Glenn Lippard Goes Over the Top Twice
Private Glenn
Lippard with the infantry in France has written to his mother, Mrs. Martha
Lippard, of Hickory under date of September 6 that he has been over the top
twice and come through both times without a scratch. When a shell bursts close,
Mr. Lippard says, they call it the “whizbang blues,” and when it goes over
their heads they say it is singing “Home, Sweet Home.”
As the young man
was writing his letter some British soldiers, with whom his regiment evidently
is brigaded, were singing in a wine saloon close by and the music sounded sweet
to him. He has not tasted any wine in France and has got along well with
everybody.
He asks his friends
to remember him. He was well and very much alive when he wrote.
Belated Letter from Joe Reinhardt Arrives
Mr. Joe Reinhardt,
veteran of the Mexican border and veteran of the great war, has written Mr.
P.A. Setzer, teacher of the young men’s Baraca class of the First Methodist
Sunday school, from the front. The letter was dated July 22 and reached Hickory
only yesterday.
Mr. Reinhardt is
with the first battalion supply section of the 105th engineers and
was having it very easy. There are nine members of the section, including a
commissioned officer, and they draw the rations from the regimental dump. Mr.
Reinhardt says they have had some thrilling adventrues, but he could not name
them. He mentions air fights, though these are so far up and away that one
cannot tell very much about them. The roar of the big guns is heard and
occasionally a shell shrieks through the air.
The “Sammies,”he
said are surely making a good show and their slogan is “Berlin, Heaven, Hell or
Hoboken, January 1, 1919.” The writer is hoping that it will be Berlin and
Hoboken both by that time.
The young man noted
in the Record that a number of members from his class in the army was larger
than the number at home, and he wonders if this fine record can be beaten by
any other class. He speaks of the good roads, the high price of fruit—and
thinks of the grapes in Hickory for the picking—and sends regards to everybody.
He signs himself one of the member “somewhere.”
Letter from Sergeant Macy S. Hight
Mrs. E.E. Hight
received several letters from her son, Sergeant Macy S. Hight, medical
department, the last being dated September 13. He was well and all right when
he wrote, but had not received a single piece of mail from home, though letters
had reached him from Detroit.
Miss Dorothy Ervin To Report for Training
Miss Dorothy Ervin
has received instructions from the war department to report to Camp Hancock,
Ga., where she will go into training for nursing. Miss Ervin will leave next
Tuesday. She will be greatly missed by those who worship at the Methodist
church where she is soloist. Miss Ervin is a graduate of Catawba College and no
young woman in Newton is more popular than she.
Mr. Crowell Sherrill Home Sick from Army Training
Mr. Crowell
Sherrill returned Thursday night from Wake Forest, where he went Tuesday to
resume his studies and to enter the students army training corps. He became ill
shortly after arriving at Wake Forest and it was thought best for him to
return. While his condition is serious it is hoped that he soon will be well
again.
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