 11th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =W. L. Warren= U.S. Navy U.S.S. Oklahoma]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Sam J. Warren= Cas. Company 63 162d Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Kyle Waters= 327th Field Hospital 307th San. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Roy Watkins= Machine Gun Co. 56th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Clinton Waters= U.S. Navy U.S.S. Rathhurn]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John D. Whatley= A. & B. School Camp Sevier, S.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John Deward White= Hdqtrs. Company 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Olin Whitlaw= Cas. Company 33 Cas. Detachment 162d
-Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. Paul W. Smith= Company G 1st Pioneers Infantry 2d
-Btn. H.Q.I.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Floyd White= Company D 23d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joe Word= 122d A.C. 106th San. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Bernard Manley= Company A 113th F.A.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. N. B. Murphy= Student Marine Training Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Private A. E. Beaird= Company I 327th Infantry]
-
-
-Roll of Honor
-
- ¦_Killed in action_
- +_Died of disease_
- *_Photo_
-
- ADCOCK, COY
- *AIKENS, THOMAS
- *AVERY, CURTIS
- *AVERY, HERBERT
-
- *BAKER, JOHN J.
- *BARNES, D. H.
- *BARNES, J. C.
- ¦BEARD, A. E.
- *BLACKWELDER, FLOYD
- *BOWLES, J. T.
- ¦*BRIDGES, JIM
-
- *CANADY, HOYT A.
- *CARMACK, JOHN
- *CHAMPION, LIGE
- *COLE, CLAUDIUS H.
- *CONNELL, MARION L.
- *CONWAY, CLIFFORD
- *CONWAY, J. W.
- *COTTLE, GEORGE
- *COULTER, ROY D.
- CROWDER, LEE
-
- ¦DABBS, H. L.
- *DAVIS, J. S.
- DELOACH, BIRDIE E.
- DELOACH, O. D.
-
- *EDGE, J. S.
- *ELLOIT, HOMER H.
-
- *FLING, H. S.
- *FOSTER, KENON
- FOSTER, RUFUS M.
-
- GARRETT, CARL
-
- HESTLEY, DAN M.
- *HOLLIS, G. W.
- *HOLLIS, J. F.
- *HOWELL, REUBEN
- *HUFF, CLYDE
- *HUGHEY, T. F.
- HUMPHREY, JEWELL
-
- *JAMES, T. B.
- *JARRELL, J. M.
- *JARRELL, WALTER
- *JOHNSON, ALDOLPHUS
- *JONES, BURL D.
- *JONES, ROBT. L.
-
- *KEEL, HIRAM H.
- *KEMP, GEORGE
- KENNINGTON, GRADY
- KENNINGTON, JAKE
-
- *LACKEY, MAC
- *LANIER, T. B.
- *LAWHORNE, C. M.
- LINDSEY, O. L.
- *LYONS, J. C.
-
- *MANGRUM, WILFORD
- ¦*MANGRUM, WM. P.
- MANLEY, BERNARD
- *MILAM, RANCE
- MURPHY, N. B.
- *MCCARLEY, W. F.
-
- *NEWMAN, OTIS B.
-
- *PHILLIPS, DENSON
- *PITTS, FRANK
- *PRATT, HORACE L.
- *PRITCHARD, HAROLD
-
- *RUFF, LEE
-
- *SEWELL, J. C.
- SHARPE, A. E.
- *SHARPE, J. R.
- *SIMMS, A. T.
- *SLEDGE, J. S.
- *SMITH, ALVA
- *SMITH, A. C.
- *SMITH, COOPER
- SMITH, ELISH
- SMITH, ERNEST
- *SMITH, PAUL W.
- SMITH, JOHN WILL
- *SPIVEY, E. L.
- SPIVEY, FORREST
- *STEPHENS, J. H.
- *STILL, T. H.
-
- TAUNTON, JESSE
- TAYLOR, C. Z.
- *TERRELL, C. T.
- ¦*THOMAS, BENNIE
- *TYSON, THOMAS
-
- *WALLACE, JOHN T.
- *WARREN, SAM
- *WARREN, W. L.
- *WATERS, CLINTON
- *WATERS, KYLE
- *WATKINS, ROY W.
- ¦*WHATLEY, JOHN D.
- *WHITE, FLOYD
- *WHITE, JOHN D.
- *WHITLOW, OLIN
- *WORD, JOE
-
-
-Colored
-
- BOYD, CHARLIE
- BOYD, OCIE
- BROOKS, AMOS
- BROOKS, JESSIE
- BROOKS, WILLIE LEE
-
- CHAMBERS, JOHN
- COOPER, JEFF
- COPELAND, GEORGE
-
- GIBSON, B. C.
-
- ¦HAFFNER, RICHARD
-
- LITTLEFIELD, B. K.
-
- MASON, JOHN
- MITTS, JOHN
-
- OLIVER, WESLEY
-
- REESE, JOHN T.
-
-
-Extracts of Appreciation
-
-"The people here are different from any other section of France. Their
-customs and dress are very peculiar, in fact, reminds me very much of the
-people of Holland. They wear wooden shoes and have a dialect all their
-own. French people from the more up-to-date parts of France have
-difficulty in speaking to and understanding them. The country is flat and
-marshy, and windmills like those of Holland can be seen. It is very
-pleasant in summer but in the winter I think it must be very cold, for
-already it is getting very cold at night and in the morning. I do not
-think we will be here long, though I do not know where we will go from
-here. Perhaps where the big guns roar and the bombs drop from the skies.
-Well, we have been anxious to go up front, and no doubt our chance will
-come some day. We have been doing some mighty important work back here in
-the S. O. S. but it is the nature of an American to want to be where the
-excitement is thickest."
-
- J. F. H.
-
-October 8, 1918
-
-"This helmet was picked up on the morning of October 16th as we were
-returning to the rear from a convoy in the heart of the Argonne, near the
-village of Cheppy. The wearer who had fallen earlier in the day was an old
-soldier perhaps sixty-five years old and belonged to the 419th Division of
-the Saxon Bombardiers. More than a hundred German and American Troops lay
-dead within sight.
-
-"The probable cause of his death was high explosive, as he was torn up
-very badly.
-
-"In an area of two square miles many hundred of these could have been
-gathered. I took an interest in this one on account of its high polish for
-camouflage purposes, something new to us at that time."
-
- A. C. S.
-
-"We spent quite a different life from this in the English waters where we
-put in many monotonous months waiting for the Hun to come out. We were
-sorry he came out the way he did for we were just aching to exchange
-broadsides with him.
-
-"My ship convoyed one-half million troops through what is called the
-'Submarines' Graveyard,' off the coast of Ireland, during the months of
-September and October."
-
- W. W.
-
-January 1, 1919
-
-"The boys in the outfit I belong to were the first to cross the Meuse
-River and were in the first lines when the guns stopped firing at 11
-o'clock on the 11th day on the 11th month in the year 1918."
-
- J. T. W.
-
-December 21, 1918
-
-"I now belong to the Army of Occupation. We are going through what is to
-my thinking the prettiest country yet. My battery has hiked some four
-hundred and twenty-five kilometers since we fired our last barrage--and
-believe me, that was some barrage--'The Million Dollar One'. It will take
-a long time before I forget it. I stood on a hill and watched and
-listened. IT WAS GREAT. I guess about ten or twelve regiments of the
-American Artillery and I don't know how many of the French took part. The
-best of old Heinie's guns were being used. If he knew the sound of them as
-well as we did, he knew that we were firing his OWN guns at him. They have
-a very peculiar and creepy sound, see?"
-
- G. F. K.
-
-December 4, 1918
-
-"I had the pictures struck yesterday. And to show you how much speed there
-is here in France--for this is an instance of real speed--
-
-"The guy who runs the shop pounded me on the back and said, 'Bon,
-bon-apres un mayr photo finie'. Anybody that has to put up with that kind
-of lingo and fight this war has sure got some job. Well, after tearing out
-about all of my hair and using three different Franco-American
-dictionaries I finally managed to get this out of the scraps, 'Good, good,
-after one month, picture finished'.
-
-"Remember that was only yesterday."
-
- C. H.
-
-October 25, 1918
-
-"If this letter reaches you safely you can say it came through from the
-infernal regions, for if there was ever a 'Hell's Half Acre' this must be
-it. Put your finger on the biggest forest in France and say I'm there. Six
-weeks like a rat, three of which is like a whirlwind sweeping through
-Hades day or night, no rest, but forever watching, waiting, working by
-candle light deep down in a dug-out, or no light at all. This certainly
-cannot last much longer. It does us good to know there is one place where
-everything is like it used to be. I certainly am glad SHAWMUT is still
-natural and hope someday soon to get back there and take up my work where
-I left off."
-
- A. C. S.
-
-"I wish to express my sincere appreciation of the personal letter service
-which has been rendered me. It is the wonderful and unselfish spirit of
-the folks back home, which has made the men of the A. E. F. willing and
-eager to 'carry on'."
-
- J. S. D.
-
-December 22, 1918
-
-"I was sitting on my bunk trying to write these few lines, when my bunkie
-jumped up all at once and said a few words (I can't tell you what he
-said). At first I thought that he was shot but I found out what the
-trouble was, only a 'cootie bite'."
-
- D. H. B.
-
-September 23, 1918
-
-"If there is one thing that stands out preeminently in a soldier's daily
-schedule across the sea, as to helpfulness it is 'that letter' or little
-bit of news from home (America). If you good people who are carrying on
-the work of the 'Home Guards' could see the eager faces of the Yanks at
-mail time, as they congregate for mail distributions, I am sure you would
-agree that time spent in writing to 'Over There' boys, is at least
-appreciated to the fullest."
-
- J. H. S.
-
-September 22, 1918
-
-"I appreciate having my name on the list at the War Service Station very
-much. I enjoy the Bulletin from the first to the last and hope I'll never
-miss one as long as the war lasts."
-
- H. A.
-
-October 6, 1918
-
-"I was indeed surprised, a few days since, to receive a letter from you
-good people of my old home town reminding me that you still remember me
-and appreciate the effort that we boys are making to do our 'bit' for the
-just and righteous cause in which we are all enlisted.
-
-"Your promise to write us from time to time of the items of interest at
-home especially gratifying, for local news nowadays, possesses far more
-interest and diversion for us than does the doings and happenings of the
-remainder of the 'great, wide, beautiful, wonderful world'."
-
- C. T. T.
-
-July 10, 1918
-
-"It makes one feel good to know that he is remembered back home, not only
-by his parents, but by his friends as well. You don't know, you can't
-know, just how much good you are doing and just how it makes us feel when
-stationed at a remote camp, where we know no one, to get a letter from
-friends at home, who are interested in us. It makes us feel as though
-nothing on earth could prevent us from winning this war--and _we shall
-win_."
-
- R. D. C.
-
-June 21, 1918
-
-"We leave this port the tenth of December and proceed nine hundred miles
-off this coast and meet President Wilson and his party, who are coming
-over to the Peace Conference on the George Washington, convoyed by the
-super-dreadnaught, Pennsylvania, and six destroyers.
-
-"There are nine big dreadnaughts in our fleet lying here who will go out
-and convoy them to Brest, France."
-
- W. L. W.
-
-December 8, 1918
-
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE STATION, _Shawmut_]
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE COMMITTEE, _Shawmut_
-
- G. C. WAGNON
- C. A. SINGLETERRY
- J. T. HOLLIS
- GEO. W. MURPHY
- MRS. JACK PLAUT, ASS'T SEC'Y
- J. R. EDWARDS
- MRS. MARY M. BUGG, SEC'Y]
-
-[Illustration: RED CROSS WORK ROOM, _Shawmut_]
-
-[Illustration: RECEPTION ROOM, WAR SERVICE STATION, _Shawmut_]
-
-
-Committees
-
-Y. M. C. A. DRIVE
-
-Subscription, $338.35
-
-
-RED CROSS CHRISTMAS MEMBERSHIP DRIVE
-
- EDWARDS, J. R.
- MURPHY, G. W.
- WHITEHEAD, J. L.
-
-Subscription, $100.00
-
-
-RED CROSS WAR FUND DRIVE
-
- BUGG, MRS.
- EDWARDS, J. R.
- WAGNON, MRS.
- WHITEHEAD, J. L.
-
-Subscription, $1,186.00
-
-
-RED CROSS CHRISTMAS ROLL CALL
-
- BUGG, MRS. M. M.
- JONES, T. T.
- KEMP, MRS. F. S.
-
-Subscription, $150.00
-
-
-UNITED WAR FUND DRIVE
-
- COLE, LOYD
- CROWDER, J. J.
- CROWDER, WALT
- HERRING, DR.
- HOLLIS, J. T.
- JOHNSON, E. J.
- JONES, T. T.
- KEMP, F. S.
- MURPHY, G. W.
- PRITCHARD, MRS. P.
- SINGLETERRY, C. A.
- UNDERWOOD, W. L.
- WAGNON, G. C.
- WALLS, J. S.
-
-Subscription, $1,944.10
-
-
-ARMENIAN RELIEF FUND
-
-Subscription, $101.50
-
-
-SALVATION ARMY DRIVE
-
-Subscription, $100.70
-
-
-SECOND LIBERTY LOAN
-
- JONES, T. T.
- MURPHY, G. W.
- MURPHY, O. G.
- SINGLETERRY, C. A.
- WAGNON, G. C.
-
-Subscription, $1,750.00
-
-
-THIRD LIBERTY LOAN
-
- CROWDER, J. J.
- EDWARDS, J. R.
- HOLLIS, J. T.
- JOHNSON, E. J.
- JONES, T. T.
- KEMP, F. S.
- KEMP, MISS GRACE
- MURPHY, G. W.
- MURPHY, O. G.
- SINGLETERRY, C. A.
- WAGNON, G. C.
- WALLS, J. S.
- UNDERWOOD, W. L.
-
-Subscription, $24,350.00
-
-
-FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN
-
- CROWDER, J. J.
- EDWARDS, J. R.
- HOLLIS, J. T.
- JOHNSON, E. J.
- JONES, MRS. T. T.
- JONES, T. T.
- KEMP, F. S.
- MURPHY, G. W.
- MURPHY, O. G.
- PRITCHARD, DR. P.
- SINGLETERRY, C. A.
- UNDERWOOD, W. L.
- WAGNON, G. C.
- WALLS, J. S.
- WHITEHEAD, J. W.
-
-Subscription, $25,200.00
-
-
-VICTORY LOAN CAMPAIGN
-
-Subscription, $10,500.00
-
-
-WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
-
-Subscription, $10,500.00
-
- Total
-
- Liberty and Victory Loans $61,800.00
- War Saving Stamps 10,500.00
- United War Fund 1,944.10
- Membership and Subscription Red Cross 1,436.00
- Y. M. C. A. 338.35
- Salvation Army 100.70
- Armenian Relief 101.50
-
-
-Committee Report
-
- Number of boys who left for Service from Shawmut 111
- Number of colored boys 14
- Number of boys discharged before War Service Station started 5
- Number of boys whose address was unlocated 10
- ----
- 29
-
- Number of boys on writing list 82
- Number of boys who died in Service 7
- Number of boys known to be wounded 20
- Number of boys who have written to War Service Station 61
- Number of visitors to Station 2950
- Number of letters sent to boys in Service 1267
- Number of other letters mailed 464
- Number of Bulletins mailed 1650
- Number of packages forwarded 125
- Number of letters received from boys in Service 283
- Number of pieces of mail sent out from War Service Station 3188
-
-
-From Shawmut Red Cross
-
- T bandages 91
- Bed shirts 48
- Triangular bandages 103
- Abdominal bandages 79
- Sweaters 116
- Sox, pairs 11
- Refugee aprons 20
- Helpless case shirts 12
- Pajamas, pairs 20
- Refugee dresses 10
- Comfort bags 5
- Refugee shirts 5
- Convalescent robes 10
- Garments to Belgian and French refugees 482
- Towels in shower 125
- Influenza masks for influenza epidemic 1000
- Garments in Christmas box 160
- Inspection of boys' Christmas boxes.
-
-
-Junior Red Cross
-
- Collected 1917-1918 $60.00
- Collected 1918-1919 50.00
- Sweaters 6
- Hospital blanket 1
- Sox, pairs 15
- Utility bags 10
- Monthly hospital booklets.
-
-
-
-
-_Langdale_
-
-
-[Illustration: =Grady Allen= U.S.S. Susquehanna]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. William F. Bailey= Battery E 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Charles Bailey= Battery D 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James Arthur Bates= 38th Co. 10th Tr. Btn. 157th
-Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. William A. Blanks= Hdqtrs. Military Police]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Blackwell= 57th Company M.T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Lieut. J. Mem Bohannon= Company I 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter T. Bohannon= Cavalry Camp Remount]
-
-[Illustration: =Bugler Henry J. Brannon= Battery F 50th Artillery C.A.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Douglas Brittingham= U.S.S. Pennsylvania]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Poet Canady= Company C 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Alsberry Carlisle= 9th Company 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Johnnie E. Carriker= Truck Company 2 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Cook Eddie L. Crawford= Hdqtrs. Troop 4th Division]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Robert R. Crawford= Company A 29th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. Ben Crenshaw= 57th Company M.T.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Amos M. Crenshaw= Cas. Company 465]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Roy Culberson= Company H 328th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Ocie Lee Deloach= F.R.S. 327]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Richmond Earles= Company 5 H.Q.R.S.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joseph A. Fobus= Battery E 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Rufus M. Foster= 327th Field Hospital 307th San.
-Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Luther Frazier= Sub Chaser 204]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. W. A. Fuller= Supply Co. 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Jessee L. Glass= A.P.O. 927]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Keener Gray= 3d Prov. Company O.A.R.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Austin M. Hornsby= Hdqtrs. Company 17th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Ronald E. James= Battery D 114th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Olin Johnson= Company D 89th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James Lee Johnson= 21st Company R.R.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Cook Ellis Joseph= Base Hospital]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Oscar W. Kent= 260th Company 130th Btn. M.P.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Hugh S. Bates= Naval Training Station]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Ocie Laney= Supply Company 10th F.A., A.P.O. 740]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Thomas Landreth= Company F 17th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. S. H. Lauderdale= 69th Company 6th Group]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Homer McClendon= Company B U.S.A. Gen. Hosp. 36]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Sam McDonald= Company F 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Benjamin F. McGarr= Battery F 7th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. William C. Manning= Company B 47th Reg. T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Eulos Moon= U.S. Naval Air Station]
-
-[Illustration: =Clarence Morris= U.S.S. Cincinnati]
-
-[Illustration: =James M. Newton= U.S.S. Anniston]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Will O'Neal= Cas. Company 61 162d Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Amos Orrick= Troop A 14th Cavalry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Fred Perryman= Company M 49th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Luther Shelnut= Cas. Company 43 162d Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Lee Smith= 4th Company O.A.R.D. Automatic]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Douglas M. Smith= Hdqtrs. Company 57th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. G. F. Tankersley= Battery E 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Zachery Thompson= 71st Company 6th Group M.T.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. O. Threadgill= 17th Company 162d Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =Ellis Waller= Naval Training Station Reg. 4 Sec. 9]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Luke Wesson= Supply Company 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter H. Whatley= 3d Ordnance Guard Co.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Johnnie Williams= Bakery Company 358]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Tommy Young= Company G 2d Training Regiment]
-
-
-Roll of Honor
-
- +_Died of disease_
- ¦_Killed in action_
-
- ALLEN, GRADY
-
- BAILEY, CHARLES
- BAILEY, WILLIAM F.
- BASSETT, BRYANT
- BATES, HUGH S.
- BATES, JAMES ARTHUR
- BLACKWELL, WALTER
- BLANKS, WILLIAM A.
- ¦BOHANNON, J. MEM
- +BOHANNON, WALTER T.
- BOON, GRADY
- BRANNON, HENRY J.
- BRITTINGHAM, DOUGLAS
-
- CANADY, POET
- CARLISLE, ALSBERRY
- CARRIKER, JOHNNIE E.
- CRAWFORD, EDDIE L.
- CRAWFORD, ROBERT R.
- CRENSHAW, AMOS M.
- CRENSHAW, J. BEN
- CROWDER, OTIS
- CULBERSON, ROY
-
- DANIEL, EUGENE R.
- DELOACH, OCIE LEE
-
- EARLES, RICHMOND
- EARLES, SCHUSLER
-
- FOBUS, JOSEPH ADIE
- FOSTER, RUFUS M.
- FOSTER, WALTER LEE
- FRAZIER, LUTHER
- FULLER, W. A.
-
- GLASS, JESSEE L.
- GRAY, KEENER
-
- HORNSBY, AUSTIN M.
-
- JAMES, RONALD E.
- ¦JOHNSON, JAMES LEE
- JOHNSON, OLIN
- JOSEPH, ELLIS
-
- KENT, OSCAR W.
-
- LANDRETH, THOMAS
- LANEY, OCIE
- ¦LAUDERDALE, S. H.
-
- MANNING, WILLIAM C.
- MOON, EULOS
- MORRIS, CLARENCE
- MCCLENDON, HOMER
- MCDONALD, SAM
- MCGARR, BENJAMIN F.
-
- NEWTON, JAMES M.
-
- O'NEAL, WILL
- ORRICK, AMOS
-
- ¦PERRYMAN, FRED
-
- ROBERTS, ANDREW
-
- SHELNUT, LUTHER
- SMITH, CHARLES M.
- SMITH, DOUGLAS M.
- SMITH, WALTER LEE
- ¦STANFIELD, CHARLIE D.
- STEPHENS, ALBERT E.
-
- TANKERSLEY, GEORGE F.
- THOMPSON, ZACHARY
- THREADGILL, J. O.
- TYSON, FRED
-
- WALLER, ELLIS
- WESSON, LUKE
- WHATLEY, WALTER H.
- WILLIAMS, JOHNNIE
-
- YOUNG, TOMMY
-
-
-Colored
-
- BROOKS, JESS
- FINLEY, ALTON
- ISON, GUSS
- TAYLOR, GUY
- TAYLOR, MANUAL
- WINSTON, FRANK
-
-
-Extracts of Appreciation
-
-"I appreciate all the letters which you have written to me and it
-certainly livens a fellow up and makes him feel good to receive all the
-news from home and know just what is being done."
-
-"I am proud to be represented in the service flag."
-
-"Am glad to hear from you and to know that you are doing such wonderful
-work for the boys."
-
-"Thanking you all for the joy that comes with your ever welcome letters."
-
-"I want you to tell your fellow members in the War Service Station that as
-a man in the service I can heartily appreciate the work you are doing for
-the benefit of the men in the service and I think it is a splendid thing."
-
-"Please accept my sincere thanks for all the letters, magazines and other
-things you have sent."
-
-"Thanking you for remembering me and wishing you much success with your
-work."
-
-"Am sure this system will prove a success as the boys will all appreciate
-the work of the Service Station."
-
-"I am grateful to you and proud of our War Service Station."
-
-"I am sure the good work that the Langdale War Service Station is doing
-for the boys in the service is very much appreciated. No one has an idea
-what it means until they are in the Service and are remembered as we are
-by the Service Station."
-
-"Can assure you that your letters and all good work is more than
-appreciated."
-
-"My best wishes for a prosperous Station, but then how could it be
-otherwise when it is for the good of Democracy and especially for the
-Liberty of these dear old 'United States'."
-
-"I am not going to try to thank you for all the good news and letters I
-received when I reached port, this time. It was just grand."
-
-"If you could visit this place once, my dear friends, you would know what
-a good place the U. S. A. is. Everything is out of date, even the women
-are all curious looking."
-
-"It may be six or eight months before I get back to dear old Langdale. Of
-course it seems very hard to stay, but if my country needs me I am
-willing."
-
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE COMMITTEE, _Langdale_
-
- W. H. ENLOE, CHAIRMAN
- W. T. DRAPER
- A. C. BOYD
- C. M. MOORE
- W. L. CLARK
- MISS OLLIE GARDNER, SECRETARY]
-
-[Illustration: RED CROSS WORK ROOM, _Langdale_]
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE STATION, _Langdale_]
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR WAR SERVICE STATION, _Langdale_]
-
-
-Committees
-
-Subscriptions to First Liberty Loan were through the bank and we have no
-record of them.
-
-
-SECOND LIBERTY LOAN
-
-Subscription, $5,000.00
-
-
-THIRD LIBERTY LOAN
-
- L. LANIER, _V.-Chairman of Chambers Co._
- W. H. ENLOE, _Chairman of Langdale_
-
-Subscription, $40,600.00
-
-
-FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN
-
- L. LANIER, _V.-Chairman of Chambers Co._
- CARL. M. MOORE, _Chairman of Langdale_
-
-Subscription, $14,900.00
-
-
-UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN
-
- A. C. BOYD, _Chairman of Langdale_
-
-Subscription, $1,797.75
-
-
-Y. M. C. A.
-
-Subscription, $625.00
-
-
-VICTORY LOAN CAMPAIGN
-
- W. H. ENLOE, _Chairman_
-
-Subscription, $10,100.00
-
-
-FIRST RED CROSS WAR FUND
-
- W. H. ENLOE, _Chairman of Langdale_
-
-Subscription, $2,353.02
-
-
-SECOND RED CROSS WAR FUND
-
- L. LANIER, _Chairman of Chambers Co._
- W. H. ENLOE, _Chairman of Langdale_
-
-Subscription, $2,390.03
-
-
-WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
-
- A. C. BOYD, _Chairman of Chambers Co._
- GEO. T. JOHNSON, _Chairman of Langdale_
-
-Subscription, $32,000.00
-
-
-LANGDALE CHAPTER RED CROSS
-
- MRS. L. LANIER, _Chairman_
-
-
-FOUR-MINUTE-MEN
-
- CARL M. MOORE, _Chairman_
- A. C. BOYD
- W. H. ENLOE
- W. L. CLARK
- W. T. DRAPER
-
-
-SALVATION ARMY DRIVE
-
- CARL MOORE, _Chairman_
-
-Subscription, $160.00
-
-
- Total
-
- Liberty and Victory Loans $70,600.00
- Membership and Subscription Red Cross 4,743.05
- Y. M. C. A. 625.00
- Salvation Army 160.00
- United War Fund 1,797.75
- War Saving Stamps 32,000.00
-
-
-Committee Report
-
- Letters written boys in Service 894
- Letters from boys in Service 263
- Miscellaneous letters written 564
- Number of parcels or packages forwarded 363
- Number of visitors at Station 1623
- Boys leaving during month for Service
- Total number in Service 74
- Number of Bulletins mailed 1153
- Killed in action 4
- Died of wounds 1
- Died of disease 1
- Wounded 2
-
-
-From Langdale Red Cross
-
- Sweaters 56
- Sox, pairs 166
- Triangular bandages 326
- T bandages 292
- Abdominal bandages 255
- Bed shirts 92
- Hospital shirts 10
- Refugee aprons 45
- Refugee dresses 20
- Pajamas, pairs 24
- Operating robes 12
- Refugee garments 1202
- Bath towels 100
- Shoes, pairs 13
-
-
-Junior Red Cross
-
- Triangular bandages 50
- Refugee garments 167
- Cash $5.00
- Scrap books 30
- Barrels of nuts collected 4
- Pounds of tinfoil collected 15
- Property bags 20
-
-
-
-
-_Fairfax_
-
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Edwin Abernathy= Company F 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Young T. Abernathy= Company B 46th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Albert Carl Austin= Company F 3d Training Regiment]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Sam A. Bradshaw= 325th Ambulance Co. 307th Sanitary
-Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. James P. Bradfield= Company C 1st Gas Regiment]
-
-[Illustration: =Ensign Frank L. Branson= Naval Flying Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Seaman Alvin F. Bradfield= U.S.S. Shaw]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Calvin G. Bradfield= Company E 1st Regiment
-Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Herbert Bradshaw= Detached Infantry Adj. Gen. Office
-Georgia]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John W. Brittain= Company C 45th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Thomas A. Broome= 2d Battery R.A.R.R.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Claude L. Carter= Company H 26th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Leonard Carter= Company D 307th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Y. Toxie Chambley= Company C 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James E. Combs= S.A.T.C. Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Homer D. Chambley= Battery D 70th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Leonard M. Chapman= Mach. Gun Company 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. E. T. Combs= Quartermaster Corps Naval Aviation T.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Forest Davis= Company 39 Recruiting Camp]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Nello M. Dixon= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. I. Grady Dixon= Hdqtrs. Troops 82d Division]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Leon Duffey= Company A 165th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Terry Aubrey Dunn= Company H 167th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Robert Ennis= Hdqtrs. Company 55th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. J. T. Franklin= Bakery Company 365]
-
-[Illustration: =Cook Curtis R. Gauntt= Battery B 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Wm. P. Gilliland= Company E 106th Am. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Charles W. Glass= Company F 151st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jno. V. Haerenborgh= R.R.D. No. 3]
-
-[Illustration: =Sailor Jos. E. Hall= U.S.S. ----]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. R. E. Wilson= 634 Aero Squadron]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Henry Hodnett= Company 17 5th Receiving Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Arthur Hollis= Battery D 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Thomas E. Kinney= Company E 106th Sup. Train]
-
-[Illustration: =2d Lt. H. B. Kirkpatrick= 21st Company Infantry Reserve
-Corps]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jessie E. Landers= Company E 1st Development Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Polie L. Lilly= Battery D 114th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Will McIntyre= 21st Company R.R.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =2d Cl. Fmn. B. F. Martin= U.S.S. Newton]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. W. Evin Martin= Company I 327th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. T. E. Middleton= 106th Trench Mortar Battery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Johnnie Moore= 19th Company 5th Training Btn. 157th
-Depot Brigade]
-
-[Illustration: =1st Lt. J. C. Morgan= 233d Amb. Company 9th Sanitary
-Train]
-
-[Illustration: =Sailor Carl Newton= U.S.S. Orion]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Walter Nichols= 7th Regiment M.P. School]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. George W. Norrel= Battery D 18th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =1st Cl. Fmn. C. Oliver= U.S.S. Patterson]
-
-[Illustration: =Yeoman T. M. Piper= U.S.S. Baltimore]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Rubin Powell= Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Geo. W. Reaves= Company A 51st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Wm. D. Satterwhite= Company D 20th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Tom W. Smith= Field Remount Sqd. 33]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John T. Smith= Field Remount Sqd. 330]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John L. Smith= Company D 321st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Fred L. Stalnaker= 76th Group 6th M.T.D.]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. W. L. Stalnaker= Company D 161st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. C. D. Stalnaker= 64th Company 16th Receiving Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Henry Taunton= Company D 5th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jesse Taunton= Company M 182d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Dewey Taylor= Company C 20th Mach. Gun Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Henry Guy Taylor= Supply Company 2d Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Cephas Taylor= Company B 3d Regiment]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. William C. Taylor= Battery B 149th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Homer E. Thomas= Company G 161st Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. T. Howard Turner= Company B Development Btn.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Emmett Welch= 5th Company Air Service]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Harvey A. Welch= 106th Mobile Ordnance Repair Shop]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joe Wessinger= Battery F 114th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =William M. Whittington= Company I 167th Reg. 42nd Div.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. A. C. Williams= Aero Squadron Roosevelt Field]
-
-[Illustration: =Corp. James E. Williams= Battery E 117th Field Artillery]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. G. Harold Williams= Company B 17th Engineers]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Oscar L. Williams= Headquarters Company 321st
-Infantry Band]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John O. Williams= Company C 1st Division Battalion]
-
-
-Roll of Honor
-
- ¦_Killed in action_
-
- ABERNATHY, EDWIN
- ABERNATHY, YOUNG T.
- AUSTIN, ALBERT CARL
-
- BOZEMAN, HUGH
- BRADFIELD, ALVIN F.
- BRADFIELD, CALVIN G.
- BRADFIELD, JAMES P.
- BRADSHAW, HERBERT
- BRADSHAW, SAM A.
- BRANSON, FRANK L.
- BRITTAIN, JOHN W.
- BROOME, THOMAS A.
- BRYAN, C. JESSE
-
- CARTER, CLAUDE L.
- CARTER, LEONARD
- CAUSEY, R. M.
- CHAMBLEY, HOMER D.
- CHAMBLEY, Y. TOXIE
- CHAPMAN, LEONARD M.
- COMBS, ELISHA T.
- COMBS, JAMES E.
-
- DAVIS, FOREST
- DIXON, I. GRADY
- DIXON, NELLO M.
- DUFFEY, LEON
- ¦DUNN, TERRY A.
-
- ENNIS, ROBERT
-
- FRANKLIN, J. T.
-
- GILLILAND, WILLIAM P.
- GAUNTT, CURTIS R.
- GLASS, CHARLES W.
-
- HAERENBORGH, JOHN V.
- HALL, EDGAR
- HAMER, ERNEST
- HERRON, R. A.
- HILL, A. L.
- HODNETT, HENRY
- HOLLIS, ARTHUR
-
- JACKSON, ERBY L.
-
- KINNEY, THOMAS E.
- KIRKPATRICK, HAROLD B.
-
- LANDERS, JESSE E.
- LASTER, WILLIE
- LILLY, POLIE L.
-
- MARTIN, B. FRANK
- MARTIN, W. EVIN
- MIDDLETON, THOMAS E.
- MILLS, GEORGE J.
- MOORE, JOHNNIE
- MORGAN, JAMES C.
- MCINTYRE, WILL
-
- NEWTON, CARL
- NICHOLS, WALTER
- NORREL, GEORGE W.
-
- OLIVER, CLAUDE
-
- POWELL, RUBIN
- PIPER, TALLY W.
-
- REAVES, GEORGE W.
- ROBERTS, JAMES B.
-
- SATTERWHITE, WM. D.
- SMITH, JOHN T.
- SMITH, JOHN L.
- SMITH, THOMAS W.
- STALNAKER, CHARLES D.
- STALNAKER, FRED L.
- STALNAKER, WILLIE L.
-
- TAYLOR, CEPHAS
- TAYLOR, DEWEY
- TAYLOR, HENRY GUY
- TAYLOR, WILLIAM C.
- TAUNTON, HENRY
- TAUNTON, JESSE
- THOMAS, HOMER E.
- TURNER, THADIUS H.
-
- WELCH, EMMETT
- WELCH, HARVEY A.
- WESSINGER, JOE
- WHITTINGTON, WM. M.
- WILLIAMS, A. C.
- WILLIAMS, G. HAROLD
- WILLIAMS, JOHN O.
- WILLIAMS, JAMES E.
- WILLIAMS, OSCAR L.
- WILSON, ROBERT L.
-
-
-Colored
-
- ALEXANDER, JOHN, JR.
-
- BURDETTE, WALTER
- BURTON, BOB
-
- DUKES, ABE
-
- FORD, OTTO
- FORD, ROBERT
-
- GATES, G. G.
-
- HEARD, FISHER
- HEART, ERNEST
- HEEL, LEWIS
- HOWARD, JEFF
- HUTCHINSON, WILLIE
-
- MOODY, BOB
-
- PETTILLO, J. L.
-
- ROSS, JIM
-
- WARE, ERLEY
- WILKINS, SAM
-
-
-Extracts of Appreciation
-
-"It's a tough proposition; it's a terrible thing, but we know that some
-blood has to be spilled and we are willing to let it flow for the cause
-and the best country on earth."
-
-"I am always overjoyed to hear or receive news from my dear friends at
-home."
-
-"The French people go wild over the U. S. boys. One can't get lonesome or
-homesick, they treat you too good."
-
-"I am still on the destroyer, _Shaw_, and we hunt 'subs' most every day."
-
-"'Tis needless to say that the letters and Bulletins which I received
-today brought one grand little message and a feeling of comradeship into
-my heart. I appreciate them very, very much and I enjoy them more and
-more."
-
-"I don't want to quit until the job is finished."
-
-"Your encouragement, our bullets, and it's all over."
-
-"I am happy that it fell my lot to serve for our grand and noble country
-in her fight for Democracy."
-
-"I hear that we are going to France. I am just 'crazy' to go."
-
-"Your letters have given me a great deal of pleasure and I can imagine the
-joy they cause the fellows who have gone across."
-
-"I have been living under the ground since I have been on the front. Don't
-know how I would feel if I could get into a house again."
-
-"If it wasn't for the Red Cross, the Y. M. C. A. and the Service Station,
-I don't see how we could get along."
-
-"I have been in action and I feel more than ever that there must be no
-peace without victory and every soldier I have met shares that feeling."
-
-"You would feel a deep new tender feeling for France and her people if you
-could see them carry the Stars and Stripes so proudly, and note the
-feeling toward the American soldier."
-
-"Well, they say that we have had a war in France and that it has come to
-an abrupt close. Isn't it strange how easily and how swiftly we put a
-serious crimp into the great German mass? I can't realize it--it seems a
-long dream."
-
-"I have been in England, France, Belgium, Luxemburg, and on the line of
-Germany since I have been in Europe."
-
-"Since the Armistice we have been on quite a long hike; followed the great
-and final retreat of the Kaiser's _grand army_. We are stationed now a few
-kilometers beyond the River Rhine, on a hill overlooking the city of
-Coblenz."
-
-"Sorry that the other boys didn't get to see France; they missed the real
-fun, a trip that they wouldn't ever forget."
-
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE COMMITTEE, _Fairfax_
-
- P. C. RAMSEY
- J. L. BOWLES
- A. G. POPE
- R. E. SMITH, CHAIRMAN
- OZELLA BRADSHAW, SECRETARY
- P. T. SPARKS]
-
-[Illustration: RED CROSS WORK ROOM, _Fairfax_]
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE STATION, _Fairfax_]
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR WAR SERVICE STATION, _Fairfax_]
-
-
-Committees
-
-FIRST LIBERTY LOAN
-
-Some subscribed, but no organized work done.
-
-
-SECOND LIBERTY LOAN
-
- F. L. BRANSON, _Chairman_
- C. KIRKPATRICK
- P. C. RAMSEY
- LON COMBS
- J. E. HOWELL
-
-Subscription, $1,500.00
-
-
-THIRD LIBERTY LOAN
-
- F. L. BRANSON, _Chairman_
- R. E. SMITH
- P. C. RAMSEY
- C. KIRKPATRICK
- J. E. B. MARTIN
- VANA COMBS
-
-Subscription, $33,700.00
-
-
-FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN
-
- R. E. SMITH, _Chairman_
- C. KIRKPATRICK
- P. C. RAMSEY
- J. E. B. MARTIN
- LON COMBS
- F. P. BRADFIELD
-
-Subscription, $25,700.00
-
-
-FIRST RED CROSS FUND
-
- F. L. BRANSON, _Chairman_
- P. C. RAMSEY
- LON COMBS
- J. E. B. MARTIN
- MISS MAUD JAMES
-
-Subscription, $1,200.00
-
-
-SALVATION ARMY DRIVE
-
- T. G. STANFIELD
- MISS MAUD JAMES
-
-Subscription, $140.00
-
-
-SECOND RED CROSS FUND
-
- R. E. SMITH, _Chairman_
- P. C. RAMSEY
- J. E. B. MARTIN
- C. KIRKPATRICK
- LON COMBS
- F. P. BRADFIELD
-
-Subscription, $2,150.00
-
-
-Y. M. C. A.
-
- C. KIRKPATRICK, _Chairman_
- R. E. SMITH
- J. E. B. MARTIN
- VANA COMBS
- J. E. HOWELL
-
-Subscription, $572.75
-
-
-UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN
-
- R. E. SMITH, _Chairman_
- F. P. BRADFIELD
- VANA COMBS
- J. E. B. MARTIN
- P. C. RAMSEY
-
-Subscription, $1,740.00
-
-
-WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
-
- J. E. B. MARTIN, _Chairman_
- J. M. BROWN
- J. L. BOWLES
- D. W. SIMMS
- R. E. SMITH
- P. C. RAMSEY
- A. G. POPE
-
-Subscriptions, $17,700.00
-
-
-VICTORY LOAN CAMPAIGN
-
- F. L. BRANSON
- D. W. SIMS
- JACK DAVIS
- J. C. DAWE
-
-Subscription, $14,800.00
-
-
- Total
-
- Liberty and Victory Loans $75,700.00
- United War Fund 1,740.00
- Membership and Subscription Red Cross 3,350.00
- Salvation Army Drive 140.00
- War Saving Stamps 17,700.00
- Y. M. C. A. 572.75
-
-
-Committee Report
-
-
- Total number of letters written to boys in Service 1158
- Total number of letters received from boys in Service 205
- Total number of other letters written 447
- Total number of packages or parcels forwarded 326
- Total number of visitors at War Service Station 1232
- Total number of boys in Service 101
- Total number of Bulletins mailed 1496
- Total number killed in action 1
- Died of disease or wounds 1
- Total number wounded 6
-
-
-From the Fairfax Red Cross
-
- Bed shirts 36
- Helpless case shirts 40
- Convalescent robes 4
- Pajamas, American 5
- Triangular bandages 48
- T bandages 8
- Abdominal bandages 4
- Comfort bags 5
- Pillow cases 12
- Sheets 24
- Hand towels 206
- Bath towels 100
- Wash cloths 24
- Table doilies 60
- Tray cloths 24
- Aprons, women's refugee 12
- Dresses, children's refugee 22
- Housegowns, women's refugee 6
- Morning blouses, women's refugee 6
- Petticoats, women's refugee 12
- Helmets 3
- Mufflers 5
- Sweaters, sleeveless 24
- Socks for soldiers 52
- Influenza masks for home use 600
- Total weight of garments donated for refugee boxes, pounds 881
- Total number of Christmas boxes packed for soldiers 28
-
-
-Junior Red Cross
-
- Triangular bandages 36
- Towels 72
- Wristlets 6
-
-
-
-
-Riverview
-
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. W. C. Anthony= Headquarters Company 321st F.A. Band
-American Ex. F]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Roy B. Anthony= 28th Company 157th Depot Brigade Camp
-Gordon, Ga.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Marvin Baker= 82d Field Artillery Battery A Fort
-Bliss, Tex.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Fonzy O. Barnett= Company B 46th Engineers American
-Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Archie L. Blackmon= Hdqtrs. Troop 8th Cavalry Marfa,
-Texas]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joe Chappell= M.G. Repl. Co. 1 Amer. Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. John Gay= Company I 123rd Infantry Amer. Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Tyler Grant= Base Hospital Ward 19 Camp Sevier,
-S.C.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Fred Hunt= U.S.A. Training Det. Auburn, Ala.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Crew Hunt= U.S.A. Training Det. Auburn, Ala.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Elbert E. Lewis= Company B 30th U.S. Infantry Amer.
-Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jasper J. Lewis= Hdqtrs. Company 56th Infantry Amer.
-Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Joe McCann= Battery D 118th Field Artillery Amer. Ex.
-Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Levi McKinney= Company E 12th Infantry Camp Hill,
-Va.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. James D. Milner= Company 5 Depot Brigade Camp
-Wheeler, Ga.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Jesse B. Milner= Company 8 Repl. Camp Camp Wheeler,
-Ga.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Glenn Milner= Company C 321st Infantry Amer. Ex.
-Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. R. O. Ogletree= 32d Div. M.P. Amer. Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Nute Paschal= Battery C 54th Field Artillery Camp
-Travis, Texas]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Henry Paschal= Company I 148th Infantry Amer. Ex.
-Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. William G. Prather= Battery E 117th Field Artillery
-Amer. Ex. Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Sgt. Maj. L. L. Scales= 1st Battalion 328th Infantry]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Dock Smith= Company H 107th Infantry Amer. Ex.
-Forces]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Arnold Waller= 53d H.A. Batt. D Field Artillery Camp
-Travis, Texas]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Logan Ware= 19th Co. 5th Tr. Btn. 157th Depot Brigade
-Camp McClellan, Ala.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Watson Ware= Development Det. Camp Sheridan
-Montgomery, Ala.]
-
-[Illustration: =Pvt. Luther E. Williams= 36th Company 3d Gr. M.T.D., M.G.,
-T.C. Camp Hancock, Ga.]
-
-
-Roll of Honor
-
- ANTHONY, ROY B.
- ANTHONY, WAYMON C.
-
- BAKER, MARVIN
- BARNETT, FONZY O.
- BLACKMON, ARCHIE
-
- CHAPPELL, JOE
-
- GAY, JOHN
- GRANT, TYLER
-
- HUNT, CREW
- HUNT, FRED
-
- LEWIS, ELBERT E.
- LEWIS, JASPER
-
- MILNER, GLENN
- MILNER, JAMES D.
- MILNER, JESSE B.
-
- MCCANN, JOSEPH
- MCKINNEY, LEVI
-
- OGLETREE, RAYMOND O.
-
- PASCHAL, HENRY
- PASCHAL, NUTE
- PRATHER, WILLIAM G.
-
- SCALES, SGT. MAJ. LUTHER L.
- SMITH, DOCK
-
- WALLER, ARNOLD
- WARE, LOGAN
- WARE, WATSON
- WILLIAMS, LUTHER E.
-
-
-Extracts of Appreciation
-
-"They can have England, France, Belgium, Luxemburg and Germany, I have
-seen them all and spent some time in each, but give me the old United
-States."
-
- RAYMOND O. OGLETREE
-
-"I will tell you of my first experience in a dugout. When we arrived here
-it was raining, so I crawled into a dugout for the night. In the meantime
-shells were landing regularly. I unrolled my pack and went to bed and I
-had no more than got settled when Fritz sent some large ones over. As I
-was a new man at the trade it was hard for me to get to sleep, but finally
-I did and sometime in the night he sent a large one over which made a
-direct hit on my dugout. I jumped almost out of bed. It rained so much
-during the night that I was almost floating when I awoke the next morning
-and it took me nearly all day to dry out all of my stuff."
-
- RAYMOND O. OGLETREE
-
-"Speaking of Christmas, we had a pleasant one considering the place and
-times. There are twenty-seven children in the town where we are now, the
-same place we were during the holidays. We had a Christmas Tree for them,
-so I suppose we made several little hearts happy."
-
- GLENN MILNER
-
-"I don't know whether I will get the first German helmet or not, but I am
-going to do my bit over there. I shall take it all like a man and fight my
-best for Old Glory."
-
- JOE MCCANN
-
-"I wish I were in good health and could do my bit over there along with
-the other boys."
-
- TYLER GRANT
-
-"It's very nice of the Riverview War Service Station to offer a prize to
-the first boy who captures a German helmet. I'd like to have a chance at
-the Kaiser and get the one he wears."
-
- MARVIN BAKER
-
-"I don't know how to start to thank the good people of Riverview for the
-hearty Christmas greetings through the Bulletin. I will say this much,
-they are the best ever. I send my best regards to everyone."
-
- ARCHIE BLACKMON
-
-"You don't know how much I appreciate the kindness of the Riverview people
-while we are over here chasing the Germans as fast as we possibly can.
-You, no doubt have heard of the big American drive that is now going. I
-must say that the old U. S. boys are making it hot for those Dutchmen just
-now. I have been transferred to the band, so I am hoping to play a piece
-for the boys to march through Berlin soon."
-
- WAYMON C. ANTHONY
-
-"I want to say that if all the boys in the Service appreciate, as I do,
-what the folks of Riverview are doing for our benefit, the work is a great
-success. The letters you send certainly are interesting to me. They keep
-me in very close touch with what is going on at home."
-
- WAYMON C. ANTHONY
-
-"I think this is one of the grandest lives a boy can live if he will do
-his best. I am proud to be a soldier and I hope that it won't be long
-before I can go over sea to do my part. I feel like we are fighting for a
-cause that God would have us fight for. I had much rather go over the top
-than have it always said of me, 'He was a slacker'. That's enough said
-about that for we are going to get the Kaiser some old way."
-
- ROY B. ANTHONY
-
-"I am sorry I didn't get over to help the boys. I don't feel like I have
-been in the Service at all, but I have done the best I could. I think
-those who went oversea are the ones that should have all the praise for
-winning this war."
-
- ROY B. ANTHONY
-
-"We are here training to fight for the old flag and we will not give up
-until the last one is dead."
-
- WATSON WARE
-
-"A German garden was captured by our boys a few days ago, so we are living
-high on cabbage, turnips, etc. You should see what fine homes the Germans
-had in their dugouts: electric lights, bath rooms, pianos and all such to
-make life pleasant. I want to tell you, however, that they are not
-spending much of their time playing pianos and taking baths now, for our
-boys are giving them all the music they are looking for, and then some."
-
- WAYMON C. ANTHONY
-
-"For the sake of my country, I am anxious for the day to come when I shall
-have the opportunity of going over the top to capture the helmet that you
-mentioned in your last letter, not for the $50.00 reward, but for the sake
-of my country and the people who are dear to me. I trust that when the war
-is all over I can go back home and truly say, 'I have done my all'."
-
-
-Committees
-
-WAR SAVINGS STAMPS
-
- R. H. BLEDSOE, JR., _Chairman_
- E. I. OLIVER
- B. B. MCGINTY
- ARTHUR T. GOGGANS
-
-Subscription, $7,000.00
-
-
-RED CROSS DRIVE
-
- B. B. MCGINTY, _Chairman_
- MISS AMBER LILES
- MISS MARION WEBSTER
-
-Subscription, $2,712.00
-
-
-Y. M. C. A.
-
-Subscription, $700.00
-
-
-UNITED WAR WORK CAMPAIGN
-
- R. H. BLEDSOE, JR., _Chairman_
- MISS AMBER LILES
-
-Subscription, $1,183.00
-
-
-FIRST LIBERTY LOAN
-
-No subscription
-
-
-SALVATION ARMY DRIVE
-
- B. B. MCGINTY, _Chairman_
-
-Subscription, $105.00
-
-
-SECOND LIBERTY LOAN
-
- R. H. BLEDSOE, _Chairman_
- B. B. MCGINTY
- C. L. GIBSON
- J. M. MILNER
- W. W. WILLIAMS
- W. R. WILLIAMS
- W. J. BRADFIELD
- C. A. GOGGANS
-
-Subscription, $1,800.00
-
-
-THIRD LIBERTY LOAN
-
- E. I. OLIVER, _Chairman_
- M. A. SMITH
- T. J. GOGGANS
- R. H. BLEDSOE, JR.
- B. B. MCGINTY
-
-Subscription, $18,000.00
-
-
-FOURTH LIBERTY LOAN
-
- R. H. BLEDSOE, JR., _Chairman_
-
-Subscription, $7,000.00
-
-
-VICTORY LOAN CAMPAIGN
-
- R. H. BLEDSOE, JR., _Chairman_
-
-Subscription, $7,000.00
-
-
- Total
-
- Liberty and Victory Loans $33,800.00
- United War Fund 1,183.00
- Membership and Subscription Red Cross 2,712.00
- Y. M. C. A. 700.00
- Salvation Army 105.00
- War Saving Stamps 7,000.00
-
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE COMMITTEE, _Riverview_
-
- C. A. GOGGANS
- C. L. GIBSON
- R. H. BLEDSOE, CHAIRMAN
- B. B. MCGINTY
- J. T. SMITH
- MISS AMBER LILES, SEC.]
-
-[Illustration: WAR SERVICE STATION, _Riverview_]
-
-[Illustration: RED CROSS WORK ROOM, _Riverview_]
-
-[Illustration: INTERIOR WAR SERVICE STATION, _Riverview_]
-
-
-Committee Report
-
- Number of letters written to boys in Service 382
- Number of other letters written 243
- Number of Bulletins mailed 508
- ----
- Total 1133
-
- Number of letters received from boys in Service 138
- Number of packages or parcels forwarded 27
- Number of visitors to Station 532
- Number of packages or parcels forwarded 78
- Killed in action None
- Died of disease or wounds None
- Wounded 1
-
-
-From the Riverview Red Cross
-
- Abdominal bandages 70
- T bandages 50
- Triangular bandages 51
- Shirts 14
- Sox, pairs 13
- Sweaters 29
- Belgian aprons 14
- Little aprons 14
- Comfort kits 10
- Petticoats 5
- Pajamas, pairs 20
- Boxes of refugee clothing 3
- Towels 75
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: GEORGE H. LANIER _Vice-President and General Manager_ WEST
-POINT MANUFACTURING COMPANY LANETT COTTON MILLS
-
-"_Whose deep and abiding interest made the War Service Stations and this
-memorial possible_"]
-
-[Illustration: R. W. JENNINGS "_Chairman of the Executive Committee War
-Service Stations during the greater part of their existence._"]
-
-[Illustration: WM. H. HUFF _Founder of the War Service Stations_]
-
-
- _My country, 'tis of thee,
- Sweet land of liberty,
- Of thee I sing.
- Land where my fathers died!
- Land of the Pilgrim's pride!
- From ev'ry mountain side
- Let freedom ring!_
-
- _My native country, thee,
- Land of the noble free,
- Thy name I love.
- I love thy rocks and rills,
- Thy woods and templed hills;
- My heart with rapture thrills
- Like that above._
-
- _Let music swell the breeze,
- And ring from all the trees
- Sweet freedom's song.
- Let mortal tongues awake;
- Let all that breathe partake;
- Let rocks their silence break,--
- The sound prolong._
-
- _Our father's God, to Thee,
- Author of liberty,
- To Thee we sing.
- Long may our land be bright
- With freedom's holy light;
- Protect us by Thy might,
- Great God, our King!_
-
- _God save our noble men,
- Send them safe home again,
- God save our men.
- Chivalrous, glorious,
- From work laborious,
- Send them victorious,
- God save our men._
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _They came from town and city,
- From factory, mill and field,
- At duty's call, they gave their all
- America to shield._]
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-Passages in italics are indicated by _italics_.
-
-Passages in bold are indicated by =bold=.
-
-
-
-
-
-
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<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="" /></p>
@@ -4492,382 +4453,6 @@ Stations during the greater part of their existence. Wm. H. HUFF Founder of the
<p class="figcenter"><img src="images/img404.jpg" alt="They came from town and city, From factory, mill and field,
At duty&#8217;s call, they gave their all America to shield." /></p>
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