i. GEN. GEORGE H. WEEMS GAFT. RICHARD tUKEI
Determined GTidders/
Surprise Navy, 1 4-7
• . A determined and fighting-mad band of Fort penning
Doughboys held the vaunted Jacksonville Navy eleven at
bay last Saturday in the Florida city’s municipal stadium pd
ramp away with a stunning 14-7 upset victory over the Fliers
to avenge arprevious defeat at the hands of the same club in
; — - — 1 — — 1 -] Doughboy Stadium.
It was the fourth triumph of
01 CnMiorc the season for the Roughs who
Zl AJUU jOlQIGlS have „ also triumphed over Great
L J Li... Lakes- Keesler Fieia and Fort
I Discharged Here McClellan. The Victory also gave
.. , . L i the Benning elevens a .500 per-
SltlCG Last MOV centage for the -campaign since
/T,tV they lost four and tied one.
Taking advantage of. Flier mis-
%4ia»
CAPT. ARTHUR CARTIER
CAPT. CHAS. TAYLOR
7 Benning Men
Parachute Safely
As Plane Crashes
Brig. Gen. Weems in Group Jumping
In Mountains of South Carolina
Six men assigned to- duty at Fort Benning and Lawson Field and
Brig. Gen. George H. Weems, were flown back to the post late
. Wednesday after having saved their lives by parachuting into the
mountains of South, Carolina. For more than 18 1 hours, the
Robert A. Phillips of Lawson Field, remained tightly lodged in a U-ee i
more than 2l,ouo soiaiers xor
separation; from the Army
since demobilization com-
menced last May, it was re-
vealed by - Maj. Marvin L.
Doughboys struck twice - wife
’ startling suddenness' to score in
the second and third periods,
meanwhile limiting the highly-
Holiand, chief of military touted wai
personnel at post headquar- which cam
tgfs, ond half k:
The 21,000 total only in- Thro
eludes officers and enlisted On six
personnel separated under the ponderous
various demobilization eligi- wall throt
bilities and does not include backs deep
medical discharges. • - time taking
Of the number, almost 10,- line
000 have been separated at i The loss
military touted NAS elven to a single tally
which came shortly after the Sec-
ond half kickoff.
Throttle Navy Backs • .
On six different occasions the
ponderous Doughboy forward
The local Separation Point
worked Thanksgiving Day
also, ! sending 185 men home-
Robert A. Phillips of Lawson Field, remained taghtiy lodged m a tree Ilf ^ fj _ " J
and at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday a ladder was being built up fee treetobe |M3fp|inn fllMVP
used in bring him down safely. He. told rescuers on the i ground feey f|fl| | UIIU I/I If V
needn’t worry lest he fall the approximately 75 feet to the ground ®
because he was stuck so firmly he wouldn’t fall even if he fell asleep. A J. A I A
gg 5L. otOcu c, r»rl Benning, KflISeS )Zj,/4U
*°CaIrt!’jJtht£ X*c!urUer, PRO |then he himself baled out, to land 1 1 _1 DanHHIfl
of The Parachute School. in the top of a tree, where he 111 ffjf|
of The Parachute School. in the top of a tree, where he A I rf\ fSOnninQ Hecht anotherCrim*on 'Tide
Capt. Charles R. Taylor, as- spent the night and most of Wed- #41 I V* I 1/wlllH*" jJ luminary^
sistant PRO of Fort Benning, nesday. • . ' - and t^Ahny^i
who will replace Captain ^Tukcy vfhile Lieutenant Philhps feus A total of $25,940.64 was raised ^ -
as PRO when Tnkey is dis- remained lodged in fee treetop, fcy Fort Benning militei^ Xpd *
. -WKgEfSfe Oatoiij* S am0ynged today in.
re”]ita^d" Rice a house afire* in " he
* *fe rt&iasard^a »Sr?ra'£Ksf
detached service at Lawson offi|ials were told’. , October ! through Noyember 15,
Fieid. Shortly after daybreak, tree has been augmented ^ almost daily making a flrst down at
- Details of the sensational escape climbers from Greenville, S. C., by “late” returns from smaller
from death were released by fee were taken to the scene in an ef- units to swell the final total al-
Lawson Field base commander, fort to effect the rescue. most to the $26,000 mark. . f Slf | Jr®
Col Glenn C. Salisbury, after all Meanwhile, all of the officers Reading the list of ' contributors ®fn £n*!!»;ed
of the seven men involved had except Captain Tukey and fee en- to fee War Fund is the personnel gW' ^^5h't:£ha^
beM renortedsafe. listed man. Sergeant Gauldin, had of The Infantry School who ac- extra point kick was over .fee
and Bruised reported themselves safe. counted for $9,219.76, topping their center. 1 _
Scratched Captain Taylor was the first to estimated goal by more than one The Navy eleven came right
Lt. CoL J. ^D Rosenberger, post ^ PHe siphoned his wife at thousand dollars, - : ^ to drive; 70 yards to fee
adjutant at Fort Benning, said he 9;3ff m_ Tuesday to say he was . Service Personnel Second Army 15, but two penalties dulled
was informed that all of fee men organizing a searching party from Army Service Forces troops and me march and j on fourth down,
escaped with scratches and bruises. Greenville. , civilian workers donated $8,429.55
Before 10 a. m., a big C-47 . General Weems Calls to the drive to capture second _ place f^bed ^an NAS toss in the end
transport plane left Lawson Field Not long afterward, General honors, while The Parachute Z0^ £°J_a toeFliers oDened
for Gainesville, Ga„ where it was WeemSf former assistant com- School soldiers and civilians gave Mommts lator toe Fh^s op^ed
to pick up the sever! parachuting mandant at The Infantry School, $5,955.84. , , yf-vard sluaaine Denaltv the Navy
fliers and return them to Lawson telephoned to say that except for First Amy Tr^.PS stahoned at JentM dow£ S
Field. ■ ; _ bruises of the shoulder and the Fort Benning contributed $^,-4504 six-yard line^But
^re the ferocious inning, for-
fliers and return tnem 10 ^awsuu telephoned to say tnat except xor first Army ^ , - g -3 +0 a first down oh
Field. ■ ; _ ! bruises of the shoulder and the Fort Benning contributed $^,-4504 six-yard lin^But
The men, all passengers in a C- ankle, he was o. k. He then was to fee drive, ^^Je Lawson Field faere theS ferocious ^Benning for-
45 twin-engine transport plane. at a ranger-s home at WalhaUa personnel accounted for $777.25 wards held to takeover on the
flying from Washington to Law- when daybreak came, search- One hundred doUars was received /
son Field, were— ordered to take jn» parties started the hunt for from the benefit show staged by np ' ticked out and the
to their parachutes about 9 p.m. Captlin Tukey and Bergeant theHollywood RodeoandCircus FhBe^^grt£C^0dvin°f ’agX. SS
Tuesday as the plane approached pGauidin but hours after they were Fort Benning persoimel-have ? point, a surprising play by
Westminster, S..C. . found_PhUlips remained m.ius Big MiiEe GWe.l IenniSg^gMrd,
The pilot, Lieutenant Phillips, treetop perch. ness to contribute to worthy caus s Continued onTPage 6
was quoted by a reporter who in- ..The plane crashed, it was re-,es by_giving so generously to the _____
terviewed him while he remained ported, between two mountairf War Fund,^ Captam Tukpy de- . . . .
a prisoner in the tree, as saying ranges between Walhalla, S. C., dared. ‘Now feat feewaris over, Procgeemn Ql Moil
that the right engine burst into and" Clayton. ■ J . many civilian communities have I Ul lYldl
fiamw and he ordered everyone It was on a scheduled admin- been exercised to obtain their quo- tA/;.r ETC Dninfc
out. He continued to pilot the istrative flight.. Captain Tukey tas. VY I 111 JJ rOiniS -jjv
bie plane for some minutes until had taken - the other PROs to lauds. Generous Response n p . 1 %
General Weems, the other officers, Washington to consult with high “I salute the men and women at BgQjnS JO til rOOV
end Sergeant Gauldin had started Amy officials, and General the post for their generous re- S1 *
fhSr narachute trios to safety. Continued on Page 5 sponse to the War Fund and . m na nr
their parachute trips, to safety,! Continued on P«e o £co7d to- • AU men posessing 55 or
•X. X X tact,” the executive chaiman said, more _ points are deing pro
^ . t. Serving along with Captain cessed, for discharge effective
CAPT. TU KEY'S EYEWITNESS- S
ACCOUNT OF PLANE CRASH SS
BY CAPT, RICHARD TUKEY head We hit a feat knocked °™lrc^*e£cers for major soon° as^ th?5? ffirs arl
PubUc Relations Officer ° The pdft tfeew everything he unite were Lt. Edith Grund of The on “orders” to Reparation cen-
CTa^eSope., SfSflg than 4|»00 ^ J.
WALHALLA S C Nov 28-1 droSe Capt. William Kemp of The Para- Fort Bennmg are expected to
cover from the shock of 13 hours onf oFus^ho had ever jumped M. Poulson of First Amy troops. eligibilities. ^
in the South Carolina mountams before were Captain Cartier.' a
Chaplain Hardin Will Serve
Ing to you after what we’ve been was forced to, jump in an accident. ""r r L1 •
through. The discipline was terrific. It a j ; _ |> * fl— X CTD
, RICHARD TUKEY head. We hit a tree that knocked orary comimttee.
sponse to the War r una ana m
keeping Fort Benning’s record in- ' Ail men posessmg 55 _or
tact,” the executive chaiman said, more _ points are demg pro-
Serving along with Captain cessed for discharge effective
Tukeyonthe drive were Brig. Gen. Saturday, Maj. MarvmX
William H. Hobson, honorary Holland, chief of *“btaxy
^airman- Maj. Gen. John W. personnel at Post Headquar-
O’DanieL Brig. Gen. J. Ogden ters, announces. ■
Ross, Brig. Gen. Gerald J. Higgins Soldiers whq have Lad four
and CoL Glenn C. Salisbury, hon- or more years service witoout
PubUc Relations Officer °UT^%itoFtfee5%verything he unite were*Lt“ EdUh Grund'of The
4 K°rt n ' had left into the left motor trying Infantry School, Capt. O. K. Mar-
(Telephoned to Bayonet) to gain altitude but the tail kept quardt of Army Service Forces,
WALHALLA, S. C., Nov. 28—1 dropping. Capt. WiLLnim Kemp (^The Para-
He told us ah to Jump., SwendeU
War Fund officers for the major
four years service
Chaplain Hardin Will Serve
Grid Rivals Sunday
various demobilization eligi- wall throttled; the speedy: Navy
bilities and does not include backs deep in Amy territory, one
medical discharges. 1 time taking over on the three yard
Of the number, almost 10,- line j
000 have been separated at j The loss was the second of the
the Fort Benning Separation season - for Coach Jim Tatum’s
Point alone, with the ten Fliers, who have won eight games,
thousandth man set for dis- A crowd of. 14, 000 spectators was
charge within the next day or in the Municipal Stadium for the
so. . , contest. "
Thie local Separation Pomt Benning cracked the scoring
worked Thanksgiving Day ice late In fee second quarter on a
also, .sending 185 men home- jjit of heads up play by End Mike
ward- bound that day after Spann, formerly of the Detroit
completing their Army ca- Lions. Spann intercepted, a pass
re®15* tossed by Quarterback Red Har-
11 “ rison and raced 36 yards before'
m ■ |e a being caught from behindhand
Vaf Fund Drive SitTAr
a ■ ! A IA boys’ 240-pound fullback,
laiCAr'V IS UHII thrown for a yard loss, Halfback
[fl|VR\ 111 .7411 Kyle Estenik faded back and toss
MIIJW rfLJ rfW ed a perfect strike to Halfback
I t ■■ 4 ■ Russ Craft, former Alabama star.
If kAff Kanninn for the touchdown. Guard George
II fill I DCIIIIIIIU Hecht, another , Crin»on Tide
BVCGED MHCB CVSS1E
Doiqt^l8>y ®^g®rs
The most attractive grid
menu of the season is on tap
for Doughboy Stadium this
Sunday with a battle-royal in
prospect between the resur-_ .
gent Doughboys and the
strong Port Pierce Navy Am-'
phibs plus some super-duper
halftime entertainment by the
football band from School
Troops.
Beaten 14-13 by fee Amphibs in
a game played in Florida three
weeks : ago, the Doughs will be
seeking revenge in a determined
way Sunday when they line up for
the 2:00 p. m. kickoff before a
crowd feat is expected to reach
15,000. .
With their appetite for revenge
only partially satiated by last
Saturday’s stunning-^14-7 victory
over Jacksonville', the Benning
eleven would like nothing better
than to even the score with the
Amphibs as well. Such a victory
{would also give the soldiers an
upper hand in their grid dealing
.with the men in blue this season
since the Doughs dealt Great
Lakes a 21-12 defeat in their
second game of the year.
MUST STOP LUJACK
I Beating Fort Pierce, however.
will probably mean a continuance
of the ; vigilant aerial defense
thrown up against Jacksonville
last week. 'In 'Johnny Lujack,
former Notre Dame ace, who
! Rival Records
DOUGHBOYS
! 0 AAF Training Command 27
21. Great Lakes Navy 12
;26 Kessler Field 7
; 0 Kessler Field 0
21 Fort McClellan 6
| 7 Jacksonville Navy Hi
13 Fort Pierce Amphibs* 11
; 7 Air Transport Command 23
14 Jacksonville Navy - ..'.7 -•
{10 Air Transport Command IS
I 7 First Air Force 19
; 7 AAF Training Command 1# ’
i 6 - Jacksonville Navy 13
1 26 Third Air Force 12
! 7 Jacksonville Navy 35
| 7 AAF Personnel Dlstribnt’16
14 Fort Benning 13
7 LitUe Creek Amphiba 27
!21 Kessler Field 7
sparks the Amphibs, the Doughs
will be up against one of the na-
tion’s best flippers. Lujack is the
adult version of the same 18-year-
<jld youngster who succeeded
Angelo Bertelli air Notre Dame in
1943. and did so well.
, Surrounding Lujack in the Navy
backfield Sunday will be Jimmy
Jackson, a nifty blocking back
whose only previou? experience
was in high school circles at Tor--
ranee, Calif.;! Ralph Chubb, a
swift 185-pound halfback from
Michigan, and Dick Chatterton,
husky fullback from- Brigham
Young. | ,
: The starting forward wall for
the visitors will have Tony Knap
(Idaho) and Hamp Pool (Stanford
husky fullback from Brigham
proudest, i suppose, o, Academic Regiment, 1st STR
the personal discipline everyone pose they’ll say, because almost ® *
I puV w iftrJ fu“te
‘ Praise Pilot . a couple of times and 1 got soaked. ^ ^Rd The Entering the Chaplain’s Corps
real Tob’the ^loWLt ’’rqUm?8 A he'foUnd’ wenf'out'in that In^Sry School, it was announced in May, 1942, Captain Hardiri
“d SL^^Se^ ^f»“k0IKh“a„Fl6der“k W- SSfan^MKo^!:-
m^u,tHnhihn,eswt^1LT n^lft rUehtneS0Ine m " m H Chaplain Hardin, who holds the out its 26 months of' operations on
jump, I wouldn t be talkmg to you . turned to civilian life. Captain Army nurse and an Army officer,
•iLac W Sin 1 the last to Regiment and the , 1st STR, The Entering the Chaplain 8 Corps
a wlmm^out in that Infantry School, it was announced in May, 1942, Captam Hardin
this week fay Maj. Frederick W. joined the 334th Engineers Regi-
^ ^F^lt^fnn^ntee to'felmoi^- Heifer, post chapliin. ment and served¥feat unit througn-*
^reaUv at tofet *“ Chaplain Hardin, who holds the out its 26 months of operations on
fvec-y mimlRof native trappers rank of captain, has assumed the the Russian supply routes m
hves. A couple of nauve trappers . formerly nerformed bv Iran. He performed the first mar- -
PASSIN’ JOHNNY LUJACK
. Amphib halfback from Notre Damfe .,
Do You Have Used Furniture To Sell? T ry the Th rift Shop
ever known of in these parts. They we suffered were some
say there are"none on record for bruises; nothing serious.
Continued on Page 5
ibis 4th ‘battalion office, in cooper- 1
Have you got any furniture
or other types of home furnish-
ing that you are anxious to sell?
Why not toy the Thrift Shop?
This unique organization, op-
perated at Fort Benning ,by the
Army Daughters Association, is
anxious to help yon ont in the
problem of disposing of yonr
furniture and also add to the
stock of its own shop.
The Thrift Shop is located in
the Doughboy Stadium building
near fee Telegraph Center. AU
proceeds of fee operation of
this shop are used by the Army
Daughters for post chanties,
such as the maintenance of fee
Maternity Ward at fee ASF] Re-
gional Hospital. Just recently
the Maternity Ward was fee re-
cipient of an up-to-tote incu-
bator, purchased by fee Army
j Daughters. • *' -
j The Thrift Shop does not jur-
chase furniture or belongings
outright Instead.it. accepts [our
I arfeaes for sale on a consign-
ment basis, and turnk fee cash
over to you' as Soon as fee ar-
ticle is sold. - .j"
Mrs. A. D. Butler, who man-
ages the shop for fee Army
Daughters, emphasizes feat aU
types of furniture wiU be wel-
comed at the present time - since
stocks are quite Tow. Miss Pa-
tricia Chamberlain and Mrs.
William Hargrave . assist Mrs.
BuUer in operating fee Thrift
Shop.
mid Chicago Bears) at ends, Tom
Parry (Washington State) and Bo
Cohenour (Texas) at tackles, Jim
Patton (Oklahoma A. and M) and
Cliff Hefflefinger (Ohio State) at
guards, and {Art Statute (Notre
Dame) at center. :
| Another lirjeman sure to see
Continued on Page 5
TPS Moving”
All Training
From Alabama
The Parachjute School at- Fort
Benning wiU consolidate its train-
ing program s arting this week 6n
the Georgia i ide of the Chatta-
hoochee, it was disclosed , this
weekend by The Parachute School
headquarters. It was pointed out,
... however, that! fee program does
not envisage abandoning the Ala-
bama area. | !
A spokesman j of the Parachute
School polntedlout that during fee-..
' winter months: as training groups
have dropped from wartime peaks
in personnel, fee training will be
centralized on {the Georgia part of
the reservation. During • these
months, it was said, some of the
buildings and' Icertain areas, such
as .the leading strip, Normandy
Field, and LaejField, will continue
■ to be utilized ijn the training pro-
- gram. 4 1 ' /
35,000 Acres
• During wartime a total of about
6,400 troops have been housed at
one time in the Alabama part of
the reservation 4 which embraces
some 35,000 acres.
For practical planning and train-
ing purposes, ijt was pointed out.
thisprogram i* being carried out
by Die Parachute SchooL A care-
taking detail, Ip he furnished by
the Post, will jguard such build-
ings and facilities as will not b4
utilized entensiyely for the present.
With possibly one exception, it
was said that pll parachute regi-
ments have beegi garrisoned in fee
Alabama area during fee war.
Two ■ Tht Bayonet, Thursday, November 29, 1945
Famed RC Chorus
Being Disbanded
BY SGT. N. H. 15RONNER
The nationally-famed Reception Center Chorus, which
■was one of Fort Benning’s most highly-esteemed musical ag-
gregations, was recently disbanded as an army organisation,
CoL John P. Edgerly, Reception Center Commanding officer,
has announced. The unit was disbanded after many of its
members were discharged from the army. •
Achieving local and national, ac- ; “ - ” * — * ~
claim, the chorus members can Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, dedi-
lool hack over their nearly five cation of Watson Field, concerts
years record as a military chorus etc., [the chorus could be depended
with pride.' Not only did the sol- pn to fill the need. A very popular
dier-singers bring credit to them- quartet could be drawn from the
selves for so freely offering their chorus, which added- adaptability
musical talent to the cause of vie- to the^group for further variety-
tory, but brought -credit to -the singing. a -
Post they represented as well as group Df musical .artists
the United States- Army as a was composed of only soldiers
whole. Having been presented in witll exceptional backgrounds and
numerous radio broadcasts over talents. Most of the chorus mem-
most of the radio-chains, many faers were college graduates and
war bond rallies concerns, special former members and directors, of
events and occasions, transcrip- recognized civilian singing groups;
tiorw. and the iike the chorus ^ Reception Center
performances w e r e considered chorufi w*. Sgt wmis M< Brown>
varied and extensive. from Min ter, Ala., former student
Many Public Appearances 0f Tuskegee Institute, member of
Millions of dollars in war bonds its quintet, and was the only orig-
were sold in rallies featuring the inal member of the Reception Cen-
Receptio'n Center chorus, as it ter chorus to remain with it
participated in each of the seven through its final performance. Ac-
War Loan Drives and the Eighth Companist and assistant director
Victory Loan Drive. In the Sixth was ggt. Varnell Ford of Knox-r. ,
. War Loan Drive alone over $8,- yfUe Tenn., graduate in music
000.000 were sold in bonds as a fr0TT| Knoxville CoUege, former
result of a 30-day trip made by teacher in the public schools of his
the chorus, covering more than city< and f0r several years served
" southern°Ustetes. “i® thto stogie a£.f Sttons^'/the TYPICAL SCENE of successful broadcasts made by the famed Reception Center Chorus w^s this appearance over thb
bond tour, the chorus made more Reception center Chorus. a coast-to-coast CBS network when the' chorus sang Christmas' carols and spirituals last Dec. bgt. Willis Hrown ija
dSi„60020P"adiS iSt S; ..gffgg SfgSS'by Sgt ' is shown directing th< group, ,vhile Sgt. Willie A. .Long fleft) solo. (Signal Corps Photo) ;
25 cities .in which they ^opp«i. WilRam Washburn Jr., a native of , ~ , ~ — - . m . ■ - 8T
siflSsISSliS Lf. Morris Goes New Order to Mean CBS New Series j
Eyes Right! Salute
Shows Big Gain
from New Jersey, Cpl. George "f* - ®
TSSKv bSrtS'. A total’of 573 |raUstma.t? and
SERGEANT! : -T 313 re-enlistment?, is shown m the
Yessir,. they finally gave the recruiting drive now in progress
Post Public Relations Officers at The Infantry] School. These
ace news hawk that sergeancy, figures wete released in the latest
hung up C behind George’s desjc consolidated recr lilting report,
is still being sounded regularly. The largest -gaih, over the pre-
Good luck, SERGEANT ceeding weekly report, was m en-
Schultz' '• Ustmente, where there was an in-
; ! crease of 65. There were 13 new >
f re-enlistments. .Most of the re-
.Enlistments Rise ; a„s:
ln First Army Unit SSeT"' for Regu,at Army’
7 The 1st STR, with 238, is setting
Regular Army- enlistment totals the pace in the recruiting drive.-
for First Army troops at Fort Hein-
ning have jumped to. a figure pf x F Q
197, it was revealed today, by ^t. A //Si AT^U X
Frank W. Rose,: recruiting officer O IWI JX I %,.;0 ’ 8
for Fourth Headquarters, First# mwmw-m m ■ X
ArTbirteen'of the First Army men jj MATES 9
signing up for further duty in- the X X \
service are re-ehlisting, while the 8 jjSSfeVw . X
remainder are enlisting for jhe 0 8
Most of the enlistments, Lt. Rose O 8
pointed out, are for one year peri- 8 ( r'' f
ods, although a number of mjen X EM B
have signed up for three year ft I t H
stretches. The majority of those 8 8
who are being recruited are over- X 2
seas veterans, most of them hajv- ft X
ing returned to Fort Benning with O T O
First^Army umts after service in X X
Assisting Lt. Rose in recruiting X X
work are Lt. William C. Holter X 2
and Lt. James A. McMahon. First O X
Army’s recruiting office is located 9 — AAA l*A 2
midway on the north side of the X _ \fitli All - 9
third cuartel. f 8 BOTH ^IIWbWW FOR 9
Enlistments Rise
In First Army Unit
"MATCH
MATES"
$69.50
sW.H. CROWDER:
Carolines, Tennessee, Mississippi of that institution. He pre-
and Alabama. pared scripts and served as nar-
The . RC chorus was the first rator for the chorus as it sang
group to take the air from an “Songs of the Souls,” in weekly
Army Post with a musical tribute broadcasts over;. Station WRBL,
to the late President Franklin D. originating from Service Clubs No.
Roosevelt, less than two hours aft- j an(f No. 4' of Fort Benning. Be-
er word of. his death was an- fore coming to the Army, Sgt.
- nounced at Warm Springs. Washburn gained his first radio
The chorus participated in both experience serving as acting direc- tour of overseas duty, has beenj rtment
the V-E Day and V-J Day cere- tor of “Pilgrims of Jordan,’ well _ssiene(1 to the Academic Regi- P in addi
monies ; ; with; Brig. Gen. William known radio group ;that broadcast g ‘L . . . -School fas’ tioi? In
To B Company 783,000 Discharges Will Tel! About j
1 and N0.7 4' of Fort Benntog. Be- 1 Fi t Lt Walter Morris, who re- Changes in the Army discharge system that win make .anjaddl- (1| UAmAfAmin/l S’
fore coming to the -Amy, Set. fr Hi second tional 783,000 men and women eligible to return to civilian life, ef- IJ| ||UI I IwwUI I III IVI ■!
Washburn gained his first radio cently returned from his seconai fective Saturday December 1, were announced today by the war de- ■ JJ ■
- AUTdMOBILE
SPRING SERVICE
MAKING SPRINGS FOR
35 YEARS j
■All kinds of Auto and Truck"
■Springs made and repaired *
■ 1637 Tenth Avenue ■
H' Hobson, post commandei
livering the main addresses.
NATIONAL BROADCASTS
Bre_ tor of “Pilgrims ot Jordan," weu - , t Academic Reel- rTn. addition to a further reduc- : . In; collaboration with the U. S. g | ,
sw. %gr-> - wac -» saraai “S
Tenn. junior officer of B Company. nf ^service- a s a discharge P ^ ... Columbia Broadcasting System
.... vst&x ***** S
Beautiful engage m e n.t
ring and matching wed- j
ding ring. '
. AS LITTLE AS ]
$1.25 PER WEEK
BRACKING
1210 BROADWAY
Ta%2iLCofil6V^rbr^ £ng^to^md^lSKt& Platoon'oTtoe 10°lst Infantry Reg- ^ 5^^ k^SfdafS!
ijt S Colum- chonls, hails from Birmingham, iment in the northern France and three ot more-' toil^en under ^18 A further announcement concern- 8 (WABC-CBS, 3:30-3:30 p.i m.,
Station WRBL? CokS- choriis hails from Birmingham, iment in the northern France and th|ee ot uj^tiiein A father announcement concern- g (WABC-CBS, 3:30-3:3
in?ttogn Trpm ’ Service Ala graduate of ^Memorial Rhineland campaigns, and suffer- *%?**&*%£& ^^betore^tfe EST)* f
Em|gein1titutfon graduSe ed severe body and arm wounds members of fee,-- Wogten’s^Artg middie of December, f In contrast with the
Clubs numbers one and four at College, and later teacner in uie ed severe body and arm wounds members of the, Wonjen’s Army middle of December In contrast with the original
Fort' Benning. At various times same mutation did gaduate burst of ah' enemy mor- Corps, both officers and enlisted middle ,antnrc series (Dec. 1944, to Sept. 1945),
the chorus ^a^r^uested^ topper- 1 atf Attanto ^ ^ the Une near Chateau women who enlisted prior to May whlc,h for, tbe
form on : nation-wide, coast-to- his Master’s Degree, and to a noted tar sheU on the line near Chateau f2° 1^5 wn° v
coast broadcasting hookups by the character to dramatics, force- galance. Under the new demobilization
major-chains. Many other occa- gg^and dr0^chf^e “j! COMMISSIONED AT TIS schedule which goes into effect
fo^anpropriate1 rtlsto ^uch^i thet of a second Paul Robeson. Sgt. Enlisting for foreign _ duty to iDecember 1, th? foUowing eligi-
for appropriate music, su 3-Art>11t. rhrict^nhpr served as bus- 1939. at the age of 19. Lieutenant ;bility standards are established.
fc iness manager for the chorus to its Morris rose to the rank of platoon Male enlisted personnel will be
1 1 end. He to a native of Tyler, Tex., sergeant while serving three years eligible, for discharge ^ they
j for the retention of personnel in
people a preview of the returning 1
eiiect. thp -now series will nro- II
hedule which goes into effect vide ;an. opportunity to^ express m I
ecember 1, the foUowing eligi- ■■ . ft I a dramatic form the reactions of de- |
lity standards are established: H3f|V|A|l||| ,n!’oblllzed servicement to civilian |
Male enlisted personnel will be |||Q| IIIUI8V \a||UI 1*11 ^e* I
M1S U4 ..igible, for discharge if they ■ vi* The programs will delineate,!
graduate of Morehouse CoUege, with the 5th Infantry to Panama, have 55 points as computed^ on A j through the ex-serviceman’s eyes. |
and as a civiUan sang with the He was commissioned at The In- September 2, 1945, or four years | fl |AC| I |||3Ff AfC his, return; to family, friends and ■
Georgian Quartet which broadcast fantry School in January, 1943, of , honorable military service, or ^UvJl UUQI Ivl J community, and his opinion, jcrit- ■
over the Mutual Network through and sei^ed at the Infantry Re- three or more children under 18 • , _ ical or otherwise, of various proj- ^
faciUties of WALB, Albany, Ga. placement Training Center, Fort- years of age dependent upon ^,..1 ects and* attitudes affecting] his
He was recently honorably ■ dis- McClellan, Ala., before joining the them for support. rlllVr rlllfl 11111 welfare.
charged from the United States 10ist Regiment. Other Factors Remain r I WWW I V I# U I Ul Following the dramatic portion
Army. The other, twenty-one of . .. . Hartford Conn he In addition, previously estab- ■ of each broadcast, the final five
the twenty-six members. of the ^ lished factors for the discharge Termed by famiies of GI’s who minutes will be used by many
chorus represented similar edu- toans me w of enlisted men wUl remain in have made use of the facilities as CBS stations to present' a picture
cationaT'and musical backgrounds.^e^-^e lsoneoiiour orume j, effect Under these fact0rs, an the finest that they have visited, of the .program’s subject in terms
They were: Sgt. Consuelo R. in tne armed xorces. enUsted man also is eligible, for the Harmohy Church Guest of their own community and its
KeUey of Birmingham, Ala.: Sgt. „ , ^ discharge if he is 35, 36, or 37 House, located directly behind specific conditions. Local cl^tt
Richard Flowers, Montgomery, son,- of -St. -Louis, Mo.; -Cpl. 'Law- yfears of age and has completed Service Club No. 3, is becoming leaders and authorities m the field
Ala.; Sgt. .Harvey Black of Savan- rence Armstead; of Florence, Ala.; (wo years of honorable miUtary increasingly popular with families of rehabilitation will be present-
nah, Ga.; SgtJTroy McCall, of Sal- CpL Henry Coleman, of New Or- servic€i or he to 38 years of age, 0f Officer Candidates and return- ed during these fiVe-minutet per-
isbury, N. C| Sgt. Joseph Mala- leans, La., and Cpl. Marving Grove regardless of the period oi his tog veterans who visit Fort Ben- iods. , • J
sham, of Calhoun, Ala.; Cpl. of Anderson, S. C. military service. ning. Among the readjustment top-
Claude Robinson, of Atlanta, Ga.; Regular Duties, Too ■; Enlisted- women' (Wacs) will be The Harmony Church Guest ics scheduled for delineation on
Prove Popular
"This store is owned bv a tobury, N. Cj Sgt. Joseph Mala- leans. La., and Cpl. Marving Grove regarciies8 of the period of his ing veterans who visit Fort Ben- iods. , . .
this store is ownea oy a sham< Qf Qjhoun, Ala.; Cpl. of Anderson, S. C. military service. nine; Among the readjustment top-
World War II veteran. The Claude Robinson, of Atlanta, Ga.; Regular Duties, Too ! Enlisted2 women (Wacs) will be The Harmony Church Guest ics scheduled for delineation on
/.Iinj.r -_J nuinor „ nnf.'vA ot Cpl. Lewis L.lBanks, of Valdosta, singing was only a part of this eligible for discharge if they have House is unique among such Army Assignment Home will be the
founder and owner, a native ot Ga . Cpl Wile^ s_ Bolden, of Mo- choral group’s contribution to the 32 B points as computed on Sep- tostallatons in- that It' offers the need for community mobilization,
South Alabama, has recently biile, Ala.; Col. Richard Cannon war eff0rts. The members per- tember 2, 1945, or are married, servicemen the opportunity to stay the veteran s realistic evaluation
rotnrnoJ iron, New Guinea J*-., of Birmingham, Ato.; CpL WU- formed tegular military duties regardless of when, and enlisted WRh their families, rather than of his own abilities; his return to
returned from New uu e , jiam Johnson, of Birmingham, ^ere |n Reception Center, prior to May 12, 1945. just visit with them; education;? his use of old skills and
where he has served as a cap- Ala.; Cpl. Charles E. Newman.of serving as technical instructors in In addition, previously estab- The building, consiructedalong newtalents acquiredin
. . w, . nn frnj0 Atlanta, Ga.; Cpl. George H. Par- th s^ecial graining Unit of the lished factors for the discharge the same lines as the officers’ service; the permanently disabled
tain. We welcome you to trade ris< of Sparta, Ga.; Cpl. Monscree r® entton Center w here thous- ofenlisted Svomen wiU remain in I quarters, contain 25 irooms. Con- veteran; the housing problem and
with this fellow soldier "
BRACK! N'S
' 1210 BROADWAY
ris, of Sparta, Ga.; Cpl. Monscree Re„eDt;on renter where thous- of enlisted women will remain in quarters, contain 25 Irooms. Con- veteran; the housing problem and
Sanders, of Camilla, Ga.; CpL Eu- andsPof illiterate soldiers were effect. Under these factors, an veniently located- within a block rackets perpetrated on veteians.
bert J. Sherty, of .Dawson, Ga., - elementary education up enlisted woman to eligible for dis- of the guest house is the Service the homecoming of a
Cpl. Earl F. Simmons, ;of Greens- f'V tupa f;fth a?ad7 level in the charge if she to 35, 36,- or 37 club, which maintains an excell- WAC; the veteran’s . participation
boro, S. C.; CpL Johnme E. Spears, twelve S or less years of age and has completed ent cafeteria serving three meals a in community -planning; veterans
of. Florence, S. C.; CpL Clano E. ^ p EdleriT wito hto two yfars of honorable military day, , ; returning .to farms; the onportun-
Stephens, of Waycross; GiM-Cpl. .Col .John P.^Edgerty witn rus wo y 3g yearsof age> re- Reasonable Rates ties afforded by small business,
Archie Thornton, of Chattanooga gardless of the period of her mill- Rates for rooms at the guest and veerans belonging to minority
Term.; Cpl. Allen • C. - English, of the Reception center ^norus a ^ house are 50c per bed per night groups.
Selma, Ala.; Cpl. William C. Harl- ,.Ilve wire of ^ fit at al tary u<l. b?toetoe it weh within the meins The new series is the result of
sa | m,i, JSl - A y^*gss&M2;
Christmas Gifts
SOFT
TOYS
FOR CHILDREN
rCrib Toys
Lambs, Dolls, Dogs
Tykio Toys
Baby Buntings
I the work done by the chorus. Col. | Male °«ice” of the r^mJa^re priralewithtwo CBS and the Veterans’ Adminis-
Edgerly said, * I speak witto deep- cal Department) will be g singje jjeds However there are tration oh the actual experiences
seated satisfaction of a job well for discharge if they with ttoefbeS ap^ of discharged veterans,
done both musically and mihtari- points ^ computed °vn SeP Th Guegt House to also served “Assignment Home” will be pro-
iy by the Reception Center Chonis ber 2 1945, or ^ year£ ™ by Howard Buses running either duced by. Robert Heller. Scripts
and we regret ; that such a fine months of nonoraDie min y ^ grd gTR or Columbus, as will be by Arnold Perl and other-’
group of singers has to be dis- service. officers (ex- well as the intra-post bus route writers. Programs will be directed
banded. . win to the Main Post. 1 by CBS staff directors in monthly
Automobile Insurance
Bodily Injury and Property Damage Liability
Current Premium $21.20 — $10-20-5M Limits
Current Premium $19.55 — $5-10-5M Limits
NATIONWIDE CLAIM SERVICE
Emory P. Cary Agency
No. 2 Edge Bldg., 12th St. j Dial 3-1313
WE WILL PAY CASH FOR-
FURNITURE — STOVES — DISHES — HEATERS
REFRIGERATORS -r- STORE FIXTURES
AND ALMOST ANYTHING OF VALUE
If You Have Something To Sell —
Dial 2-4580 For Our Estimate!
Southeastern T rilling & Sales Ce.
14 WEST TENTH STREET ] ■■ • ■
Fall and Winter-
Hats for Ladies
SELECTED
EBAli !
Regular Stock, Now $3.95
HATS REGULAR^ $5-00 — $7,95
Hand-Made Saeques 0 Caps # Blanquilts
Baby Shoes • Poeketbooks O Shop Early!
GUSSIE POPE, Manager, Infants and ’Children's Wear
DIAL 2-1818 1212 BROADWAY
atr Ida’s
cromn stop
J 1301 BROADWAY L
Hi-Light in Your Clothes Closet
Gowns-Coats-Suits-Sportswear .
Millinery Accessories ’
A Choice Selection for G. 1. Joes
The General's Lady
•banded. j aaomou, to the Main Post by CBS staff directors m monthly
Col. Edgerly awarded each, of cludingMwiical Department) lU to Hie . manager' of rotation, ..starting with John
the. chonis members a. leatiier contome i be eligible “ the guest hotise to Harmony Dietz, Original background, mus-
wallet with “Reception Center” charge if they are 50 years oi ge Chur«i with Mrs Barry white- ic will be composed by Robert
and the respective name inscribed or over. . h ead as assistant manager. Further Stringer for' the: orchestra under
to golden letters on the wallet information can be obtained by the direction of Harry Salter.
aXiwdTsocSiaS.SSntly hl«temllr “ calling FB 6417. - PREDICTS ROCKETS TO
pjssraas. ,sas.,,L
riven a farewril social affrir as computed on September 2, caning r id on <. PREDICTS ROCKETS TO g
21 The waf ^ontored' bv M«5, or are married, regardless gIX WAR n BROTHERS TRAVEL 3,000 MILES ft
toe Athtoti^a^ RMreation Of- of; when, and enlisted prior to May Jom ONE LEGION POST LONDON. England- (ALNS)- **
ficer rf. whie^Can^n Robert M 12, 1945. _ •„ WASHINGTON COURT Rocket ranges of 1,500 to 3,000 ||
Reynolds officer to charge 1 ' !In addition WAC. officers- wiU Hqus£ O.— (ALNS)— Six brotto miles .now appear to be possible, J
Reynolds is offiwir m charge. continue to be eligible for dis- aU with World War n service, according, to W. G. A. Rerring, m
The Re^ntton Center Chorus charge 11 they are 40 y6a S °f ag joined The American Legion Post British aeronautic expert, who s
rne necepnon . i^enxer cnorus Qr over i- h when Flovd Vernon and told the Royal Aeronautical So- =
was .organized in April, 1941, un- To Discharge Surplus Troops F^,;ier?jr^+ .-oJtw rii^haneeri ciety that this would be accom- m
ROBERTA WELLS, Manager; Millinery Department1 ^
2-1818 ! 1212 BROADWAY
'e**x‘^eacK^^
orover. . : , _ 25 here when Floyd, Vernon and told the Royal Aeronautical So- s
To Discharge Surplus Troops , Cecil West, recently, discharged, ciety that this would be accom- 1 m
SSe ]whoerS to The A^^ contoue to dto- winged
I «Hto rSin’c charge personnel in. this country s"e time acted as proxies for the rockets equipped, with a booster
| with the. United States Chaplains who are no longer needed and who other Howard, ;S 1-c; Reed- mechamsm. Flight would be at
| Corps. He picked men from the d not qjaiffy for overseas duty, r y 3_c ’and Robert, corporal, more than 800 miles 'an, hour, he
even though they do^ not have stiU to the airbed forces, predicted. ,
- ed«e and love of . music, with the er,n1,„h - noints for release under Jliif = i
ldea, „°I sinPing. Songs of the the 6poi^t system. These dis- |p ■=== I f
Soul.” The smgers soon establish. charg^s will not be permitted |to -i _ i ’i • - '
ed a reputation and then when interfere with the prompt release _ . ** I II
they began singing over, the ether o{ those eligible imder the point
waves, this reputation spread rap- system or with the speediest pos-
ldly- ■. , , , stole return to this country 6f
Sgt. Abner Jackson served as high-point men from overseas-
director fof the Chorus until De- All other factors for discharge,
cember, r 1941, .when Pvt. ' Jack including discharges by reason of
Montgomery assumed the direct- hardship or dependency or- im- 1
orship. Montgomery carried the portance to the national health,
chorus until September; 1942, and safety, or interest, will remain to
the leadership fell to Sgt. Willis effect.
Brown, sole survivor of the origi- At the present time, the criti-
nal chorus, to its end. Major R. P. cal score for the discharge of en-
i Langley; then Captain, was in listed men is 60 points, enlisted
"If It'* Worth Doing — It'* Worth Doing Well" «
DOES YOUR CAR NEED
Glasses— Upholstery— Painting
OR , - -1
Wrecks Repaired^— Fender Dents
Wheel Aligning
Mechanical Repairs |
IF SO, FOR GOOD SERVICE, SE^
c A I TCHfC FENDER AND
OAL! t K w BODY WORKS
740 LINWOOD BOULEVARD .
DIAL 3-5772 | COLUMBUS, GA. ■
Mommy
You'll W
Find All . A |g
My Needs (3p^j
Christmas '
... L “ . ' !
Herman Abdala's
New and Permanent Location
tiny Tot Shoppe
1218 Broadway
i j An ArM|iy Wife I
1 1 Shops in ^Columbus 1
Certainly practical] as well asi THE SEARS ROEBUCK COM-
pretty gift iddas are. the ■ leisure PAHY, as usual, has a wealth of
footwear styles- smartly designed by practical and reasonably priced
Daniel Green. The up-to-the-min- ( Christmas gift suggestions. For the
ute concern of MILLER-TAYLOR [male members of the family they
SHOE COMPANY presently : is dis- suggest plaid cotton shirts for
playing several styles for your hunting and fishing throughout the
choosing. One style, suitably named (winter. Plaids] of blue and brown
Tea for Two, features a soft, satin lore featured in warm, 100% wool
bow and meduim heel on the du- .mackinaws which may be worn over
bonnet, royal blue or black slippers, the shirts. Not quite so bulky, but
Perhaps a bit more cozy is the Joli providing extra warmth-are the low-
style. It is just as pretty as its name jpriced utility jackets, nicely tailored
implies, in blue, dubonnet, shocking (of cotton twill. Hard-to-find leather
pipk or block. This particular style jackets for women are presently be-
has a flat heel and is fashioned of ling offered ot Sears in sizes 12 to
felt and satin. Other bedroom slip- |20. Zipper or button fronts as well
pers and ''mules" are equally ot- as belted styles ore included in tne
tractive gift suggestions offered by .assortment. For sports weor of the
this well-known footwear concern, more active type, shop at Sears.
If in past yeors you've chewed J If you.olways hove trouble sh<3p-
your nails Jo the quick worrying ping around Christmas time, a good
about what to give the many friends Way to solve the gift- giving for. all
on your long Christmas gift list, your friends at one fell swoop is to
ponder not this year .! . . just visit get a good photograph, token of
THE J. A. KIRVEN COMPANY, yourself. • The best place to hove
They have on outstanding- assort- this done without a lot of fuss and
ment of gift ideas to please you pother is THE MAURICE PHOTO
dnd each person on your shopping ^TUDIO. And, most Important, tno
sheet. Unusuol handbags, exciting results will certainly be^ well worth
jewelry, exotic scarfs and the better! <he small remuneration asked. This
known brands of perfumes, just to' popular studio, locoted in the Mom
mention o few things. Ilf ypu want Jheater Building offers borgom
to please someone special, giving combinations for a short time be-
any of the following perfumes will fjore the Christmas rush begins. So
certainly do the trick: Chichi by polish up your brass, or put on your
Renoir, Schocking de iSchioparelli, pest bib pnd tucker and hie your.
Sirrocco by Lelong, Bli)e Grass by self to the studio which is open on
Elizabeth Arden, Chontilly by Hou- Sjundoys for your convenience. And
bigont ond the. very latest scent on expect some superior photographs
the market: Toglio by Lelong. .( . . you'll get them, too! • .
m
j The Baronet, Thursday , November 29, 1945 -
JhsL WnvisL U)qsJl
THE MUMMY CASE— One of the praps for The Man Who inr that luscious blonde, Brenda Joyce. .» week following a long layoffand Snyder, Elizabeth Ann Knott,
Came to Dinner" will be the mummy case shown above tottrsday Nov 29th have been playing at unit parties, Terry. Rosenberger . Amory ^ ihce,
with Lt. Dollie McCarty trying it lor size, and Corp. Bill C«. j,K. ,| T to* and itong fwt ^S.V^E^JST "*
Van Treese pointing out the ‘advantages.’ '(Signal Lab ilartrove? TlmilPr K IWO Be°TS *he past tw0 ?
—.Photo by Corp. Jerry Tiffany) Not 4 & 5: Tte Stork Club l/lllilvl ■ ' I ft V ^The Four Aces are a rather for hier work in many post produc-
njn jn- pillow of Death' ■■■■ ■ II ■ - * ■ ■ unique type of musical organiza- tionsi including “Oklahoma, in
'Man Wim fame To D imer ^itoneur- Hilarious Hours sr^swqs
man nno tame luusmic I : ^i-j^*****^ «w»w» ',WU,J
^ _ J EH* DvAHAviu yvAnlAin Nos. 2 & 3: How Do You Do? tilT API 3IVHHAm best of the established favorites in deinic Gaieties, and Music at
Posed dio Property ProDiem inicnainnieni ^ ,?our *
"* 1 .No 11: Allotment Wives. ; Blue, who in civilian life played es” include Blue at the piano, Ted
Far from being the least of aH The proportions , of this job iSATURDAY, Dec. 1st The genius of George K^utEman with. D6l G<5urtney, ishapi Jobes, Wasfelewski at the string bass.Al
jobs connected with “The Man would have caused most furm- jjos. j & 8; The Strange Mr. and Moss Hart is.s^°y™ Everett Hoagland, Art Mooney, Stairtpf at tenor sax, and Frankie
Who Came to Dinner” is the ture ferriets” to quake but ap- Gr^y F cre/fftlon^LSU^i^^ and for his own MCA Band, is a Keever with the jmter.
property gathering of Lt. Dollie parently not so the case °f NaSi | & 3: What Next, Corpor- in The Who, Came to Pm pianist of no mean ability, and his They re available for boolangs
McCarty. The Messrs. Kauffman Guild’s Lieutenant McCarty. With, al HaXgrove? ner, , as presented by the Theater £ty]ing it is what paces the Aces all oyer Fort Benning. Either Blue
and HartJJot only have outdone narry a bat to her lash, Mac Nog 4 & s; Snafu jGuild, ?pemnf Decemtier 10til m through all of their arrangements, or the Fourth Headquarters, First
themselves in the writing of this undertook the securing of such No. 10: Pardon My Past jthe Alabama Area. Rae Featured Vocalist Army Special Services Section can
odus but have presented the unorthodox bits as; 1-Mummy jj0 jj. pin0w of Death The play, whose acts crisp with Featured vocalist with the Four handle the bookmgs, and they can
■ property department with as case, 4-Penguins, and mind you, SUNDAY, Dec. 2nd the sharp utterances of Sheridan Aces js lovely Ata Rae, who is be contacted by calling FB 3409
mountainous and diversified a list a colony of Cockroaches to, say Nos j & 8: Yolanda and the Whiteside, is full of zaney people to Fort Benning residents or 3870. I
of working properties as can be nothing of- the thousands and one Thief c who come and go in the upset ;
what NEXT COEPOEAL HARGROVE?: The toning* to
to “See Here, Private Hargrove” in which the two- g
SpS is again portrayed by serious Robert
Keenan Wynn once again stealing the show as .his sidekick. I fi|fP| 1 P
THE STRANGE MR. GREGORY: Edmund Lowe and Jean Gregory H ; I
in a run-of-the-mill mystery flicker. ■
VOLANDA AND THE THIEF: The technicolor version o^apold|J^p B H ‘
°^ad tTwiT^ed Astaire and his. newest dancing partner,
THE^DALTON^RmE AGAIN: Suave Alan Curtis and lush Marthg || |f
I EH SJiic
to you) and Zachary Scott in some worthwhile eDtej^im°e^; I EH
PAlSoN U, PAST: A rollicking and cleverly conc«ve^tuahon & | £1* | t
comedy featuring Fred McMurray, Marguerite > ♦ /
Sged^s^rmemToblerns. „ KENNY BLUE partie*"^^ mh^crncS^^all^er Fo^BeMlng^n^e^g^taf AUa
THE STORK CLUB: The song and dance dynamics of ®etty^U Ra“d?« ttevoSlSSI whS^Maestro^ue’s piano stylings pace -the group. (Photo by 167th Signal |
and four hot-tunes of the piece are enough to put the mm oyer ivae^ Company.) i . ■ ■ ■ ' —
with- a bang. Barry Fitzgerald also adds lustre. - " ' ' i ■ _• 1 ,
SNAFU: Robert Bendfley and Vera Vague in a trite comedy that has R| r ^ k AA. GlM SCOUtS Ell 10V
boreowed Ik. Ok SUhguaSe winch mean, *> g|yg^ pO||f AC6S |_0j,g Hike Ot POSt
Action After
all. . _ - 1,1 r,v,,v held a Thanksgiving “hike” last
rftwmgKTTAL AGENT: In which the “Come with me to the Cas- ■ g| I it Saturday morning: trampmg
C0THrch“f^ invhad «The If»k." Lamen Bacai( to [enqthV LaVOfl
\dsit the Casbah. (Wonder where Bogy is?) , - 3 « ■ Chattahoochee River and Upatoi
ALLOTMENT WIVES: Class B flicker of interest to GIs. Features Anny)g outstanding- music Creek for an hour and a half.
Kay Francis and Paul Kelly. ■ 1 . ; . combo, . “Kenny Blue and the The ^P.P^I ^eSers in-
PILLOW OF DEATH: Chiller-diller stuff with Lon Chaney terroriz- Four Aces,” returned to action last Martha Hughes, Dorothy
Lend-lease food shipment to
the United Kingdom from March, |
1941 to April; 1945 was valued, at
$3,185,810,000.
Blue's Four lAces
On WRBL Tonight
Kenny. Blue and the Four
Aces, First Army’s dance com-
bo, /Will be featured tonight
over First Army’s1 Thursday
night radlqprogram, presented
as part of tort Benning on the .
Air over WRBL at 5:15 p. m.
; The Ace?, who leature the
- piano stylings of Maestro Blue
and the i songs of charming
Alta Raej will tablade ^two
popular favorites i on. their
musical hill of fare] They are
[ “Symphony” and “It’s Been a
Long, Long Time”
Firt Army’s radio program
Is the oldest of all unit radio
shows now being presented at
Fort Benning, with the pro- .
Before Yob Bay—
*iThey Furnish Yflur Home
COMPLETE for Gash or
on Credit."
| Phone 3-^991
PALMER A SON
101P- lit Ave. Columbui, Go.
Eight members of the Fresh-
man ! High School Girl Scouts
held a Thanksgiving “hike last
Saturday morning: trampmg
from! the Scout cabin to St. Hu-
bert’s Shrine and along the
Chattahoochee River and Upatoi
Van Treese pointing out the ’advantages.’ (Signal Lab poral Hargrove'
-Photo by Corp. Jerry Tiffany) ,s 4 % 5] 1
ing that luscious blonde, Brenda Joyce.
THURSDAY, Nov. 29th 1
as. 1 & 8: What Next, Cor- a
'Mail Who Came To Dinner'
Posed Big Property Problem
Nos. 2 & 3: Snafu
Nos. 4 & 5: The Stork Club
No. 10: Pillow of Death
No. 11: Confidential Agent
FRIDAY, Nov. 30th
NoS. 1 & 8: What Next, Corpor-
Hargrove? „ _ .
Nos. 2 & 3: How Do You Do?
Nos. 4 & 5: The Stork Club
No. 10: Pardon My Past
No. 11: Allotment Wives.
iSATURDAY, Dec. 1st
'Dinner' Is Two
Hilarious Hours
Entertainment
The Corridor
Daily Serving Hours
Lunch: 11:30 to 2:30 E.S.T.
Dinner: 5:45 to 8:30 E. S T.
Approved By Duncan Hines
13>/2.12th ST. DIAL 2-1751
-B & S JEWELRY CO.
WATCH REPAIRING
4 to 24-Hour
Dependable Service
— Dial 2-1064 —
1724 Hamilton Road
A “Crawford” Watch^^^,
Sure as the Sun!
True as the Moon!
Regular as the Stars !
Inspect Our Values!
stock pieces needed for such a Nos 2 & 3: What Next, Corpor- household of Mr. and Mrs. Stan-
; large production. al Hargrove? ley, of Messalia, Ohio. The Stan-
Now we all know that roaches Nog 4 & 5. gow Do You Do? leys themselves are the chief
are. not too hard to obtain, espe- No 10. The strange Mr. Greg- brunt of the “great one’s” jibes,
dally in some of the camps we piuch to the consternation, of Mr.
! know, but the idea, of colonizing N-0 jj. pardon My Past Stanley, played by \Capt. John
them for a show — well, they wall - - MONDAY, Dec. 3rd Currier, and his wife, portrayed
appear none the less, houses and Nos j & g: Yolanda and the by May Pigott. There are Miss
all, thanks to “Mac.” Thief Preen, the overworked nurse, -with
Lieutenant McCarty has fever- Nos 2 & 3: The Strange Mr; Mrs. Currier filling the role; the
jishly worried for the past two Grej,0‘rv • bver zealous Dr. Bradley, capably
' weeks how she was going to Nns. 4 & 5: What Next, Corpor- played by Lt. Omar Coleman;
' Sflaaaaoada«ededd86 al Hargrove? pixyish Harriet Stanley, Sallie
AJJUIJU i _run_rLrLrLrLTLr - -- j jq. The Stork Club Holman, steps into scenes all
bbc 1 | ' No. 11: Pardon My Past through the play to mystify
Mfstftn TUESDAY. Dec. 4th Whiteside no end.
ll Q lull 1 Nos 1 A 8; The Daltons Bide Swiftly pacing the play, as aup-
/■' ■ ' Again porting stars are his ‘:pals in skull
v-VJvY Nos. 2 & 3: Yolanda and the duggery” Beverly Carlton and
• \ 1 Thief Loraine Sheldon, with Cpl. John
<; W ■ Nos. 4 & 5: What Next, Corpor- Walsh and Doris King supplying
%:/W : al Hargrove? many a laugh. Lt. Val Borger por-
Rvvn iJr & ifo 10: Snafu trays the local “Horace Greeley
.,/ No. 11: The Strange Mr. Greg- and steals Whiteside’s secretary
VofSfF ory> from under that so nosey nose.
1 WEDNESDAY, Dec. 5th All these together, with Lt. Wm.
> i ' Nos. 1 & 8: Danger Signal King as John the butler; T-5 Lot-
. $44.50 INC. ! Nos. 2 & 3: Yolanda and the tie Hughes as Sarah, his wife,
is! tax 1 Thief „ guarantee to give the Reard
i 1 No. 4 A 5: The Strange Mr. many a lively moment when he
d— Seats are Available
DALLAS
FT. WORTH
From Atlanta j
- ' ' 7 ; FLIGHTS DAILY
lUlaoo Hotel Lobfcr * Phone 7480
LOYALTY TO CHURCH
and I
TO AMERICA WILL BUILD
CHRISTIAN CHARACTER^ *'
(EASTERN STANDARD TIME)
At Your Friendly Credit Jewelers
PAUL JEROME®?^
'Truly a Diamond House"
Telephone 2-B755
I Gregory. •' wheels about the stages of Fort J
\ No. 10: Snafu ; !Benning in the Theater Guild i
J No. 11: The Stork Club 4 production opening December 10th
! — -with performances at Theaters
K/au/ K/owennnPr !Nos- 1 and u> the' Alabama Area,.
> nGVr riGWSpuper and with tentative playing dates
(8k* a • • . in several other theaters.
J Covers Activities There is promise of the two
i _ . _ , . : Jj. most hilarious hours you will ever
5 Or School TrOODS sPend in the theater in-the pre-
I JLIIUUl i holiday presentation of “The Man
The first issue of The Troop- who Came to Dinner.”
SEE EAGLE FIRST
FOR
Caps # UNIFORMS • Jewelry
"HEADQUARTERS FOR ENLISTED MEN "
EAGLE ARMY STORE
1028 BROADWAY
er, official newspaper of School
Troops, The Infantry School, bh i. a |l ■
was; distributed to all units of UAfNlH MAUiar
School Troops last Thursday. llUjUIICll rlUYIv)
Published by and for^the en- ■ lWD|f ainai a
listed personnel of School ^ 1 f ■
Troops, The Trooper Matures UAmi 3F \ATMICA
unit! news columns,. School :|"ll|||||ni flvv
Troops sports activities and I* -
jkl? Sch001 Ttr,r; flf PpH fm«
Supervised by the School y | |\vU vl wJ
41 Troop’s Public Relations office,
'lhe Tr??v.pe^ hal- Recuperating GI’s at Regional
Tec. ; 4 Charles A. Fairmam, Jr. Hospitalj Fort Benning see movies
Detachment editors,, COI?Pan£ which are rushed here by a film
reporters, two artists and a service that ^ the largest non-;
photographer make up the bat- theatrical operation of its kind in
ancelof The Trooper staff. The the ^orld *
Trooper is published every oth- - e. Hill, i American
er Thursday. - Red Cross Field Director at Fort
! Benning, said that the pictures
manage the handling of four Pen- come via the Red Cross hospital
guins and at the last minute al- motion picture service and are cir-
moet [threw in the towel when culated to 247 Army and Navy
word i came the other day from hospital recreation buildings in
the express company to come and this country, 416 Army hospital
get ’em. She got ’em ... so wards and. 350 hospitals overseas,
another, screwey prop obtained. See Up-To-Date Movies
Mummy Case? Naturally most “Patients in the hospital are see-
of our better museums have them mg up-to-date movies all right,”
but for some reason pr another — said Field Director Murray E.
we can’t imagine why— there was Hill. “Sometimes they are seeing
a continual barrage of refusal, them as soon as they are shown,
when we asked for one. So what — in hometown theaters.”
we have the facilities right here He explained that as new fea-
to make our own mummies — so tures and shorts are produced by
“Mac” and the technical, depart- nine major motion picture com-
ment have developed this week a panies, prints are obtained by the
mummy case, four thousand years hospital motion picture service for
old? showings in this country.
When “The Man Who Came to “Films provided by the Red
Dinner” opens December 10th the Cross reached audiences topping
Theater Guild will breathe an 15 million in this country and un-
ample prayer of thanks for Lieu- counted millions overseas in the
tenant McCarty and her super- last 12 months,” • the Red Cross
sleuthing. field director added. !
| WELCOME
Fort Benning Personnel
Eat All You Want
■KiSs "Family Style"
With Your Friends
ALL ONE PRICE —
Lunch, 75c — Dinner, 95c
HAYES Restaurant
925 BROADWAY AT DILLINGHAM
-HERE THEY ARE-
YOUR
" Roy Logan"
Buckle
Oxfords -
MADE FROM
First Quality Leather
xThru-oui" Entire Shoe
CANNON SHOE STORE
1127 BROADWAY
iuF"™ED ]
- BIG SHIPMENT - . [
"Forever Amber" jj
. BY V ‘ ■ . ! s
KATHLEEN WINSOR [
The Book You've j j
( Been Waiting For!
White's Book Store
1211 BROADWAY DIAL 3-2691
First Presbyterian
Church
First Avenue at 11th Street
Sundjay Worship Services:
9:45 A. M.— Bible Sehoel
11:00 A, M.— Church
Vesper Service, 6:15 P.M..
E. S. T.
SERVICE CENTER— Open Satur-
day* and Sundays with special
parly each third Saturday
night. Games — Refreshments
ALL Service Men Invited!
— Fellowship — Fun. Social
hour with Refreshments and
Special Program Each Sun-
doy ot 7:00 P. M., E. S. T. . ,
FIRST BAPjTIST
| CHURGR
(Opposite Ralston Hotel)
DR. FREDERICK S. PORTER
Pastor
Sunday School, 10:15 A.M.i
Morning Worship
11:30 A.M.
Sunday Evenings
5:45 Fellowship Hour
1 for Service .Men
and Women
B. T. U.,6:45 P.M.
Evening Worship
8:00 P.M,
HOLY FAMILY CATHOLIC CHURCH
Corner 12th Street on|d 4th Avenue
j REV. HERMAN J. DEIMEL, Pastor
Masses Sunday-— 7 :00, 8:30, 10:00, 11:30, 12:30
Confession Saturday — 5:00, 6:30 and 7 :30-9:30
BAKER VILLAGE— Moss In the Administration Building ot 9 o'clock,
E. S. Tj., every Sunday. Religious instruction for the-chilJren every
Wednesday at 4:45 p. m. in Hundertmark's residence, 26 Fox St.,
Baker Village.! I ' \ '
For MEN Only! -
STAG NITE at KffiVEiYS
lues., Dec. 4th, 6 t# 0 p.m. ^
Hi, fellosf We j thought you'd like to do your
Christmas shopping without any feminine
interference, so we've planned to hold a STAG
NITE for meh only! There'll be shopping
hostesses to help you, and "smokes" and re-
freshments "on the house." We think it'll be
lots of fun, and we want you to come. So we'll
be looking forward to seeing you STAG NITE.
COLUMBUS, GA., NOVEMBER 29, 1945
'£®?SB : . aTsssarawfc" ' - -i
urtMtel the officer *nfi ealiited personnel of Port B«a- .
SSTrSIs dUtrihuUd to. AS <mitt tfc*t mho «P OrMtor < *n msmMXxn tot puMtestJoa ihouM j* ttot to jhj
,-..... Stai^S&“u'aWS!!SH',a2£
Pftlifiw tag «Ut*m«BU rtflaettfl to an n«r» eelnrmi 07 itmuh. —
s«sss*““,B!Sf,sr*a »l:sas^ras£f^"“! if*
— **^^'^.0™! fBr*Mril Only) 1 Bit 12; fl Mwrth, $1.25; 8 Month. 75o— Ptftftl. In Adonnc
r.,...u... a?. ' ! T,IqKi»m«CI
. th» prodn cU »dT«rt2»a.
^ ah nm fat eo&neAtiaa mould b* Mat to thi
5EM“SSK
Editorially:
Speaking
General
Marshall
The acclamation, “A Good Job Well D°n^<
has scarcely if ever been more appropriately used
that when referring to General of the Army
George Catlett Marshall, who last week stepped
down from the post of Chief of Staff for the
Axmy, a post which he has filled so well and
so unobtrusively, and who was awarded the Dis-
tinguished Service medal by President Truman
' ■ Monday.
General Marshall is a true Soldier of Democ-
racy. Competent in his military strategy, liberal
in his outlook upon the world, and plain, forth-
right, outspoken and vigorous in the performance
his duty, he has served the nation welL
It was a black day for the world when Gen-
eral Marshall took, over the reins in September,
1839, for that was the day when the German
armies were unleashed on Poland^ and World
War'll began.
' General- Marshall had. been especially selected
by the Commander in Chief, President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, for the job of chief of staff, because
in Marshall Roosevelt recognized a man who was
no respector of hidebounds traditions and past
methods of war- lie realized that in Marshall
he had a man who could look ahead, assimilate
and appreciate the rapidly-changing methods of
battle, and lead a mechanized and aerial army.
' upon Marshall there fell the huge- task of
converting a small, rather— antiquated American
,*rmy into a modern striking force capable of war-
fare all over. the world., France 'fell, and the
alarmed Democracy of the Welt realized that the
licking flames of war were creeping closer and
closer to its shores.
The army began to prepare. Induction of
civilians into its ranks was begun, and the
United States Army set out to make itself into
the! machine which might someday ibe needed to
■ defend America from blitzkrieg war.
Marshall’s success has been measured in the
Victory of American Arms.! He was quick to
, cut away red tape and oldj obstacles, eager to
adapt new weapons of war. He was adept in
the handling of men, and tlie first to Tecognize
ability of newer men when pthers preferred
seniority. \ . I
His elevation of General Dwight D.- Eisen-
hower to high position is a case in point. Before
the war, Eisenhpwer was an obscure lieutenant-
coloneL Marshall it was who recognized the
military, genius in Eisenhower, and he saw to it '
that Eisenhower was placed jin situations which
proved the point to all others.
Thus, when American forces invaded North
Africa in 1942 after we had been involved in
the war, Eisenhower led. The choice was a wipe
one, because General Ike proved a fine tactician
- and strategist and ;.an adept coordinator of ’the
military efforts of a number of nations.
American Armies slowly regained the offen-
sive rafter the sudden Japanese attack had caught
us off balance, and the United Nations armies
moved closer and closer to j Berlin and Tokyo,
until finally the enemy went under.
It was General Marshall who coordinated the
American efforts, who trained, led, and inspired
the civilian Army of America to the rank of the
world’s finest war machine.
A true -soldier of democracy is General Mar-
shall, and all Americans hail', him as such.
Chaplain Tells
Of Conditions
At Death Camp
“Americans at Dachau,” in
which is described the conditions
and the rehabilitation . work at
the famous German Concentra-
tion and Death Camp, is the sub-
ject of an article written by
Chaplain John G. Gaskill of First
Array’s! 127th Evacuation Hospital
for the Atlanta. Ga., Constitu-
tion. I
The 127th Evacuation Hospital,
which returned here in the au-
tumn for inactivation after serv-
ing throughout the latter stages
of the Battle of Europe and then
as one of two hospitals at Da-
chau, were at the famed scene of
horrors!, photographed by First
Army’s! 167th Signal Photo com-
pany, also at Benning for over
six weeks.
Chaplain Gaskill was in charge
of documenting the thousands
upon thousands of bodies which
had been cremated, or merely
thrown) into mass graves, and
having] a new cemetery properly
fitted for use. He was assisted by
one of] the internees at the camp.
Pastor Bohumer Opocensky. of
Klaster -District, Opolone, East
Bohemia.
Kept Record of Dead
Opocensky, during all of the
long tenure of German- adminis-
tration! during - which .thousands
died or were frilled, kept a rec-
ord of [these dead, hiding the book
among| - diseased corpses where
the Germans were afraid to look.
This aided immensely in proper
documentation.
Upon his departure for his
home, : Opocensky gave the book
to Chaplain Gaskin, saying that
“I want you to have it, for you
> have shown me more of Love of
God in these few hours than I
have experienced since I came.”
Given Altar Set
Another treasured possession
given Chaplain Gaskill at Dachau
was an altar set made for him
by a Polish craftsman who ask-
ed him to take the gift “as a token
vehicles. This splendid shot by Bayonet Photog Jerry Tiffany was taken from nP.T* S carries all
Transportation Corps ona test run as it left the post and began its way across the Betjeman Bridge whic n
rail anil vehicular traffic across the Upatoi Creek just outside the outpost. (Signal Lab Photoj.
AUAVAA^vvi awajj tion,” means it’s your headache
Vmf a m a 4 now
M H H r. ...ill ” means I
V T ’Swi have forgotten.
V. A “For immediate action,” means
do something j quick, before we
“Is my face dirty or is it my member him and the next three both, get in trouble,
imagination?” didn’t know. he’d been gone. j “7 — ~~~
“Your .face is clean 'but I don’t ” . see e
know, about your taalination.” '
Boy! Am I a sissy!
Hiaplam’s
corner..
have [for the Americans and for
America.” ''
The _ huge task of cleaning and
Once Over,
Lightly!
Give Unto Them
The Bird
Mandy: “Ah can’t come to work
I tomorrow, Mam. Mah little boy
is 6ick.”
Mam: “Why, Mandy, I thought
you said you were an old maid.”
Mandy: “Ah is, but ah ’ain’t
On a recent furlough back home, we were con-
fronted with a rather disturbing problem.
We happened to be -sitting on a large and an-
cient cistern, long since filled in, which occupies
part of the front yard of a college we once attend-
ed, and we were basking in the --sunlight which,
though gone- from other regions, still was holding
forth in the low . country of South Carolina
(Commercial.) •
Along came a friend of ours of pre-war stand-
ing, and asked us if we wouldn’t please take a
couple of chances on a turkey which his frater-
nity happened to be raffling off that week.
What, we inquired, would, we do with this tur-
• key if we. won it? Oh, get somebody to cook it,
was the answer. “Don’t you know the army bet-
ter than that?” we asked. For answer, he ner-
vously fingered his discharge button and we re-
called that the lad had received a medical dis-
charge after several years; of overseas service, so
that shut-' us up- along that tack.
We decided to adopt more practical measures
of contention, in order to get out of the turkey
raffle. How would he get it to us, if we won,
since we wouldn’t be there at the time of - the
drawing?
He started to say, “Don’t worry; you won’t win,”
but changed -his mind. He' solemnly assured us
that he would mail the turkey to us. When we
told him that we doubted whether Postmaster
General Walker (or is it Hannegan now?) would
particularly approve of large turkeys being cir-
culated among his mail carriers, since he doesn-’t
like eggs, we were told that the turkey woul.d be.
sent’ to us by express, postpaid.
This posed several problems. ‘First of all; when •
we told our mail clerk that we had a turkey over
at the express office, what would- he do? Would
he go over there and pick it up for us? Hardly,
because he’d probably think we were handing him
another tall story.
Granting, however, that we convinced the mail
orderly of the truth of the matter, what then? We
would have a large turkey (and we were assured .
that the bird was a large one!) and would have
nothing much to do with it.
You could give it to the mess sergeant to; fix
for you, the solicitor told us. j Nope, because one
turkey, ^Ven a large one, wouldn’t go very far
with several hundred soldiers each wanting some
white meat.
You could sell it, thejlad then suggested. This
was not very probable, because to dojthat. we
would have 'td ferry the big bird into Columbus,
and it would look -terribly out of place on a How-
ard Bus. 1 ■
You could take it to a friend .. . . you must
have one who lives off the post and get him
to fix it for you. Hardly. All the friends we have
who live off the post brought their families to
mess halls for Tha'nksgiving Day and that was be-
cause a large turkey would, in all probability, not
fit in the ovens of most wartime households.
For a moment we had the turkey raffle sales-
man half-convinced. Then, unfortunately for us,
some more friends came up, all of them .members
of iny first friend’s fraternity.
Against guch (Overwhelming numbers, our poor
logic was unavailing. We were urged to con-
tribute to a worthy cause, to show o|ur school
spirit (we got nut in 1942, but that didn’jt matter),
to get in there and fight, to be a sport, and soon
the! inevitable happened. j . !
Five minutes later we were two tickets' richer
and fifty cents poorer.
We never did .hear how the raffle came out.
However, we wouldn’t be too surpised jif the ex-
press office phoned up to inform us that there was
a large turkey awaiting usi neatly boxed and
crated, down at their establishment.
Then truly would we have been given the bird!
Since we’ve still got several more, inches of type
to occupy, we’ll close with a poem: j
STRIPEOLOGY .
I Each soldier boy must l[ave, his stijipes,
As "every rookie knows. - ! !
A sergeant’s are upon his arm,
iin smart, three-decker rows, i
A private's are invisible;
They hover all his clothes. '
—Lb uis D. Rvpin, Jr.
The C. O. making a . Saturday is 6ick.”
inspection, rummaged through a Mam: “Why, Mandy,
private’s footlocker. He . came you said you were an ol
across a fifth of White Horse. Mandy: “Ah is, but
“Don’t you know this locker one of them fussy kind.
for clothing?” demanded the ^ ^ a a and Poppa
C* ?' , Rabbit stories . . . Wuz a Momma
7“' f’,, replic<* * ' and a Poppa rabbit standing out-
vate. “That’s my nightcap. ^ Qf # war plant> watching the
While resting in the bus sta- thousands of jeeps coming off the
of the burials, the murders, and
the prison, are all described in
Chapljain Gaskill’s eye-witness
account of the camp.
A resident of Derry, N. H.,
There was a hot pilot named
Bright
Whose speed was much faster
than light.
He took off pne day
To indulge la C fray.
And returned on the previous
night. i .
Enoch walked with God. The Bost[I University’s college of
disciples walked with, burning Liberal Arts, and the Andover-
hearts in the company [of Jesus.
Paul’s aim was to walk worthy tionalf Church of Peabody. Mass.,
of the Lord, for he Walked by in 1929, Chaplain Gaskill has '
- ..u since had appointments at the
faith. Agreeable compahy short- E v a L % e 1 1 e a 1 Congregational
ens the road and lightens the church of Canton, Mass., as super-..
«v#« Kir” renlied the pri- Rabblt stones . . . wuz a Momma To indulge In a tray. _ 'load. " Lif is like a journey that intendent of the Bible Society 'of
Yes, sir, replied the p Poppa rabbit standing out- And returned on the previous ° ^ ; . Maine, and as pastor of the First
vate. “That’s my nightcap.” ^ Qf ^ watching the ^ . . need nfer be lo^ afd » al‘ Church of East Darby.
White resting- in” the bus eh. «-»»* - ** « ^ .T^lvaI o( th. .T " “ * “ ^$0%
ri"any It t. * in business. P.rtaer. SVOSSi
I’m kure, they must have started Letter Draft Board:
“Pardon me, but are you look- with j more than just two.”
ing for a particular person?” Every woman is wrong until
“I’m satisfied if you are,” she she cries # . . and then she is right,
Virginia had a little quart
Of cider,, hard as steel.
instantly. — Port Hole, Naval ]
racks, Tampa, Fla.
Theme song for Japanese: “No-
“Gentlemen:
I am In Class 4-F. - My
mother-in-law came for a
visit two years ago and she’*
still here. For God’s sake
draft one of us.”
should be friends , who irust one ed wijth the 127th since. He served
another without reservation. Their overseas with the 127th in the
Rhineland. Central Europe, and.
devotion to a commoji cause at D^chau. and then at Rhiems
should be ^unequivocal and their and Marseilles, from where the
And everwhere she went, ’twas body! Knows the Rubble I’v
sport,
To watch Virginia reeL
Seen)’— The Flame, Fort Lewis',
, Wash.
A soldier on duty in the south-
west Pacific recently received a
V mail “Sorry but I’m getting
Love makes the world go
round, but then so does a good
swallow of tobacco juice. —
Auctioneer: “Mine is a bus-
iness that women can’t in-
fringe upon.’?
Gal: j “Nonsense. A good,
woman could make as good an
auctioneer as a man.”
Auctioneer: “Yeah? Well,
loyalty in service beyond " ques- unit was originally scheduled to
j. _ .. , ■ leave for direct redeDloyment
tion. Two heads are better th?m duty J the pacific. The 127th re-
one except when they are irrecon- turned to Continental United
eiUhly opposed. Many a premia-
ing business is ruined for a lack Eleanore C. Gaskill. has been
of agreement on the essential servinjg as acting pastor at East
. Darbyf m his absence. He also has
factors — objective, methods and two ^ons> Robert, age 12, and
investment. The last is the meas- Paul, i6. .
lire of a partner’s interest and the .
clearness with whieh he pereeives Oncfc upon a time there were
tits goal, determines the attention gikls who got on a troop train
Which he devotes to his bnstnese. ^ "'f11';, °»« “d
Two minds with a single purpose )ao,PeP oH . mmedtatety. The ,
i . ■ _ , v- ■ other remained calm and collected.
married.” from his alleged one The Beacon, AAF, Stuttgart, just the same, try *n6 jmag- Two minds with a single purple Vr femained calm and collected. '
and only. He was even more Ark. ine a young! woman before a c!an wrok wonders. But beware -j .
, • . Vioorf when he received „ , T- 7“ crowd s&yinjg, ‘Now, gentle- 0f the cheat who would have all A Scotchman upon entering a*
a Zklge TentS tlT^S % "*“* “ men,- .11 I want Is an etter!- o, , he profit, without labor. Part- sadd,e}s asked for a single spur.
“Here's your ring, send back my pat;. ,,5^ ateppad 0„ lhal ncw Wey down hTS^gia . travel- ■”“=) Pf “d . “**“* ““ 18 on' “ked
picture.” weighing machine. with t’ne speak- ing man found, himself stranded a e- ey * ™ ° W°r ° f.wlyi”* ror.Ug.fi «OTwiv «:# t
I The soldier snapped out of it . attachment, and it said, ‘one for the night and in his rambles gether, they must be agreed. W^ll, replied Sandy, if I can
long enough to quip,-via cable, J J time, ^iease’.”-Armored around town : noticed there were So are we partners, in the so- get one side of the horse to go
“thanks for the ring - would N?ws> Covington, Ga two Baptist churches. He asked *•! ™a»«. Three great words the otter side wUl have to go wi
—Armored around town ] noticed there were
send picture back, but can’t re-
member which one is you.
A Marine walked over to Zazu expression. — Gosport, Naval “Well, boss, I Ah’ll tell you,” said learning to emphasize not the
Pitts and said “H’ya, Beautiful.” Training Base, Pensacola, Fla. the informant! ’ “Dey just can’t word “own” but the word “owe.”
Zazu smiled and said. “I know- vet-j telegram to agree. One of de churches be-. We owe our community our gifts,
why you are calling me that. Its ^ g.^; uHavjng wonderful wish; Heves dat Pharaoh’s daughter endowments and achievements,
because I spent six hours m the , qu were here.»_The Bui- found Moses in de bullrushes. De We are partners of our comr
beauty parlor.” The Marine said, ■ Mi^n- pa_ odah church claims dat’s what she munity, seeking our own good
Love makes the world go1
round— with such a worried
expression. — Gosport, Naval
Training Base, Pensacola, Fla.
i around town , noucea mere wctc - . ,, ... , .
two Baptist, churches. He asked ‘lal realm. Three great words the otter side will have to go wi
a colored man why there should meet us everywhere in our it”
be two churches of the same de- time — leadership, cooperation . Huiipty Dumpty gat on a
rumination and brotherhood. Today we ar* ~! ..
Humpty Dumpty sat on a
wall,
Humpty Dumpty had a great
fall, ;
All the king’s horses
And all the king’s men
Had egg nog.
“No, it’s because I have spent six
months in the Solomons.”
letin. Fort Mifflin, Pa.
Mother had just finished a lec-
ture to her young daughter on the
Nurse: “Every time I listen pitfglls of sin; After she had |in.
to this soldier’s heart his blood ished she <aEke(j, “Now, tell me I
Some men can stand praise
without a murmur, but let a
line of just criticism come
through her good. All the com- winin^ to accept such fellowship,
munity owes us is the oppor- Christianity "is partnership with
tunity to become a partner for JGod all things. “Can two walk
pressure goes up. What should Leaj.^- where do the bad little girls their way and they’ll yelp like
the greatest good to all conr together e
. cerned. Make this an objec- Amos 3:3.
tive, and cooperation will be - 1 I ■
the method instead .of old time l| mg
together except they be agreed?”
Fort Benning
Scrap Book
The demure young bride, herl tyranny, and bossism. The re-
lace a revelation of winsome in- ward is brotherhood, more
Home-made
Peace
INSURANCE?
YES!
On a single day in New York Statej 600 G. I.’s .
. filed action for .divorce. They did riot seem to’
realize that the nation for which they fought is
essentially a home-made nation. Nor that, -in
breaking up their homes, they were cutting at
the very root of our national ideology.
'■?. Sound homes— ‘Tittle democracies” where
people, voluntarily agree to. live and work to-
gether— are the basic units in democracy. De-
stroy this idea— let home become a “little dicta-
torship”, a man’s castle, country club or cave, a
legalized love nest or a battleground for self-
willed parents and children— let wedlock, for
any reason,' drift into deadlock easily soluble
through easy divorce— and we lose not only the
■ idea behind democracy but any possibility that
democracy can work.
In Europe there are millions of displaced
persons and homeless children,’ without train-
t ing or direction. There are suffering and hatred,
: bereavement and i fear stalking across all the
] “liberated” countries, instruction in democracy
\ will prove- footless -here if we simply restore.
; their devastated houses. We must reinspire and
5 Testore the idea of a sound home.
In England and America, however, homes
. continue to break up — the homes of stay-at-
tiomes as well as those of the returning soldier.
- When the marriage knot comes untied it is the
children who are left at loose ends-. Juvenile
delinquency continues to grow with the divorce
rate — even among children from the “best fami-
hes”. A nation of children on the loose has no
answer for the nations of homeless children. It
is imperative that we should heighten our idea
of jthe “best families.” We must be different at
hoipe if we are to prove convincing abroad. We
mupt create a nation of sound families if we are
to. make any rignificant ! contribution to the
family of nations. ,
The first Christmas made home out of a
bam. The spirit of Christmas : can restore our
homes today — -even homes that have grown like’
a barn due to coldness and indifference. New
homes will mean new nations. They will mean a
home-made peace and a home-made peace can
1 d0?” r h,ftUse” g0?” , a PUP StUn* by * bUmble h**' the method instead of old time aUAai'n m « AKA
Doctor: Button ^our blouse. Daughter smiled winspme^ and ^ demu£-^g bride, her tyranny, and bossism. The] re- INSURANCE?
Toots Shor, the restaurant ty- sighed. Everywhere. Wi gs, facg # revelation of wins0me in- >vard is brotherhood, more
coon, tells the one about the fath- Chanute EieId> 1 L nocence, slowly walked down the precious than many fortunes. VFC9
er of six daughters, who finally The Navy is a' tradition in my church aisle clinging to the arm for in such an atmosphere life I fcVn
was presented with a son. family. My father was a famous of her father. ; As she reached the becomes divine, j AND NATION-WIDE
“Who does he look like? the sea captain. All his life the fi- platform her dainty foot brushed a jin religion the \ same principle y
father was asked. nance company, referred to him potted flower] upsetting it. She is at work. We have all heard of SERVICE, TOO!
“Can’t say,? was the reply. ag ..-rbe- Old Skipper ”-j-The Bea looked at the; spilled dirt gravely, the. Silent Partner. Jesus prom- p#1|I||ttL||e |n|a|,ela|A
“We haven’t looked at his face con> Terminal Island, Calif. then raised her child-like eyes to ised that he would [be witlr us. UUIUIUDU® 11116191910
vet.” ■ ' — , . the sedate face of the minister But there are conditions. There ■ |L#M-aiiaa. A0AHau
a <n ^ explanatlon of the more subj and said, “That’s a hell of a place must be trust. No man need walk IHSUY,8II66’ A§|6IICy
Executive (dictating and^in tie meanings of the language used to put a . lily » ' through .-life- alode. The Spirit njli 3.5071 7 e Uth
doubt as to use jof a phrase) . in offlcIal communications: ■ ■■- - . . pf God wiU iea^ those who are|lP'r 3 5871 7 Ea1Uh
AND NATION-WIDE
SERVICE, TOO!
Columbus Interstate
Insurance Agency
doubt as to use jof a phrase): ^ official communications: ■ .
“Miss Jones, do ! you retire a “You will show him eyery cour- Since the war started,' many _
loan?” ! tesy*’ means his uncle is a gen-i patriotic pictures have been used j
Miss Jones (Wistfully): “No eral. on calendars but the girls are I
! sleep .with Mom.”
“You will take necessary ac- 'still way out jin front.
The i answer to atomic bombs is a spiritual up-
heaval.
■Wy* had rictory over our enemies. Now
fon victory over overselves.
Our language may not be polished but it can
always be clean. .
A real friend is one who knows the worst about
you yet expects the best. •
Even when a small home goes to pieces, the
nation it belongs to feels the bump.
As for glairior, ladies, you wouldn’t have to
gutter outside if you had a spark inpirfy,
The big convertible drew up
to the curb whree the cute Uttle
working girl was waiting for the
bus. The wise guy stuck out his
head and said, “Hello, beautiful,
I’m driving west.”
“How wonderful,” said the
diic, “bring me back an orange.”
Two mosquitoes were sitting at
a beach watching the bathing •
beauties. Said the old one , to
the young one, “You’re lucky. In
my day I could only bite girls on
the hands and face.
SHOULDER PATCHES
• • THOUSANDS • •
• FOR YOUR SELECTION •
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Notice— Returning G. I/s
We Have An Expert Dye Man
Let us dye your coats. Blouses,
Shirts, Trousers, Blankets, Etc.
(U. S. A. end FOREIGN)
WE SPECIALIZE IN PATCHES
FOR COLLECTORS AND RETURNED SOLDIERS
Have you! ever thought hov| much you saved by
Cosh and; Carry? . j -
It’s tough on discharges. One
of them writes ns that after an
absence of three years he
walked down the main street
of his home town. The first
three people he met didn’t «■
THE GIFT SHOP
936 Broadway Columbus, Go.
Model Dry Cleaning Co.
“Tek. your cloth** to .THI MODEL— ooorly ovoryono do**—
tho'ro'* m roaton.” 1 . 1
• INSIGNIA SEWED ON WHILE YOU WAIT •
MAIN PLANT 12400 HAMILTON
TELEPHONE 2-3375
Private In Army Clears More Money
than Civilian Earning $3,600 A Year
“Army pay is good pay. Yes, fprjyou find that the average Regular ~ "
fhnriK
*gs^a!i?5Sff«!SS iOlQier UHNlo
“Army pay is good pay. Yes.for you find that the average Regular
CnU'iar fhnriK
Ssgf&ttfg sftss? usissssi aSs iKsgs jOlQier Uiorui
Cinnc at Tribute
£&£&*%&£&£* ilnyS ai iriuuie
“ <b' Re‘" “Sk if. what kappant to.fe Jq VlCtllTIS
Wj-ta-tSfe SSS^-MS S?8X
fe with the ReguIarE^ ^ does not anoear on - the. monthly
. avefagf^ %£&£&&■ BjS” AUGSBURG, Germany-tSpec-,
points outi He, receives clothing of the very ial to Bayonet) — The well-known
The average wage earner a in- finest quality for winter and sum- soidier chorus of the 71st Division,
come today is less than $3,600 a mer wear. He is given excellent Tnfflntrv Chorus partici-
year. for ninety percoit of ,aU the £ood and comfortable living quar- 5th tofantry Cho P
families in the country have earn- ters. He gets the best of medical pated in the November 9th niuer-
ings or incomes of less than this and dental care without charge, putsch”. Anniversary Tribute to
figure. To compare the average ye£,.and above all this, every year .. victims of Nazism held at the
wage earner or the man. making he serves means that he is build- ■ > . , nachan Con-
*3 600 a year with the income of: ing a retirement fund that is his site of; the infamous Dacha
.private in the Regular Army j after twenty to thirty years of centration Camp; Beamed to all.
should be more than fair. Iservice. points -in the world through the
Fifty Goes Long Way ! The. man making $3,600 a year facilities of the National and Co-
The unmarried Army private j receives more cash money than iumbia Broadcasting Companies,
nets fifty dollars a month at the the private in the Army, it is tine. tke program featured an address 170-POUND
** c ,.1.1*: a l. < I Rut -HnPC hp hflVP AS much at the , _• /-vf r»ol Tam
The, Bayonet, Thursday, November 29, 1945
Handel Messiah
» National Headquarters of Selec-
Da IliHM ICIf tivd Service has announced that :
10 DC JlKlD DV , all registrants who have received
• V W WIIIJ 00 1 i an | honorable discharge, or its
ai ' | M ■ equivalent, from the armed forces
( hand I nAlf are] to be placed in; Class 1-C.
Lnaucl UIUII They are not to be reinducted un-
VIIM|#Vi V,,¥M less! they volunteer or unless thei«
reinduction is authorized by the
Singing of portions of Handel s Dir^ctor of Selective Service.
Messiah will usher m the pre- Xhe telegram sent to State di-
Christmas season, at the Main recijors follows:
Bost Chapel Sunday morning ‘‘Effebtive immediately post-':
when the choir and soloists will pone induction or preinduction
combine in presentation of the examination of any registrant
famed music., under the direction who has been separated from the*
of Mrs. John O. Methvin, choir land or naval forces of the U. S.
director; . . by ; honorable . discharge or dis-
This brilliant anthem is writ- charged under honorable condi-
ten for violin, harp, organ, tenor tioiis or by an equivalent; type of
solo and chorus. Pvt. Roger Hall release from service if the regis-
will be the violinist. Warrant Of- frarit was an officer, flight offi-
ficer Richard’ Shores will ’ play cer, or warrant officer.
the harp part oh the piano. Pvt. _ — : —
Arthur C.' Bennett will sing the I . ■ .
tenor solo and Mrs. L. H. Averett welcome to Join the Junior Choir
presiding at the organ. The full which sings on Sundays at 6:30
chapel choirs will assist. p. m., . and holds practice at 5:30
New Members o’clock on Fridays.- •
New members joining the m A _ _ _ _ _ — •
choir . at last Friday?? rehearsal ■ ■ n #% I I Kl r
included dhe following: llff 1 |J I 1 I I AI I
pS s& ^MUdVLi N r
ed :on turkey and trimnun is. member of an Eoisco-IIWI , • " Ial
Dischargees Are Now
Placed In Class 1-C
:very month. | But -does he have as much at thejby the commanding general of by Col. James O.
" end of «very month? No. Here t£e Third United States Army, Lt; Left to right are: Corp. Boman Holt, Col.
CAKE baked for Military Police Detachroentpersonnel
?.e^cI!!n.ent_^rsonnel snd^guestshsd feasted
[nXarbox, T-4 Fred Nuccl who baked the cake, and Pfc. Wm.
vilian job gets $300’a month. Let are his expenditures: . General Truscott. Granger. (Signal Lab Photo), j
JSt ssissss & -■ Fort Benniji. - a 45 ^ leave was „„„ ,
veterans, here’s where the soldier’s of Son qf Arthur Pichler, a well- '■ f ; “T Weems, on a 45-day leave was memb?r of ^ Main Post Chapel fl
money goes: •«, this total . aU supplied to the known composer and ‘conductor in j r andvromen »r« reported en route to Fort Ben- choir who has just returned
The soldier gets two haircuts a gg , ^ j j, j. Amy S man without German musical circles. The selec- CHopelS " ' ^ ning for a visit ' ' from- overseas. . w‘; •
month. These cost him amayerage cb e tion of the site was made as a fit- __ „nmmn_,nn t 8/30 open eveiy d&y md evening. -Vesper terr- „ Monroe was pilot of ^c. George F. Henderson,
of twenty-five cents each which D^ct ^ $2,508 from $3,600 ing background for the piece which a ™sfundCa?' ^hooi in the chiidren^schooi lee every Sandsy 5:4# p. EW* J? ±1. * t to Gainesville to *>“»•• rWns
-amounts to fifty cents. _ and the man on the outside has Mr. Pichler_said In his remarks, St™9:i5 a. m. Morning worship kt W30 * rW»eei«ni . sent t0 where. he did choir and chorus
-Tailor Expenses Slight' si 092 left— Out of this must come “is dedicated now to the dead, a. m.. Anthem: “And the Glory oi . Red CrOSS Directory return the new members of the WOrk. j
Tailor shop exp^tum ■ for r&uce sSdtel^ddtS, whd dM S, ^ redceos. “Caterpillar club.” It arrived in ■ Invites Others .
cleaning and pressing to ^keep > _ this figure to $343 Thus the Army a result of Nazi infamy;” son'1— Dictinshn. vioim br Prt- ttUPo«'tfeed« you for Gainesville at 11:39 a. m. - Several new memb^s I«ve
uniforms neat and clean amount nets sevent v-seven doiiars T+ Roger Hail.. Evening worship at 6.3° p.m. tj uamesynie ai n.o» *• “*• .promised to join the Mam Post
to a dollar and a half a month. moL than the man with . Lt- ^eB^alr,Tfu^0it ^as. chapiainxharies r. cariaon. 1 moS? omp Meanwhile, a military board £hapel choir at this Friday’s re-
For#cifiarettec cigars and tobac- ; f, ^e.ar enn w® uac nn duced by Lt. Col. Richard A. Kor- parachute school: Morning worship at gurgjCai Dressing was appointed to investigate hear sal Arl‘ invitation has been
co the gArmymaf spends three ! ^0^eC0^ef tf’S^about as ton, head of the MilUary Govern- 10:30 a. m. (Common ion each nrst sun- Gre/( Ladies^ crfsh?and determine the c^use.. ^Sed by Mrs Methvin to all
dollars a month at his post.- ex- Sfoovernment aUowsVim a $1,- S Followi^GenS Trufcott’s a'Mofcher. ' Cros* ^ ^R?v,^ r^ntafn° T?keril ?thZSJ>* - “ioin*
change.. . . . 1 500 a year deduction on all service cph • alaeama aeea chapel: Morning - 'UA ■ reported that Captain Tukey is terested in smging. to join the
Being a great movie fan, the aaaress, Burgermeister Dr. ben- ^ t 10.45 (Communion each sewing and Knitting from White Plains, N. Y., Cap ,choir. New .members are also
average soldier spends a dollar and pa^dav ihe Regular Army offers Yalbt* °f 2a,chaii,and, Dr\ °ppel- Y^dnday y-chapSn Bober? M.' Hen- Die Saving and swimming tain Cartier is the son of Arthur
iorty cents’ a month at his camp everv^nportuXfor^d vance- Augsburg City official and form- eunday.i-cr.apim j. Cartier, 1669 Washington street
theater and sees all of the latest ^y ^PP. £ ^ho are fr “mate of Dachau Concentrg- , AgF eegional hospital. Morning West Newton, Mass.; .Lieutenant X W J 0
movies before they are released * the future and want to Jum Camp made short remarks to Wor£hip for . the Medical .Detachment , — Hayes’ home address is. 349 East X Hj ■ m/ _ g
for civihan-theaters make ^the Regular Army their ca- th* > assembled audience which con- Patients *nt ^nurses | • L ■ Fifty-eighth street. New York 0 m [jlf ■ g
Monthly expenditures ..for soap, Let’s make other compari- sisted of many former paopleers ,* amp LU|QCK“ City; Lieutenant Phillips is from g S
toothpaste, razor blades, apd shav-. sons‘witb outside. incomes. For ex- under Hitlerism. ?FmsT stcd. tbkg. begt.: Morn- ' „ ' Miami. Fla.; Sergeant Gauldm X • f |t g
ing cream amount to sixty cents. ample: The proceeds from the program ing worship at io:bo a. m. in Main Continued From Page 1 from Cleveland, and Captain Tay- O LEAR.N TO FLY NOW! g
' S4 for Incidentals . An unmarried corporal’s income went to the Jewish Relief For Ex- ?P6t chapel.— chaplain Harvey " action for Fort Pierce is Bill God- lor from New Richmond, Ind. K 0
The commissary and the past ex- CQ1Tipares t0 a civilian earning Concentration Inmates., ^th battauon. fibst stb: Morn- win, 218-pound center on Georgia’s' — 0 SPECIAL PRICES 8
change average ' fou.r dollar~ powei^of §4,000 a year; an unmart . iig worship* in battalion area at 9:3Q j^ose Bowl team of 1943, who is a • "r* * ' O AM WFflf DAYS ■ X
month of a privates pay. for ““■-Tied- master sergeantx-ompares to *L m former team mate of Dick McPhee, Contain TukCV'” O WEEK pAY5 B
dental- items,, such as candy, gum, a S6.oqq a year annual earning. In Mill, t A, .1 p.. ^ ^ varsity fullback of the Doughboys. V,'V*r „ " _ X a u, a n u 8
sodas.or a few_ beers. the case of married Regular Army J /|H I PpiTipil t see vice ' battalion. fib6t stb-. ,They Amphib eleven is coached Continued From Page One 5 C Uf A D V 8
[Other1 m iscelianeous expendi- men a sergeant’s pay js equivalent I4III WQUIwfllCrll MfrangCworshiP service ,9:15 a. m. m b Hamp Pool, its brilliant right ■ .. . j, are out 8 W tf M M X
tqres Jar the soWier ’*«K>un.t _ to tQ an income of $2,20° ;a jmt and company -a-: Day Boom, chaplain Fur- e£d hp also tutored : the Navy and 1 thp medical men all are out w FLYING SERVICE X
LfJSST* 1 th a flrst sergeant s pay equal to P* „ 1 centeb: Sunday Bible team a year ago; when it romped there , . O ..bb«0t 8 !
Fort Benning Calendar
she was a member of an Episco-
pal Church choir for five years.
1st Lt. Marjorie i Baker; an
alto, from Grand Rapids, Mich.,
a member of a large oratorio
chorus. | ‘
Capt. John Graham, a baritone,
from Richmond, Va., a former
month. These cost him- an ayerage J
cleaning ana pressing , « thi s fi gure t o $343 Thus the Army a result of Nazi infamy:” son"— Dictinsffn. violin ow
S3 a5 halfCi month IprivatTnets seventy-seven dollars ■ Lt General Truacott was intro. .
1 For'cisaretU* cigars and tobac- f, year “°r^ftll^nfir)tnhe Hm.a]aswl® duced by Lt. Col. Richard A. Nor- parachute school: Morning worsi
*hp a rmv "man spend' three ! l!ie lnc0“e °f $3,600. He has no ton ]jead 0f the Military Govern- 10*30 a. m. (Communion each ftrsi
a mont^ Jt h?S post e^- “co“c taxes to worry about as me^t Detachment, F-214, Augs- day. vespers. Sunday Evening ai
dollars a montn at nis post e tbfi Government allows him a $1,- bure Following General Truscott’s p" M- chaplain ; Charles c. Moschei
Beink a great movie fan." The | 500b year deduction on all service m
average spldier spends a 1 dollar and jP^oday, the Regular Army offers walbe,„of Dachau and ^ Oppel, 7r°t sunday.i-chapiain Bober? M.
theatereand aseTs0Iall of !the_latest in.P«?^dimto men ' who^re ?.r “mate of Dachau Concentra- “°A6P eegional hospital: m
ggtee,2uSSy‘?:4 /reasr '
51 Red Cross Directory
lpvt! SERVE WITH THE BED CROSS
, Motor uorp
; Surgical Dressing
overnment auows mm a *1,- hum FollnWinn GpnAral Tniccntt’c e! M. Chaplain , Charles C., Moscner. wrrh Ald
year deduction on all service addfess Bu^IrmSr nr R h- Alabama area chapel: Morning - ;
Worship at 10:45 sl m- (Communion each sewing and Knitting
change average • fou.r dollars- a powei*of §4,000 a year; an unmar-
mbnth of a privates pay. for mci- ried master sergeant^compares to . . _ . _
dentah items, such as canay, gum, a g6 000 a year annual earning. In ' « 1(1 f A I &
sodas, or a few- beers. the case of married Regular Army | /Tti E #$OfHIIMI|i1
(Other miscellaneous exPe.n^: men a sergeant’s pay is equivalent 81,111 UQUICIIiCril
tures for the soldier amount t0 to an income of $2,200 a year and
. fqur dollars a month for the aver- a {ir£t sergeant’s pay is equal to * . f"_ ||
age man in service. , an income of $3,400 a year. rll IAV rPTAU/Oll
iA.dd up all of these items . and The Regular Army offers quail- LlllvT | Qf VTTv!l
a=oaOBdoOOOOOOdoOOOOOa6 fled men good pay. And what other * •
i ‘ ‘ ------ - . 6 job offers retirement benefits Up r t 1^1 L
[Levy-Morton ^016 In Columbll
. : \ • *,hey may retir, after tw«ntyye.rS i, was „ fe Golden Eest clt
O at nau Pay*. in CollimbUK wherp 12t.h fnmnar
Captain Tukey-
i Continued From Page One
Enjoy Farewell
Fete In Columbus
Class In Receiving Battalion Theater; i
ft:30 a. m-:- Morning worship at 10:30 a. m
Evening worship 7:00 p. m.: Wednesde
a:30 a. m.:. Morning worship at 10:30 a. m.: .undefeated season and ^cognition er^se at Walhalla^ es_
Evening worship 7:00 ‘ cllbsneThis year' facing a tourer peciall! Gaulln and me I fell
5« «.7 SbSul^nSiSibsghaye fa* Caloil' IbStl
*T~ “ xrinfnripc seven defeats. wii^lo stumbling along hdoul #
One of those vfctories carrfe at a. m trying to find f meone who
evnanca nf thp Dnuchbovs in could sh°w ,we how to *et ?ut of
LEARN TO FLY NOW!
SPECIAL PRICES
ON WEEK DAYS
SWABY
FLYING SERVICE’
MUNICIPAL AIRPORT
- Phono 2-4758 —
11" LARGE BOTTLE 25? " L
f KEEP HAIR filEAT ^
HAIR TQNIC
EXPERT
Watch Raphiring
, Complete ’Stock
Balance Staffs
I^ain Springs
24-HR. Service
! Crystals for All
i ■ j j- .
| Makes of Watches
Put on While
You Wait
i ■ | .
Loyal Jewelers
1023 BROADWAY
r#»n»irjt fo Electrical! nisei soldiers- parents
epairs to i^lw send check to legion
A X RIVERS. Ariz. — (ALNS) — V
Apparatus, tsea g the prospective closing of
§Repatrs - DaiE 3-6391
[ 1028— 13th St.
SSS VW.UmM4W.aa- at S64S’«o wh
SSKf ” It ™ at fe Golden Reel club S£?S i-S 'iSZ£&£V£* ». fe “^ ot the Doughboy, In cofe ^ow we how to get out ot
[ at h , p y',; id Columbus where 12th Company S1™*- „_rT1 • worehin a game which Fort Pierce pulled thfL^ "1!^" ‘all night ain’t fun.
NISEI SOLDIERS’ PARENTS Cadre gave its farewell party last. ia“ and i"o“' 'm. “veU^ay P^feswpt out of the fire in the final minutes Be“| al° 2
f SEND CHECK TO LEGION Fnoay night. Considered as one of fellowship meeting each Wednesday at 6:15 after the Benning team had held . w is very happy
RIVERS, Ariz.— (ALNS)— With most jubilant affairs of late, p. m.-chapiain waiter Laetsch. - a 13_7 lead ^ the final quarter. U elathd at the res-
the prospective closing of the ^ie Cadremen and their guests harmonv cherch abea Tbg Doughs had some bad breaks . effort He praised everyone'
Japanese War Relocation center danced to .the sweet tunes of Bub- w™i“» stld. ™G...BEGT,^Mojni g ^ that tilt( however, and' they are aiscipline when they7 had
here, the Japanese - American bei James and his orchestra. JcommSnfoneach first Sunday j. chap- determined to prove their supen- t iu™
. Servicemen’s Parents’ and Rela- . A tasty menu was served dur- lain Paul R. Fine. orjty aver the Amphibs this Sun- i t os* His Papers
tives’ Association decided to dis- gtttej mtermission, along with da?f ‘ CartiW “ok leaWng the plane
j tribute, the small remammg funds refreshments.. chaplain • Paul r. Fine. Doughs Work Hard in' his stride. He even took his ov-
sin its. treasury among orgamza- Sgt Willaam A. Long and Mrs. service battalia ihiee ' stri Lt BiU Meek Doughboy tutor, ercoat ^nd his overnight- bag.
tions m which it had confidence. Joseph C. . Britton, wife of Sgt. Morning worship > at 11.00 1 a. m. m Bee hac been working his minions hard t thraight I’d do something of
One of the checks was sent to na7 Joseph C. Britton, chief instructor each" Wednesday evening' «t 7:00 an week in anticipation of a tough the sanjie thing so [I tried to take
can Legion, which notified the group a thrilling treat with rendi-! first infantrt ^detachment ■ aau - -- . > fairlv Bood nhvsical bad with me ! i
'•irfp^ariried tftt^Americani^ni ‘‘nfS ay ''Wit.houf, a, So2g” ap<! wor^hi^ at°?orooSa m. in ChapeiNo. i condition, however, and even I jumped with those oapers but
Pur^nAhe “f tgirm T01e M?j „mn'er„ . by.,Ser®fa“t (Communion each firet Sunday.) -chap- welcomed back two injured ends I had trouble pulling my ripcord
Endowment Fund of.Jbe Legion. Long, and “Trees” by Mrs. Brit- lain Chadc^p. __ this week wherv Mon£ Edwards and I Had to let the bag go.
t0“ . , . . Morning vimr*wp in Chapel NO 3, at and Paul Sizemore showed up for They still haven’t found my pa-
IS YOUR
STEINWAY
FOR °
SALE? ^
FLY AT THE NEW AIRPORT
Flight Instruction
Solo Ships
FOR APPOINTMENT, CALL 3-244S
CHARTER SERVICE — SIGHTSEEING TRIPS
COLUMBUS AIRWAYS
MUSCOGEE COUNTY AIRPORT
Take River Rpad Bus to Britt David Road, Vi Mile South
well party were Colonel and Mrs. ^De^nPchapfi^No or Sizemore, varsity ends at the sure me they will find them when
John P. Edgerly Reception Center “Papism wmiam c. Shane, worship start of the season, is expected to they gel .a chance.^
commanding -officer, Captain and service im Piney woods Area. Bldg. no. readv for acti0n Sunday They We all lost our hats- and over-
Mrs. Newell ‘ C. Griffin. Second |^riA‘e 9:30 * 'M- chapUln Wafler may get in the season’s finale coats. Sut we sure are glad to be
Battalion commander, and Lieu- ^ATH9T;Tf, c^mai notices against Fort McCleUan the follow- Sive. .
tenant and Mrs. Robert W. Lyman, sigerfoos and vibbert: Sunday c,.njav • ■ , 1 11
=omp,ny officer of fe 12th Com- ig- Ifeok ° Jill probably . start , Chaplaill-
PaArrangements for fe affair ,
Eritton. and other members of the coniessions^saturday evening 7:oo to J^.oo helped plenty in the Jacksonville million ^tons. of supplies inrougn
On rare occasion* It become*
necesscjry for an owner to part
with hi* Steinway. We are ready
to buy used Steinways, for ex-
pert reconditioning and later
sale, and offer liberal arrange-
ments. Telephone us, oi stop in
and talk things over, ; , \
I I Eritton. and other members of the coniessions^saturday evening 7:oo
Cadre, Sgt: Reagan B. Hudson wasted beicre Masses,
in charge of decorations. ; I ^CwasTsfs SatH°8?oo
SH>iiiiiiiiiliinuiiiiiiiiMiiiuiimiuiiiiV
■ AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE
j AT A SAVINGS IN COST
j Present Dividend Saving 20%
j The Lawrence Murray Agency
■ BODILY INJURY i' PROPERTY DAMAGE
5 MEDICAL PAYMENT REIMBURSEMENT
■ FIRE * THEFT * COLLISION
V| PREVAILING RATES
J I #■ I J '“iawson field chapel. No. 2: sun- back will do the bulk of the pass- Icoming to Fort Benning
7n#th \av Man ?oVe' £ at 9:00 tt- m- COnfCS OnE ij?gT>2nd running with Craft and £st March, heg became a familiar
m /IJl III JuA r ids I harmony church AREA: Masses at McPhee also lending a hand with and poplar figure to all Harmony
, AVI III wwn ChapeiNo. lateiooam: c^Pq am.? ^ baU-carryingchores. Church ' units before his. recent
■ Uf U ■ f\AUf Chapel NO m5 at P7 00 andan:io a. m. _ Gussle to Start transfer! to the Main Post
■ W3C lU 371 D! B Ulf confessions before all Masses. Starting ends will be Howard Educated at Southern college in
■ VfCU mil I Ulf i AmABc^niAess^nsAUfprnedaM a«a6S a^d MikeSpann. The tackles at Lakeland, Fla., where he played
- , „„VIrF5 the kickoff will be Joe McCune football; and at Duke University,
By CPL. WILLIAM B. POWER 'T'fver? ^id^^velFngTt^^o p. m. and.Bulldog Waggoner with Clyde where he took .his Bachelor of
Cnl Bavne F Sellers baritone a. the children’s schooihouse, coraer Bait- Johnson also due for heavy duty. Divinity degree m 1932. Chaplain
saSmam to tof”2671h AGF Band, g SE Mike Gussie, who scored the win- Qardinl preached throughout the
SDent six months in a German nVmn Fieia organizations and au para- nmg touchdown against Jax Navyi peninsula , part of Florida before
Drisoner of* war camp, and today *r°0P infantries. • will team with Gene Corum at entering the Army. . His last parish
to 'anxiously aWaiting Kis dis- 2- Eun<jBy mornin« Eervlcee 1or a“ per: guards, and Bob Cherry, and Tom- was Childs Park Methodist Church
^arTeXSythrArmyg !^J*5SS5- J? ^W'KrJW “Y Thompson will divide the piv- in St. ?etersburg.-
“Btog,” as he is known to his gay morning at 9:30 a. m. In theatre No. o\ assignment with Cherry prob- _ . n ” - im_
Dnfessions^Saturday evening t.uu to ^.uu upinpfi nientv
3d before Masses. neipea piemy
PAEACHUXE SCHOOL CHAPEL. No. 1: ga”}e»
unday Masses at 8:00 to 11:30 - a. m. duties With A
onfessions Saturday evening from 7:oo * b offen«
After I returning from overseas I
We will also consider purchasing other makes of pianos
Humes Music Co.
I By CPL. WILLIAM B. POWER | i Every
! Cpl. Bayne F. Sellers, baritone | a- the chi
| sax man in the 267th AGF Band, j “g is ior
j spent six months in . a German : Lawson f
! prisoner pf war camp, and today | ^r°opclnf.a
| to anxiously awaiting Kis dis-:; 2- Bun“
Conlessions Saturday evening Iror
' LAWSON FIELD CHAPEL. No. 2
day Mass at 9:00 a. m. Conlesslo
fore Mass.
HARMONY CHURCH AREA: Ma;
Chapel No. 1 at 9:00 a. m.; Chapel
at 11:00 a. m.; Chapel No. 4 at ; 9:30
Chapel No 5 at 7:00 and 11:10
Confessions before all Masses,
j ALABAMA AREA: Sunday Mass I
a. m. Confessions befpre Mass.
JEWISH RELIGIOUS SERVICES
club on offense. Estenik at tan-; , • Sch00i at Fort Devens, I
:l, No. 2: Sun- back will do the bulk of the pass- r?o°°L to Fort Benning I
confessions be- jng and ruhning. with Craft and u TnmVltor II
ATTENTION
OFFICER CANDIDATES
COMBAT-JACKETS
SHORT BOATS „.M«,
(24-HOUR SERVICE) ,
SOM
$7.00
1 ALL ACCESSORIES
| REDUCED UP TO
50%
“Cash and Garry”
DRY CLEANING PRICES
friends, . left the States in Oct. 9. sth Division Road. 3rd :student Tram- j
1944, and; arrived aent®“ : 3. Monday evening service at Lawson
NiOV. 1, with the 106th Infantry pleid Chapel No. 2 near TPS Headquarters. 1
Division. He was a “loader” in a service Mondays at 8.p m. (
57mm. anti-tank squad and first pbf.sbyterian center: ah soldiers
tasted battle on- Dec. 8, being in are invited to visit the Presbyterian Serv- '
one of the first units' to be hit Ice Center 1st Avenue, on 11th Street,
i ’ *1,! n-ttu if Jho U ilsp jo Columbus. Open Saturdays and Sun-
jin the Battle Of tne Bulge. davfi. Supper served 6:30 a. m. each Sun*
! Captured on Dec. 19, “Bing was day. -
token to a prison camp to Mull- Christian science servives:
berg, Germany, and from there. : Main Post chapel services at 8 p. m. ,
?antpt0 Dr“tl 4elT945d
the Russians on May 4, 1945. Rath, C. S. Wartime. Minister. (
6" -DAY FURLOUGH • trinity club ROOMS: A cordial in- ;
Upon his release, Sellers was citation is extended to all. officers and I
sent, to an Army - hospital m imeD from Fort Benning to visit the Serv-
Khieims. and then to Le Havre, .1“ Men's Club P.ooms at Trinity Epis-
where he tocarded a sHip for gg mum-
home, arriving in June. Following :tics are provided for writing letters, piay-
a 67-day furlough with his wife, ine ping-pong, shulfle^board and many
Jean, in Waterville, Me.. “Bing” '°“er eames. Informal party every Sat-
i went to Lake Placid where he was ^^Lr^ife E^ndav^ aIter V,i'
| assigned to the 267th. h.theean center: ah service men
• Trousers 25c • Blouses 25c
• Overcoats 50c
• Pressing While You Wait •
24-HOUR T>RY CLEANING SERVICE
AT NO EXTRA COST
AT LAST WE HAVE
scooters . .
J METAL— WITH 8-INCH WHEELS
$6.95 S
Wheel Barrows . . $2.85 1
■ ALL METAL— GOOD SIZE
(On* Black
Fram
9rii S*. USO)
FOREMOST
AUTO STORES
1006 BROADWAY
ably getting the starting call. . Homes beautification and im-
For intermission, the bands- provement of the home grounds
men from School Troops have ar.e S°0|3 projects for the fall nnd
cooked up another dazzling show winter, when other farm work is
featuring the baton-twirling of not so. .urgent, specialists of the
T-5 Robert Olmstead, twice na- Extension . Service assert Good
tional champion drum major, who Plans . rpade before starting the
will at various times not only landscape work will help in se-
twirl three batons at Once but alsd curing the best results. ,
try his hapd at twirling an . army ,
^carbine to a military number. 99th and 267th AGF Band?, both
Members of the football band are of' which are attached to School
drawn from the personnel of the; Troops, ] the Infantry School.
| msT-siEUS!""'"']
| KHAKI SHIRTS {
I AND!' [
TROUSERS ]
5 - '1 §
S’ Also Complete Line .■■■•! ■
0. D. SHIRTS [
PANTS and CAPS j
ALTERATIONS WHILE YOU WAIT ■
• WE CASH CHECKS ON PURCHASE • |
National Military Stores]
900 -BROADWAY -941 £
DIAL 7100 • DIAL 2-4677 :
SHOP NEWBERRY’S
BASEMENT
FOR PRE-WAR
TOYS
Arriving
Daily
TOYS OF
ALL KINDS |
» • DOLLS
• • TEA SETS
i» • FURNI-
TURE -:--
«. 21" Baby
Doll, dressad
in the Haight
of fashion.
• • GUNS
• • Books • • Doll Houses^
• • %eddy Beors
• •Mechanical Toys
Shop Newberry’s Basement
NEWBERRY
Starting Fort Pierce Lineup for Sunday
MM '
/U-' : ^,..’'V;'--5
, m %* '*/.£— jam*
end tony knap tAckij TOM P^EY
(Idaho) (Washington State)
SJX ______ r/ie Bayonet, Thursday, November 29, 1945 ~
Here, There and Everything
■ ■ - — r — 1 — W&m
~~ PVT. “CHUCK” LEWIS L
Humors are out that Don Hutson, the Green Bay Pack-
ers’ pass catching end, will undoubtedly “rettf e£ this season.
Dondias snagged 484 passes for 7,995 yards and nmety-mne .
'touchdowns in his 11 years in the pro league. ;. •• George %
Hunger, Penn’s coach, usually directs his^ team from the ^
bench dressed in regulation football togs but changed to civ- W, ^
vies for the Columbia game. . . ■ Reports from the ^val
Academy are that if Oscar E. Hagberg, Navy, coach, returns
to sea duty, his successor will not be named until f^r the j
first of the year. . . . Sid Luckman moved ahe^d of Samm> Jj
Baugh a week ago in the passing department of .pro football. ||llS
Eachihas completed 96 passes but Luckman s fosses have BAC
been good for 133 more yards and ten touchdowns as com- ,
pared with Baugh’s seven. . . . Indiana s wm pver Purdue
gave them their first Big Ten crown m the history of the con-
ference and should be a good dividend for Coach Bo McMil-
iian on his ten year $95,000 coaching cohtract . .. , Hal New-
houser, Detroit’s pitching sensation, won the American
League most valuable player award for the second time in
two years. He is the only player to wm the award two years
in succession since Jimmy Foxx was so honored by the base-
ball writers in 1932-33. , ... . While in the Senior circuit. Cub
first sacker Phil Qivaretta. won the writers award. ... All
eves will be on Gilbert Coan, rated the No. 1 minor league
player coming up to the Washington Senators next season.
. Also Dick Sisler who is expected to give Ray Sanders
stiff competition for the first base assignment ,qn^
Lotus j Cardinals, . . . Steve Van Buren of the Philadelphia
Eagles and a star halfback at Louisiana SJate before going to
the play for pay circuit, never wore socks until he reportea
to the Eagles.' . . - It wasn’t surprising to this department
when Army didn’t receive a bid to the Rose Bowl. . . . One
group of West Coast enthusiasts wanted to pick- an all star
team'-ffrom the conference clubs to play Army so that the
Westerners could get a look at the powerful Army team. . . .
Alabama’s bowl history, you might say, is running over with
craw or $$$$. . . . The Crimson Tide has played m eight
bowl games and this year’s trip to the Rose Bowl will be the
ninth bowl game in 20 years. ... The Chicago Cubs are giv-
ing Hank Borowy $20,000 plus next season. . . - Joe DiMag-
sio signed last week for' his pre-war salary of $42,000 with
the Yankees. -. . . “The third time is a charm” proved so for m5_4
the “Big Three” of the Yankees. Larry MacPhail, Dan Top- school,
ping and Del Webb were successful on their third attempt to H. G.
buy the New Yorkiclub. . . . Plans are under way to have .Greer,
baseball represented at the 1948 Olympics. . • • Of the prey1-
ous four unbeaten major football teams, only Army, Okla-
GUARD JIM PATTON
(Oklahoma A & M.)
CENTER ART STATUTO GUARD CLIFF HEFFLEFINGER TACKLE /®Jv^>HEN°l3R
M- ,
rC' • m ' *
BACK JOHNNY LUJACK
‘ t (Notre Dame)
(Notre Dame)
mmm
END HAMP POOL
(Stanford)
Two Benning Quintets
Win Atlanta Games
BACK JIMMY JACKSON
(California HS)
BACK DICK CHATTERON
(Brigrham Young)
BACK HALPH CHUBB
(Michigan)
v« ■# \mt
Greer, center; Lou Otto, forward; Ed'Belsser; and Don Bntler^guard. (Signal Lab Photo)
Officers and Enlisted Men
BATTLE JACKETS
Also Pink, Green and O. D. Serge
TROUSERS
Beaver Short Coats
Classy Clothes Shop
1035 BROADWAY
OPINING ft $ '
NOV. 30th
AT 7/U7
Southern I y w
Manor
Wheeler Leath
Again Member
Of TPS Quint
One good reason why opposing
quintets will find , The' Parachute
School’s basketball team hard to
handle this season is their center,
Wheeler Heath, one of the few
holdovers from last year’s squad.
Lieutenant Leath, former All-
American center from the Uni-
versity of Alabama, averaged
better than eleven points a game
for the Paratroopers last season.
The towering, blue-eyed blond
center hits the net with amazing
accuracy.
Also footballer
The athletic feats of Leath are
not confined to the hardwood
court -alone. Sports fans in Ala-
bama still remember him for his
stellar end play on one of Coach
Frank Thomas’ varsity football
elevens, in' addition to holding
down an end position for three
years, Leath played left field on
the baseball team at his alma
mater.
Known (by all Fort Benning
' court fans last season for his
cool-headedness and ability to
shoot accurately . with either hand
> from off-balance positions, Leath
• is a master at evading , opposing
’ guards who attempt to block his
one hand tip-in shots. His smooth
court play under pressure spark-
, ed a surprising number of garri-
son, finishes for last year’s Para-
chute quintet. ,
“Let’s go,” bawled the topkick
! to a straggling rookie; “do you
know what happens to slow-
pokes like you in combat?”
^ Rookie; ! “Sure. They get there
i after the battle is all over.”
i A girl is drunk when she feels
v sophisticated but can’t pronounce
[Determined-
continued From Page 1
turned the tide and brought vic-
tory to the Doughboys. With
second down and two to go on the
Army 42, Gussie got in the middle
of a Flier handoff play, taking the
ball out of the hands of a Navy
man and streaked 55 yards for
the winning marker. Hecht again
converted.
Johnson Intercepts
The Fliers fought back des-
perately in the final period, driv-
ing to the Benning 15, but an
interception of a screen pass by
Tackle Clyde Johnson, former
All-American, stopped the march
which had covered 63 yards.
Another interception, this one
by Craft, . halted the final threat
by the NAS eleven.
Doughboy Threats
Two Benning threats were
squelched by the staunch NAS
line in the second quarter. A pass
interception by Halfback Jeff
Burkett, who returned 20 yards,
gave the Army a first down on
the NAS 18. But Benning .was
tossed back to the 32, and had to
punt Shortly afterward, a re-
covered fumble gave the Dough-
boys another chance on the Navy-
17. Again the Army lost ground,
and a fourth down field goal at-
tempt by Hecht from the 24-yard
line was wide.
Two terrific pressure kicks by
Burkett, traveling 60 yards and
74 yards, pulled the Army out of
tight spots. Craft was the stand-
out back for Benning, along with
Burkett and Cenci.
Benning 5 1 7
NAS 0 0 7 0—7
Scoring: Benning— Craft, Gussie. Point
after touohdown, Hecht S. NAS — Glese.
Point after touchdown, Timmons. .
Sub*.' Benning— Hecht, Pawlowsld, Har-
grove, Johnson, Martin, Collins, Cenci,
Meek, Burkett, Cure, Ferrara; NAS— All-
sup, O’Quinn, Akra, Hanlon, Harrison,
Forbes, Boyter, Lesher, Peck, Brown, Kane,
Wright, Timmons, Douglas, Rapara, Kirk-
patrick. Trotter.
Profs Trounce
Fliers, 71 to 38,
In Cage Opener
. The men’s basketball season got
off to a rip-roaring start at Fort
BeDning Tuesday night when a
large and responsive crowd
watched the Academic Regiment
Profs hand a 71-38 lacing to the
visiting Robins Field Fliers in a
return match at the Post Gym.
The Fliers, gamely seeking re-
venge for their 45-29 defeat at
the hands of the Academics in Ma-
con two weeks ago, put up a stub-
born 19-11 fight in the exciting
first period. But the Profs un-.
leashed a well-coordinated assault
to widen the margin to 36-17 at
halftime and to 52-24 by the end
of the third stanza.
The Air Corps men made a de-
termined last-ditch stand in the
fourth quarter, but the Profs’ mo-
mentum carried them crashing
through to their fifth spectacular
Win in as many starts l
Brightest star of the night was
Ed Beisser, ex-Creighton pivot-
man, who poured 28 , points
through the hoop while sparking
DR. E. A. DAVIS
Dog and Cat Hospital
Complete Hospital Service
Battling and Grooming
1006 - 13th St. Dial 8871
the Academics through the first
three quarters. Joe Loisel gave
the ' crowd, I which followed him
with open admiration at Benning
last year, another exhibition of
sterling floor-work as he sank 16
points for the winners.
Tennessee’s John Greer also
drew well-earned plaudits as he
registered 10 points in a personal
sortie in the last few minutes of
• play. J
The Fliers were paced by fight-
ing “Staff” Kelley, their super-
charged forward from Kentucky
university, who accounted for 16
• markers, arid Joe Byrnes, whose
s long rifled shots netted him eight
i tallies. i
************
I (M |
iyrUM't
1 PRESENTS y^
Jg ■ LOU VOGEL yL
! X Foremost Master of Cere- yL.
• monies. Brought Bock by ^
, -fC Popular Demand ^
• CAROL HORTON
Jt Sensational Personality 5^-
J X • of 1945 yL
. X MARK and '‘MARSHA J
; £ Superb Balance Veom
5 £ CORRINE DECCO 3
•yL Broadway Torch Singer ^
M -—AND J
DON CORTEZ *
^ and His Popular Orchestra y^.
DELICIOUS STEAKS *
^ SO, FRIED CHICKEN y^
jtick'kick'k'klck+rk
ATLANTA, Nov.' 26 — Two ]
invading Infantry ^chool teams 1
took the lion’s share of honors
in a basketball j triple-header ;
s at the Sports Arena here Sun- .
day afternoon • when the School '
mM. Troops Snipers picked off the ]
IReeder-McGaughey quintet, 79-50, ;
and the Academic Regiment <
Profs routed the Xrena Men’s :
All-Stars, 70-38, in the second and !
final contests, respectively. The
Arena Blues sextet J humbled the :
1 Atlanta Women’s All-Stars, 39-25,
in the preliminary. ]
The Snipers builtj up . a 44-24
advantage by halftime and led all
the way in a wild and woolly af-
fair characterized by plenty of
shooting arid racing jup and down
the court. Using their distinct
superiority in the higher altitudes,
the Troopers controlled the e ball
off both backboards.!
Jim Homer Stars For Snipers
Jim Homer, six-fqot-five pivot-
man from the University of Ala-
bama, sank 19 points for the,
visitors, mostly by tapping in re-
bounds, to cop thej high-scoring
honors for the afternoon. Roy
Tendler, ex-Tarheel, guard, and
“Speedy” Schaeffer, set - shot
wizard from the St. Louis cir-
cuits, looped in 10 1 points each.
Leading the losers .was forward
“Canny” Canale with 13 tallies.
The Profs — intent on bettering
their 60-43 victory lover Johnny
Moon’s boys two weeks ago —
whirled off to a 15-point lead be-
fore the All-Stars coyld register
their first marker, | and held a
36-10 edge by intermission. The'
Academics had possession of the
ball at least three-quarters of the
time, feeding, . passirig , and
weaving with masterly ease and
KURT L0EB|
Upholstering
518 1 2th St. Tel. 3-4281 |
patience, shooting only when the
play was perfectly set up.
Leading the Prof offensive was’
Joe Loisel, of Creighton, who
sank 14 points, riiainly by set-
shots from outside the circle.
Tennessee’s- John Greer, playing
his second season for the Profs;
scored 13 markers, followed by
six-foot-five Lou Ott6, of Kansas
State, and Clyde Littlefield, of
Idaho, who accounted for 'nipe
points each. John Kendall yj as
outstanding for the losers, sink-
ing 10 tallies and sparking their
floor play. : .
Lee Lodge’s Snipers will; takie
on the All-Stars in the- Arena
Monday night. H. G. Peabody’s
Profs are heading for Fort Ben-
ning to open their home season
Tuesday night with a return en-
gagement with Robins Field,
whom they defeated in Macon last
week. ~ > i ■ . .
{guaranteed!
1 WATCH
1 REPAIRS
| Fast Service |
8 Expert 8
8 Repairmen 8
R Reasonable §
| Prices j
GEM
| Jewelry Co.§
| 1200 Broadway |
| Phone 3-4981 §
STARRING
• EDDIE BLACK •
RIOTOUS COMEDIAN — EMCEE AND IMPRES-
SIONIST. DIRECT FROM EL MOROCCO, MON-
TREAL, CANADA.
• KATHLEEN DENNIS •
LOVELY LADY OF SONG! WITH A DYNAMIC PER-
SONALITY APPEARING AFTER A RECORD-
BREAKING ENGAGEMENT AT THE "EVERGLADES
SUPPER CLUB."
• JOHNNY CONRAD •
DANCING STAR OF THE CURRENT
BROADWAY HIT, "MEXICAN HAYRIDE"
• FELlCjA SHAW •
WHIRLWIND ACROBATIC SEN5ATION?
• 2 FLOOR SHOWS NIGHTLY— 9:30 AND 11:30
• CONTINUOUS DANCING— MUSIC BY—
RUDY BUNDY AND HIS ORCHESTRA
FOR AN EVENING OF PUN, COME TO
Southern Manor
homa, A. & M. and Alabama remain after last .week’s games.
Virginia dropped to" Maryland after running their winning
streak to 25 games. . . . After the Doughboys’ win over
Jacksonville Navy we are hoping for a good home perform-
| ance against Fort Pierce next Sunday. '. . . To carry on the
tradition of picking the winners I like. . .Army over Navy. . .
Alabama over Mississippi State. .'.Notre Dame over Great
Lakes. . Georgia over Georgia Tech.. . .
P~ ARMY officers j
8 Personal Property All Risk Policy J
8 The most complete protection you can gef
8 for your personal property.
| EVERYTHING IS PROTECTED
8 ' Anytime, Anywhere > Any Cause.
I JEFFERSON COMPANY
o Insurance — Loans — Real Estate
8 405 Flowers Bldg. _ _ . Phone 5554 J
We Make
BATTLE JACKETS
FROM . YOUR OLD. BLOUSE.
With A Guaranteed Fit.
By Expert Tailors
We Also Do Any Other Kind of Military Alterations
1026 BROADWAY
VISIT OUR STORE
and see our new shipment of
Trench Coats
W!TH
.Wool Removable Lining
S3995
Also Complete Stock Of
Elastique Uniforms
Pink Pants— Gabardine
Shirts and Mackinaws
'Headquarters for HICKEY-FREEMAN UNIFORMS
H OFF LIN & GREEN TREE
Columbus' Leading Clithiers Since 1888
Dial 2*2592 1128 Broadway Columbus, Go.
t.
Tigers Trounce Ft. McClellan, 12,-0
To Meet Alabama A&M Saturday Nigl
Banning Eleven Keeps ^T7b /fojmttiJL ?.omf J 0 1® ^S*0"
Jinx on Infantrymen JS}CMA.9WMim. Final For Post Tear
#l 1 ox BY SGT. ARTHUR C. SEABLES
■ BY SGT. ARTHUR C. SEARLES JAX NAVY-DOUGHBOYS— They’re expecting 12,000 plus to Alabama Af & m. College Bulldogs will meet th
.. The Reception Center Tigers’ jinx continued to hover^am every niche of Doughboy Stadium this Sunday in.tnome » tion Center Tigers at Doughboy Stadium here i
over the Ft. McClellan Eagles as the Benning eleven defeat- Coach BiU Meek and Company for their 14-7 wm oyer ^im la ”7" night in' the final game of the season for the Tif
d the Infantrymen 12 to 0 on Ft. McClellan’s Athletic Field highly touted and heretofore., once beaten Jacksonville Fliers at tn game which begins, at 8 o’clock may also mark the
last Sunday afternoon, before a large GI crowd. It was th® [Navy’s home field last Saturday. pearance of a Reception Center football team. It is
third time this season that Ft, McClellan felt the might of; ^ wU1 be a fitting gestUre indeed, for the Doughboys cer- that the rapid demobilization will prevent the I
thp Timers, eoing down in defeat each time they met. -,t personally, we’re climbing aboard Bill Meek’6 Center from fielding a team next season. A large
An ataostgentifely new . team TT^CLKon a^d pickhig an Lpired Benning ^aggregation to stop expected to witness the BuUdog-Tlger jdash in tribu
represented the Eagles against the DaviS; Reception Renter’s brilliant bandwagon and P 6 Amphibians and revenges a 14-13 amazing record compiled by the soldier eleven W
Reception Center in Sunday’s bat- center, performed well both- on de- Jhonny Lyjack and the Fort Fierce AmpruDians ana « b amdzuig icuu p , • +he t
tl? Ft. McClellan thwarted five fenSe knd offense. !defeat of three weeks ago. Should! the Doughs accomplish this and won 30 games and lost only live Since xne team w<
‘ scoring threats in- the first half to Eagles Fight Fiercely . j „ to defeat McCleUan again, the following Sunday they would ize(i two seasons ago.
. f4SSPSfm>£r Sod. won 5, lost 4, and tied 1 record against some of the country Those ttus content
Edwin Smith, Tigers’ greathali- dfleakEfnest Williams, I top service teams, and coupled with the changing personnel problem “ Jridders battling the.Recep- \a4||V#|a|| f f
back, put on an aerial display dur- with his ac-j^ coaching staff.has bad to face that wouldn’t, be bad. . £Ton Center soldiers. Coach Georgej IfflUmClV i I
I The Bayonet, Thursday , November 29, 1945 -
im. I * 4 4 1 LEGION POSTS ELECTS AN ,
iMAfC hraatact W YB.-0^ COMWANDUR .
I lyCI J Vi CQIVJI INDIAN VALLEY, Calif.
^ . - mm • (ALNS)— Joe Saizan, 18-year-old -
veteran of two years in the South
. uasketDaii Year
■ m - ■*' -V - 4 enlisted)— has been elected coni-
I m In llvAAMf a# mander of American Legion Post
IS III Y lOcDSCI 568 of Indian Valley. The post,
W ■** 1 * VVprfVI located in a town of 600 popula-
. V . , • ' ,. . . tion, has a membership of 67 vet-
A team with dazzling speed and erans.
• adept ball handling will represent — — — ■. -■■■ — ■ ■ ■ :
the Reception Center Tigers oh bled at the Reception Center are:
the hardwood against , their bas- Edwin Smith, stellar guard from
ketball foes this season. The Tig- Morehouse who will [ Join r tee
ers -quintet has bden sharpening S^eSS Siter who
its claws with nightly drills at thp wm again perform at the pivot
that^roduced^t^^Recept^ Cen^ J^^^ ^toe^to Psink i ^ The story of how the Doughs tripped a teajn that had routed
*r’s ’t^tfethisCfomer Mm-ehouse hiTform^f telmXW with aeria1|them three weeks before can be told in “Three Little Words,” to wit:
College^ teammate End Maurice 'terrific line play. Then to cap* the climax a lineman scored the wm-
Moore for the. f^rdneriod when brunt ' of the Eagles’ attack andining fourth quarter touchdown; the gentleman m name, Mayor M e
. ffire^took p£s brought the fans to ^their feet with; Gu£sie; ^ play, somewhat unusual, we must agree. Here s what
be told in “Three Little Words,” to wit:
. JT gm jr located in a town of 600 popula-
Game iD Be Season S A team withdazzling speed and ^aSa“eraber8hiPOf67Vet’
WIII^ ■ W W » , adept ball handling will represent
P * I B ft _ - j T the Reception Center Tigers oh bied at the Reception Center are*.
■■IMA | pAP r IlST I CU f ■■ 1 the hardwood against . their bas- Edwin Smith, stellar guard from
I llllll I Wl ■ ■ ***»■■■ ketban foes this season. The Tig- Morehouse who wiU join the
BY SGT ARTHUR C SEARLES ers quintethas b6en sharp«iing Ig^uel^m,! towering cente^who
, ®Y0S«/‘ A?TH « its claws with nightly drills at the; WiU again perform at the pivot
Alabama A. & M. College Bulldogs Will meet the Kecep- 24th Infantry Gym under* the su- slot; Orland People, ex-Nashville
tion Center Tigers at Doughboy Stadium here Saturday pervision 0f Maj. Roland E. Falls High School Star at guard; Haynes
night in'the final game of the season for the Tigers. The who will have charge of the Re“ f^fbertTS! f^Ft H?iil?
game which begins, at 8 o clock may also mark tne last ap- ception Center’s cage activities State College, both forwards; and •
Dearance of a Reception Center football team. It is believed this season, and 1st Lt. Donald V Hawthorne Lee who learned his
that the rapid demobilization will prevent the Reception Stoddard, assistant officer- M
Center from fielding a team next season. A large crowd is charge. | season * ,
expected to witness the Bulldog-Tiger clash in tribute to the Seven new faces will be on thj Heavy Schedule SoBght
amazing record compiled by the soldier eleven which ^has f^d t^eYA945-46 sSnPaga^ Sgt. John H. Patterson busings
won 30 games and lost only five smce the team was organ- ,
ized two seasons ago. ~ Hate tor the team and thl nlavir the Tigers. Two games with Tus-
Those who attenl. this contest ; to w atch ail-se^ on is WU^ur kegee InsUtute, one there and on
will see a scrappy Bunch of col- ja ,v | f A Georee 6-foot 4 center from At5 December 81 the Golden Tigers
lege gridders battling the.Recep- UflirilaU f hanlA Ga^ ^ Until thd draft^boid come here to begin the Reception
fion ffler soldiers ^Georgej fAgW J ^0^6 slnt^ him tetee ^ennhfg ^el ^ ho^ season .been
Hobson, head mentor at Alabama ■ ~ George played two seasons with assured. Other games are in t&e
A & Ml and a former grid lumi- I P f « Tuskeeee Institute where he was makm? with a possibility of tour
nary at Alabama State College, U UnH | Jamed All-Conference Center] Tenant Stoddard
Seytw“2fsoi «S M, JWdll jUlly : Fast as greased lightning, George’^
Bulldogs wiU be at full . strength m I T"
for Saturday’s game.^They boast Lam | I MAVf -
a light, fast team with ^ plenty of I M| l| | |Uvl 3 8
tricks. Thp Bulldogs wiU be aided .3 i f
ionv V tv'fentv-vard pass brought the tans ro xneir 'ritu:Gussie; the play, somewhat . unusual, we must, —
in- the end zone. The final 6-point- ofliSS happened: JacksonvUle had the ball on the Doughboy 45-yard line.
ern clhmMnnt ^naSe^^mith’V 1 5- Rawlins and Hankins on Ft. Mc-^On the first play from scrimmage Caleb Marian, reinstated at tackle,
Whrrihr^ m crolf thf ^oal line Clellan’s Une deserves praise. The his 0ld‘ position, broke through to hit the ballhandling quarterback
^ndi^up10 A fhM touchdovm te the Jax Na^ T-formation" hard, enough to make the, ball squirt
madeby Moore ^^ut^y|0o£| enlist^ men assigned g to Fort out of his hands.. Mike Gussie, coming through frpiqhig guard
Is Swan Song
sDMialty6 is a^breakaway shot a«er last night’s driU, commented .
from the sideline. And he seldom t^arrant^nh^a^rfn'and tiiarhe!
misses! WaUace Hawkins, who WMTMit.
played with Florida A. & M. Col4 was going to attempt to arrange-
lege, -winners of the SIAA Confer-} ■ ® ,our’h * _. - -
tn Ranks’ perfect pass while R. Reception Center Tt. McClellan
Brown’s place-kick was wide, Maore le Hodge
•- Smith, Brown. Alternate Higr - lg a g. Brown
Porky Smith and Roscoe Brown Cadc RG Harbins
alternating at fullback in the Tiger. Barnes R| Ha^ins
lineup crashed through the Eagles Garrison qb Robinson
fonvard wall to spark the Recep- r. Brown RH .
tion Center’s ground attack. The supers lh wngh^
Tigers made 15 first downs against substitutes: Reception Center— Banks,'
offside penalty agatoUhe Recep- E° Bteg^ef c^h* and beautiful j down field blocking galloped some _ 50 yards for the taUy.
«°n m wimble recoveSd by Me- Lt. Warren E. AUen, Eagle mentor Hecht converted and the Doughs assumed their winning 14-7 margm.
off an- ' Trie Doughboys scored first, aided by some nifty hpadwork by
rVhnterTl!ttemptred con versions thlr wJrk improved for the re- the Professor himself, BiU Meek, who played most of the game as
Sed Edwin Smith didn’t, hold on mainder of the game. offensive! quarterback. After Mike Spann had intercepted a Navy
_lo__Banks’ perfect pass while H. Reception Center n. McClellan and returned it the Jacksonville two-yard Une , Meek
Brown’s place-kick was wiae, |*c _ nr Green -Id irenci into the ball game. Just about everybody including
• Smilh’ Br°^ ^iernate - ^ ^^“m expected the former Penn Stater in a. series of
alS^natinght fullback^The Tiger. ItJU If Ha^‘S plunges in an attempt to score. But Meekcrosseri the™dUP^e^'
lineup crashed through the Eagles Harrison qb Robinson fully and called a pass. Estenik to Craft, which worked perfectly.
Uon’Snter’s gound^ttack Th; But^^ || ’ W Hecht converted and the Doughs led, 7-0. _ -
Tigers made 15 first downs against Substitutes: Reception center— Banks,- T^e half ended just that way, but in the third period Jackson-
vUle gotithe model-T rolling! and scored, on a long pass, with Tim-
ground George^ Thompson mens converting to tie the game at 7-7. Jeff Burkett’s booming
gained considerable yardage on re- R°«hlnM^e^n-HaU. f ^^Jojan. &e rest of the third quarter staved off repeated Navy thrusts
verses for Ft. Benning. John A. VllUams, Foster, .Winlie d, Hines, * . • Hpfpn-ive neriod
Hyler played a whhle of .a game and stukes. during a strictly, defensive penoa, _
ai guard against Ft. McCleUan. Then came the last period and Gussie’s own version of now
End Lonnie Gaines, Tackles Claud 200 IRISH GIRLS CRY AS , , < hav„Jt now I’ve eot it and that’U be 13-7,
Watson, James W. Barnes, Haw- 50 marines SHOVE OFF you’ve got it, now you haven t, now ive got u ana cm
thome Lee, and Bennie Colbert, n.Tnn,TT,I,pBV Trpismrf thafik you; Hetch’s conversion, and a winning 14-7; count.
and Guards-Sam Cade, Richmond LONDONDERRY, Ireland , i . •
BurreU and Jestharo Green broke (ALNS) — Two nunarea xeariui i . .
through to throw Eagle backfield Irish girls gathered at the railroad BOWL TALK— Now that Ala- wiU be journeying to Dallas to
ffi SStt S&SrtJ&S. bama baa cla.red aomawba, th. Mika. tb. Lo.rtiiv.
scrimmage wlssfyards. Reynolds Marines to leave here. Each of that hovered, around the of the University of Texas, who
±=, the 200 girls insisted she was there ^ ali over the at this writing have a strangle-
l -butythTre were°,oSyr 55°mSs country by accepting a Rose hold on the Southwest crown.
HMf HODBlIS bare in the contingent— and none of nomination, let’s look Talk has been emsinating out of
. them were talking for pubUcation. we can-t dei Miami that suggests a Miami-
Established Since. 1908 th ^Marhie radi^statinli1 neai^Lon- termine just who’ll corvvorf Holy Cross engagement in the
Firm Roberts Safe
Established Since. 1908
One of the South’s
Nationally Known
Restaurants
Fine Dining Rooms
We Prepare Food
to Carry ■ Outl
Phone 9149
t’s look Talk has been emsinating out of
can’t de* Miami that suggests a Miami-
convort Holy Cross engagement in the
ir’s Day. Orange Bowl. Miami dropped
tricks. The Bulldogs wiU be aided • 9. . \ lege, -winners of the SIAA Confer-} tour>u -4 \
by the “ol- coUege -spirit which - members of1 the original ence championship, last season, is , AU_ who . have seen the Tigers,
makes the players give their aU i r t Tivers’ footbaU another standout performed in action agree that team is fast
for the “Alma-mater”. Reception Center Tigers fopthau Hawkins in the forward position and has plenty of fight. The
Tigers Are Favorites team will hang up their uniforms shoots with dead accuracy. He youthful speed plus the playmg
The Reception Center Tigers after Saturday’s game when the Can be counted on to ,add several experience possessed by the Re-
enter the fray as favorites to m^ce Ti&ers meet Alabama A. & M. goals in each game. ' ] cephon . Center are going
“bullpups” out of the Bulldogs. ^ eee BuHdogs h ere at Dough- Morehouse Contributes Three ^ake th m ghty
Coach Roland. E. Bing’s cohorts College ^uuaogs «ere^ai i^oug^ Morehouse CoUege> runn^-up beat- *
have won their last _ three games boy. ^Stadium in contest. to Florida A. & m. last season, has
and would like nothing better All; cSvfrpand contributed three of its members
than to close the season with a two years of service and the Tjgers for this season. 014 | _| II.' DniMalrA
victory. Coach Bing and Assistant expect to be J^de Ver Brooks at forward, Silas Davis LSI OS R8III8K0
Coaches Franklyn Banks and next football season rolls around. ^ guar(i and Robert Swain at VA,.B
James Gardner remember th| Leo T. “Oop” Harrison, former wiU be piaying together .jYQUR
stunning upset their team received All-American at Florida A. &- M. agafn- Pre-season- workouts reveal M , . ■ I t
by another college eleven earlier College; Franklyn L. J. Banks, t^is trio can reaUy swing it with GOItlDdl ddCKSt
in the season, so the coaching staff AIL- American at Bluefield ! Col- that basketball. Speed, precision WUIIIMBl «
has been carrying their charges iegB; Standford “Porky” Smith, and accuracy : mark their drills] $fi00
through strenuous phases of prep- ex* Morehouse College star,- ana Herman Powell, a teammate of I w with
aration. . ' Richmond. Burrell, temfic guard George at Tijskegee last season, p*rlrefr*
The Reception Center came out from Rome High, school, were lowing up well at the forward , Plea!ed rOCkew
of the Fort McCleUan tussle pret- members of the first Reception berth. Bertram Martin, formad * p • ci__. m
ty banged up. Although the final Center team organized in ;1943. Tennessee. State College Star has . • Pointed Flap* •
score does not show how badly This team was undefeated .and ,un- b een looking good at guard. uiJc niuic
outclassed the Infantrymen were, tied during its seven-game sphed- Members of last season’s team! MRlS. DAVIS
the McClellan Eagles fought like ulfc j expected to make their contribu- GIFT SHOP 936 B'WAY
mad and when they did hit the a post-season game the ,T;- tion to what promises to be the ; - • '
Tigers they hit .mem hard. There ^ smothered Camp Forrejst 77 greatest aggregation ever assem- ■■■■■■■■■■■
were no serious injuries, however, t0 g to claim the national Pham- ,
so the Tigers wiU be in good shape pjonship for colored service teams.
for Uie game. For the 1944 season, Harrison, O 8
Razzle-Dazz e Game Due Banks Smith and Burrell aided 9 . BEST SELECTIONS NOVl ! . O
The Benrnng lads have quite a the: Tj in winning eigbt of O 1 ■* 9
few tricks up their offensive ^bj ten scheduled games. Ao _ O
sleeve which they ’hope ta .work tie an*/a fail5re to add j FAR AftlDBCTIIAC TAY< 8
on the Red and White Jersey team the extra point in one game were X p UK vfllllvl IfIMO I W I V X
for Huntsville. Those who like the on]y Amishes on their rec- X 1 ¥H . X
razzle, dazzle, ord. So far this season the record O i 8
JSSL*” | • _ Jk Hugoblc Dolli^ with pointed ^0*e! ■ I
F 12$ unto th l direction “cSumJ nJSona’l 8 DreI,e‘l *" ‘ * $6'95 8
Oak Wagon full of bocks. .i.k>,93'ZS up 1
Pleated Pockets
9 Pointed Flaps •
MRS. DAVIS
GIFT SHOP 936 B'WAY
BEST SELECTIONS NOV
FOR CHRISTMAS TOYS
AVAILABLE NOW
Recordings By
Dizzy Gillespie Morris Roceo
Qerald Clark
and other popular artists
THE RECORb SHOP
1344 Broadway
WE INVITE YOU I
- Well, we fear it goes without by Georgia 27-21 for it* only
saying that thrice beaten South- defeat runs against a team
cm California (Washington, beaten only by Temple *40.
San Diego, Navy and SL Should this materiaUze we have
Marys) wiU receive the West left the Sun Bowi twhlch wiU
-Coast Conference’s bid to defend find New Mexico entertaining
the laurels of the West against Temple, Penn State, Michigan
Gilmer and the roUing Crim- State, Virginia, or Clemson. The
son Tide provided they hurdle Ivy League and the Big Ten, of
UCLA again in their season’* course, can’t accept even though
finale Saturday. It’s things they have some likely candi-
like that that made the Sugar dates. Neither Army or Navy
Bowl loom as the best game, of will be allowed to play a post-
the day. For, as we see it, the season game which leaves Ala-
To Call
and
Safisfy Your
Military
Needs
At Our Friendly Store
Green Blouses & Slacks
BATTLE JACKETS
PINK SLACKS
CAPS— BELTS-INSIGNIA
S combination of Aklahoma A. bama and Oklahoma A. and M.
■ and M. and St Marys that will as the only two • undefeated
■ comprise the menu at New Or- teams scheduled to play Jan-
'S leans is a lulu. But just who uary 1, 1946,
S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL— -Jordan’s Red Jackets ;played their
S finest game of the current season last Friday night, and therein lies
■ the story of their 28-13 win over an out-manned, underdog but
■ hardly outfought .Columbus Blue, Devil aggregation. The. big pre-
S game question that clouded the annual rivalry was’ } “Would the
■ Jackets, and especially their line, play the game triey were capable
■ of playing?” If they could,, there’d be no question as to the outcome.
■ They did, as they proceeded to fashion their choicest victory of the
’45 campaign with some real heads-up football that featrued a de-
5 vastating passing attack, sharp blocking, heady quarterbacking, and
■La hard charging line. . In fact, it’s not hard to say that the Jordan
. ■ j forward wall turned in their season’s top performance Friday night.
5 A little 125-pound center bearing the monicker of , H. M. Yates
■ spearheaded a spirited line ably assisted by a pair of fine ends,
■ Workman and Meekin. Hinton Mixon, speedy wingback, supposedly
■ sick in pre-game reports, looked anything but that as he sparked a
■ nifty Jordan attack tallying twice, once on a pass from Watkins and
■ again on the famed Jordan reverse, Milan to Mixon. Mixon’s catch
” of Watkin’s touchdown pass marked the' first time he handled the
■ ball. Later in the second half, with Jordan leading 14-7 by. virtue
■ of Workman’s tally on a pass from Sheppard, Mixon intercepted a
■ Devil pass,_and two plays later he went 30 yards to: score, the second
” time he handled the ball from scrimmage. Milam galloped 40 yards
■ off tackle on a quick opening play over the strong side for the final
■ Jordan tally midwmy in the last quarter.
■ For the Blue Devils, quarterback Bobby Rowe, who defies the
■ fates by sporting a big orange 13 on the back ofj his blue jersey,
2 furnished the thrill of the evening, scoring the Devil’s first touch-
■ down on a over-the-shoulder catch of Cline’s fourth down aerial
■ after a : touchdown had been called back due to la Columbus off-
■ sides. Chuck Magoni, Devil captain, played his best game of the
2 season, plunging over in the third period for thej final Columbus
■ touchdown after a pass had set up the score. J
■ Just about everyone in * crowd of 12,000 local, partisans and
■ GIs who braved a bitter November wind agreed that Friday’s con-
2 test topped any seen in Memorial Stadium in some time both in
2 good football and splendid halftime entertainment. L
32-Oz. Beaver Shortcoat j
■
And All Other Items You Need ■
LEVINSON BROS. |
Serving Columbus Since 191-2 — 2
OPEN TO 6 P. M. WEEK DAYS— 9 P. M. SATURDAYS ■
B WELCOME j
No matter what branch of the 2
service you’re in — no matter ■
whether you’re getting a dis- ■
■ charge or just starting in — 2
2 you,U always find a warm welcome and 2
■ the most for your money at ■
PI 1 Our rceordt show over two 2
g Jfores, Site. milli0" «®M« hov* mad* pur- 2
"EVERYTHING MILITARY"
DIAL 3-3051 1220 BROADWAY 25 i 926 BROADWAY mu* be 0 '««"• ■]
■ ■ ■
IlllllllllllllllllUlllllllllllillllUUIIIIIlP
ehote* in our rtore*. Ther*
mutt be a reaton: .
Profs Bowl Over
Baftey General
By 58-15 Score ,
The rampaging Profs of the
Academic Regiment, The Infan-
try School, overwhelmed the Bat-
tey General Hospital five, 58 to 15,
on the losers’ court in Rome, Ga.,
last Friday night
The winners took the lead with
■two goals' in the opening minutes,
but the home five counterattacked
gamely throughout the first pe-
riod, which ended, 15-7, in the
Profs’ favor. From there on the
Academics tightened up, I allowing
the Medics only four points in the
second stanza while pouring in 16
more for themselves to lead 31-1-1
at intermission.
After coasting through the third
quarter to take a 39-14 advantage,
the Profs loosed a terrific 19-
point barrage in the final period,
while holding Battey to a lone
point, to rack up their third win
in as many starts.
• “Titan Ed” Beisser, who led the
scoring with 19 points, looped in
four consecutive baskets in the
last two minutes of play. Joe Loi-
sel, shining atr forward, and Guy
Crawford, who sparked the defen-
sive, sank 12 tallies each for the
winners. •
Alfred Cornfeld, former Phila-
delphia, scholastic star, .scored
seven points for the Medics while
playing ah admirable floor. game.
Only three personal fouls were
called on each side.
Grid Pickers
In First Army
Are Rewarded
Cpl. Lewis A. Wiseman and Lt.
Jorin Gerhardt, of the 1290th
Combat Engineers and the 3410th
Ordnance MAM Company, re-
spectively, won last week’s foot-
ball picking contest sponsored by
The Ace, First Army’s newspaper
at Fort Benning.
Wiseman picked 24 winners out
of 30 games for an 80 per cent
average, while Gerhardt came
close behind with 23 correct
choices in -30 chances.
Both received leather wallets
from The Ace as token of their
prognostication ability, and they
became numbers 7 and 8 in the
list of winners of the competition
which is conducted each issue in
The Ace.
The ballot for the contest ap-
pears on the sports page of each
issue of The Ace, listing the. games
for the weekend following publi-
cation and leaving space for the
x probable winner to be circled
by the entrant, and for the score
of x one designated game to be
listed. , '
PHILIPPINE RIBBON IS
AUTHORIZED FOR WEAR
WASHINGTON. D.C.— (ALNS)
The War Department ha* granted
authorization for wearing the
Philippine Liberation ribbon,
proffered by the Philippine gov-
ernment for service in the Islands
in trie period October 17, 1944-
September 3. 1945.
Hugable Dollie with painted face; ;
Dressed in overalls .... .>i» . , ; . . .$6.95
Bright-Eyed Panda #r. . . • $6*95
Oak Wagon full of bocks. .:.rc,$3.25 up
Land, Sea, anij Air Set ....... . $1 .95 ,*
dition to his exceptionally good X Oak Wagon full of bock*. . .K, $3.25 up
football record, Harrison was O I
heavyweight intercollegiate box- ; NW | Land, Sea, and Air Set ......... $1 .95 a
mg champion for 1941. ! . ' I , . j -
Next season Burrell, who has | T ‘
his full college career dhead, plans _ _____ ahAH
to continue liis gridiron activities ■> DC1|T| CV^Q CDllM I xMllP
at {Tennessee State College where DEI1ILCI O VlwIVI VlRVI,
he: has been offered a scholarship. ' T ' ’ ]
Many other members of the Tiger I DIAL 7365 1304 BROADWAY ,
squad will play college football ( • • \; ■
again when they , receive ; their . I ■ _ nrvv-M-xxVMVrifi'
VnmLmml7nnmmwwmmn*u»wmmmwnuwmmmnmmmnwmmmmwnm,m,wmmmmnnmnww,m,mmmu*m»
1304 1 BROADWAY
SMITH-GRAY
OF GEORGIA, INC.
INVITES YOU
• * | TO INSPECT |
THE UNUSUAL |
"BI-SWING BACK"
IN THEIR BLOUSE.
| This is entirely different from any
other <<bi-swillg,, and eliminates
! the use of any elastic in the back
giving you more free do m of
“shoulder action” without bind-
Let us demonstrate this “special
feature” and we assure you of
long continued pleasure and com-
fort in this blouse with the **bi-
swing back”. j
WE NOW HAVE
TRENCH COATS
A COMPLETE STOCK I
c ,mtnN c i —
]MAKE NIFORMS]
Sight — — — The Bayonet, Thursday, November 29, 3945
Discharges Faster, More
Efficient Than in Last War
* A Striltmg compKivm
fcilizatttm PW» , SIS to X vetoaS were misplaced ir lost,
following World War I and atthe «Je^an* onal thousands ofvet-
teesent was, offered by. the War ^ aa££e separated from the
tojjgw s&a- r*.
« S? I.’SMSS gg after World War: II re
f • SSi other plans had The
teen rejected, it was d.ecided 8,300,000, with 5,500,0GfiD
" raSaMasr
??hl?t5See‘#-
put the
fcilization centers wortoig m re- not inimilitaiy unite
verse, for toe arrival of overseas ™“y*£^viduals- oh the basis of
janits, men in this country who had hutss^maiviu to ^
thirled wStoale.^An men in
g^ aS'one ofSh^ ve?
were discharged before the over- sey^Ugh November 16, 1045, 3,-
f^ySe^ii i!S possible to
release some f0 000 m Deceiver more men than X,
sSs-st sms *■ as.
S-d ^ -ersea^se^e.
tion to debarkation, m Preparing tbe Armj', on the aver-
fot StdertS. ^he^onthly^dis-
^lovCie^i oT:B™£ 3%E£*r 28£}£S$^ '
§89 -2 P 395 60of Jul^ 346; 1 0 1 ; the place of separation. j. ■
NS^nblr, oJ%jU£ Plamied. s The^ion^y
result of the mass demobili- OMlj^ ^ gl
. . _ . 000; September, 597,000; October,
! Ihtfiirm Reward 1,270,000; November (1-16), 666,-
LlDcruE ivewuru OOO. This last figure for {15 days
, is greater than the figure jfor the
FOR. LOST peak 30 days Of demobilization fol-
Marked at RC
* MswpiBlPP
-f'Av;
'Old Fashioned' 307th Qen. Hospital
Thanksgiving Now Located in Osaka
Harked at RC
Thanksgiving Da, cdebratton M training and OIpq«t oyer- vrtto^
in and around the Deception Cenr seas. at the bers of the 307th, may do do
ter went over in the true “old u^f Siv^Tth^wSb^t Sr APO 360, to .cue of the
fashioned” Turkey Day style for post telling of the experiences Postmaster, San Francisco.
all servicemen and many of -their of the unit which left th,e post late '
tamrne. and M«id» who visited to •££ com- SOID
the Post as guests. hundreds of doctors and GIs. • irnKTiMn Tnd —CALMS) Be-
Highlighting the Receptira Cen- Lt Henri Wolbrettej .^utent ca^se_as he claimed— his neigh-
ter Thanksgiving Day celebration o£ the 307th, gives] Bayonet “bothered” him, How-
was the special program pre- readers thefo^wingjccoimt. of ^ CurSiam, a fanner to Tipton
sented immediately following the the travels of the unit'Sipce it left COunty. sold 4T of theim He took
feasting of the Thanksgiving din- Benning: j 33 of the porkers, to • Greentown
ner in the appropriately- decorated .. Vivid Description and sold them for $621.15, and
Mess Hall of the Second Battalion. ' “After coming a long way from later sold 14 *noreto .I*®"
Sf SogmmT Sded several Bering we are* finally setting up. ers for $220.80. The hogs have
group PSongs led by Pvt Willie Our travels took us {to Camp been recovered, and Dunham was
S&ri'fcft sf&S sac« «s| — =-
gd '55-^ja ** BStSSS
Day." uorporai dcuilci uu* j-
the celebration from the Pilgrims states. - ^ 1
to the southern states which •, “Then we went by ship to Wa- —
St. Joseph I
ASPIRIN
^ to the southern states whicti v “Then we went by .to wa-
joined in celebration m 1850 to j^ayama which is a place fhat used
“""SS.wDd, Airforces6 came] Itls! ^veled and
(Phole by 161th Slgdel Fh.W
P | | | mentioned>Iti^t tWs was tSfffrst “Next^^akT^b WAS a
u .... Arm„ X/nrntinn l^it Tn Mllfh ^^Sd%re?&SV'p?if
JMew Army vocaxion mi io oee wiuin ^yg
Use By First Army Troops At Benning gg”||g^| '“““is"
~ _ a 1 „rt-a«nnal andlmanv eases at more or less cruciallof window display, auto_salesman. praise to_those W ._ I 1 1941 Chrysler
FOR LOST
•• •/: . , lowing World War I and indudes
Cnven/t0V.SnAti!pE vast numbers of overseas imen as
SprtnjeF'jpuTillcI against the relatively few dis-
charged in December, 1918.
White ?uppy with Black spots. It is estimated that November,
1945. discharges will total 1,200,-
4 months old. Name "Bo" <
"Cl."
CALL CAPT. W. C. KITE
FT. BENNING 2-132
ns, xi IS esumaieu uiiu nuycmuci,
1945, discharges will total 1,200,-
or 000 and that over 1,000,000 more
veterans of World War II ! will be
discharged during December. This
is more than twice the [number
: discharged in May, 1919, the month
when World War I discharges of
veterans returning from overseas
mmm reached their height.
Your Guests Will
Admire Your Taste—
Yes, you will receive many compliments if
you let us take care of your entertainnumt j
problems. Whether a dinner-dance or ban* >
quef, the charm, hospitality, and splendid {
food at CHEROKEE LODGE will win the op- j
proval of you and your guests. CALL US!
Qh&wk&SL otodgsL
TALBOTTON ROAD ; ^ DIAL 2-1091
• PARTY HOUSE OF COLUMBUS AND BENNING •
5 Use By hrst Army I roops At Denning TmmM
y The Army’s new vocational and many cases at more or less pucial kur t0Futi S2“Si had^ooperoted and contributed to
k iZAfX. ^u?K^K out aj aabout ^ Turkey Ddy menu waspre-
ie lieutenant Stuart, who recently yllrs tote^o^vtiU be various occupations.” pared under ^hew|^Vrecentiv
1- succeeded Maj. Glem-R TerrelL m sai^^O Countless Jobs Open Sgti Nicho^s E Walker^ recentiv
S SteSfM Sffl er2rS«?ePr0SSbK tffi
5 sss“-?jsnSBf tfft* j^^jsnssjf & S^SSarfis $J$s&
»! coSSeSy ficross”todexed..°Over fle°e±f,^ui°IacSTbou° the fobs j^ffiJ^e^,“aSe°8iiwon“" was'held^fseWiK'Slub fwlS
efts® ?■ - - a ^ssL^ss^r r .
°° 800o“fvef« . ’T&zssittssi s» ja* ^ ffzssrsst
Among the 73 folders of major fandom examples ; from the cross ^^dedi in their individual second Battalion STU was given
job fields, there are more than 400 mdex file. Take fue 57. | companies. One vocational guid- in the Battalion area last Wednes-
pamphlets. The kit also contains Trade .far ^tanc^ he sa^In compa^ ^ bg fui?i^d each gander the supervision of
six standard books, one of the -fee Me folder are boohs e _ 1 in FirSt Army at Fort Ben- g.ggt. Herbert A. Kelley, Second
books having two parts. . In Business ior_ xomaeu^ on ning, and unit orientation, officers Battaii0n I academic supervisor.
Lieutenant Stuart emphasized ]^a^0UL ™efs. The Grocery will be available to assist per- Th were eats and drinks
00 TABLETS
Worlds Largest Seller At lOi
SOLDIERS: We Have
Decidedly
The Best
! Shoe Repairing
CUMBAA BOOT
AND SHOE SHOP
18 - 12th Diol 2-0052
Wedding Invitations • Announcements • Informala
Enclosure Cards •'Personal 6tationeiy W«iting.Cards
Monogrammed Note Paper • Anniversary Invitation*
Samples and prices submitted upon request =
I P S T € V 6 n S 6 n G R A v i n 6 c 0.
110 PEACHTREE STREET. ATLANTA. 3, GEORGIA
FOR SALE OR TRADE
2 1942 Chryslers
1 1941 Chrysler
OPA Prices— Will Finance
DIAL 5837
Of Restrictions
For Holidays
For Duty Overseas
Theater Officer
Gets Captaincy
KEEP IN TOUCH
WITH BENNING!
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you leave behind you many
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them through the pages of The
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Most Complete Post.
Mai! coupon and check, money order or stamps to:
CIRCULATION DEPTV^
- LEDGER-ENQUIRER,
COLUMBUS, GA.
CIRCULATION DEPT.
LEDGER-ENQUIRER,
COLUMBUS, GA
Subscription prieo
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Please enter my subscription to The Bayonet:
J My check, money order, or stamps ere enclosed L
heeSMMMMMMiM»»M-MliamHMW»Mi
a?SB ■_ Si£
.. c Mahany Leaves " Thoafor OffirPr SoStb.S"dr.^eSrS
Messages Free 4th Headquarters Utjicer
Of Restrictions For Duty. overseas. : Geb Captaincy
Fnr HnliHavc ta“™.cco^»d^o^; wp„«entoa^ri Vg.
ror noiiaays zs & sss% «
Ter die first fim. of virpni., for .ventu.1 ov.^e.s ^became g* f™‘e,L S8. USO^f S-
the United States into the war, service, it was announced - today offic£r in charge of the: post’s 11 lumbus° Mrs. Hazel Blackburn; of
unrestricted hoUday greeting mes- by Fourth Headquarters, First theaters iast August, has been a Atlanta js director of Service
sage service, known as Expedi- Army. familiar: Benning cjub 4
tionary Force Messages, will be Major Mahany, who has-been “J th> IMPROVEMENT|
ibis year available ■to and from Detachment CO since early Ocio- telepbon| center before he be- Georgia cottonseed crushers,
members, of the armed forces over- ber> is to be trained at Lee in. a came theater manager. cotton oil processors, ginners and
seas, the War and Navy Depart- speciaL course in repatriation A native of Erie, Pa., Capit. other cotton groups discussed oe-
ments announced today. activities. It will be his second Monahan played basketball on his velopmOTtofa m a
1? P«vi.b. y.™ war mmm. Major Ma-
ications requirements necessitated bany baving already seen duty m was a Sp0rts edftor of one of the The commercial cotton groups
restriction or total suspension of thg AiaSkan Department from Frie papers for a time and spent considerede the sponsoring 01 a
Is to complete your coll prompt-
ly...If a delay occurs, itk be-
cause there ore more colls
then the lines con handle. We
appreciate your
patience and
fl understanding.
the service. In 1942-43 the'serv- March 1942 until February of 11 years on Erie newspapers and five-acre cotton contest mine
^ ^Oregon,
actual combat and hospitalized Major Mahany has had charge of mile a newspaperman, Capt. pr^ ’t^n and c^ton^products must
troops, and last year total suspen- enusted personnel of Fourth Monahan kept an active hand in if ^ cotton is to meet
sion was necessary. . Headquarters Detachment since Erie • sportsdom by coaching the De imp u eu competition from
S. H. ^
3^S£SSlSS3«£ ZtSr S2bSj.P piln..d out at th.
of overseas personnel and expand- marsbai for Fort Benning. l\
ed facilities have combmed to — — b
make possible uncurtailed service • ■ a
ESS— Hanukkah Feast j
Facilities Marshalled ... _ _ • _ t
Communications facilities serv- R J I J TAM!MLi C
ing all countries throughout the MSTtfAn 1 iUllflil!
world where U.S. force* are eta- |T|ol iVvIl I vlllUIII
tioned have been marshalled for ■ -
the purpose. Theater commanders observance of Hanukkah— the
have arranged for prompt delivery 1<Feast of Lights”— will be held
of . messages within them com- tonight in children’s School
mands, and have finished nforr {or aU Jewish military personnel
mation enabhng the several car Foft Bentlblg
riers involved promptly to tr^s- Rabbi Herbert s. Waller of the
nut and deliver anticipated mcom- B>nai Israel Xemple in Columbus,
mg messag^. ^Appropriate in wm c6nduct the special observ-
P«L^ viST’ Message the
11s -country are available wner- -Matinnai Tpwish Welfare
ever routine telegrams, radiograms the 1 National Jewish welfare
IPSSsi yASa’SSsr-Sfi'S
mL be select^a and the occasion. Songs .are sung in
JSjaSS' sentiment fo'r VS^ollowed by
fflsa?0 cents- regard-
Complete Address Required 1 to?n . served to compiete the
Persons sending messages over- Feast 01 lugnts.
seas are cautioned that the com-
plete accurate address will be re- FAT SALVAGE
quired this year. In previous code Farm women can speed the re-
names and routing words were turn of nylons, refrigerators and
employed for security reasons, but many other much desired items
with the removal of censorship re- by continuing their job of fat sal-
strictions the complete addresses, vage, the Extension Service says,
including name of the individual, pats and oils are needed in the
rank, organization, geographical production of nearly all the every-
location and APO number will be ^ay items we use. __
required. . , — : — -
To insure that the available ca- r_" AMD QUICKIE
pacity of communications facih- ***• - _ wwiwmb
ties will/ be adequate to serve the /you SANTA ]
anticipated load, greeting messages - f nltrr A )V>'sL
must be filed sufficiently in ad- \ imuluji J fie* A
vance to allow for transmission in Vsr/V
the last week of November and in
December. Messages will be ac- " // HaBAb
cepted starting November 23, with r'Neifc Ci -'^gaOBSB/^
delivery, to overseas! addressees to //vjf
be made between December 22-26. f)r-> °
No assurance of \ delivery by j/ M L &. -L/I/
Christmas can be given for mes- JBn3| -
sages filed after December 18. t x sS&k
In order further to insure sea-
sonal delivery starting November
24, the War Department wall re- V V
ceive daily reports from all ma- u T™
jor domestic and foreign stations of 1/ ifiR MATTBs m
greeting service traffic awaiting i YOUR GAL WALK mg
transmission, so that distribution VIll^AiAn' ON
of load can be estimated and ac- 1
cumulation of traffic backlogs! a I! 1 * ™ \ V \\
may be avoided. 1
tas gg-f Pdta,ed out at
basic training at Fort Bragg and meeting. , — — -f—
Camp^ordOT^^a^er^e^as as- commissioned a second lieutenant
signed to the officer’s section at inSJune, 1943 *“dhn??J0^“gas!
Fort McPherson before . volun- 10-day leave at ms home, was as
teering for Army Administration signed to Fort Benning m Special
OCS at Gainesville, Fla. He was Services work. :
PIANOS
It's a Good Habit to Use
City Pharmacy
■ When SO MUCH Depende
■; ■■ Upon '
Accuracy-- Sk^l- Purity
A Lasting Christmas Gift?
PRICES REASONABLE
Your Satisfaction Guaianteod
DOLLAR PIANO EXCHANGE
DIAL 2-3209
600 SIXTEENTH STREET .
PHENIX CITY, ALA.
City Pharmacy
•’ Clean, Wholesome fyod at Counter or Booth, t ..
14 THIRTEENTH j ST. * PHONE 2-2577
Across from Waverly Hotel
"R.CTAMP QUICKIE
rOMOE9 OUT, YOU MEA N?\/b0NT OE A OOPS
EVER SINCE THAT SAILOR If QUICKIE-USE SOME
tn HERE SHE'S A STRATWY..1JSTEN..
StVEN'ME THE
n Are Snfartjopl
WJKS FOR THE
UE’U.C.'.lVE N ROMRIr CROWN OOM «
ctmo* WKINEJ IS THE BEST-TAsW
»UT OF AAY- COLA Of THEM ALW
4AN0 A I
MATTER, QL»CKi£_l
W YOUR GAL WALK J
on youT^m.
r "vja v
I by Hap Browor
CLAUDETTE COLBERT SAYS: ^
mESBk r t’* CONVINCED ) ^
ytrmm-stsr// g ^ i
^w5/ Lovely CUudett. Colb«rttook JjA
the eole Ujte^ei t*ndpicW
■L **1 Royal Crow* Cola beat! Tqr it ■ BU
youraeU. Say "RC (or mar
That'e the: quick way to tate
QIkL— 4HMI froaty bottle of Royal Crown ■
ImnwOTlTi^-r CoU-b«*t by taite-tcet.