Friends of Captain Grover C. Wilkes have received
notification of his safe arrival over seas. He is attached to the 122nd
Infantry as a medical officer. Captain Wilkes was one of the pioneers at the
U.S. Army Base Hospital, Camp Greene, having arrived here in August, 1917 and
remained a part of the hospital until the last of June 1918. His work was in
the isolation wards and in B-8.
Captain Harry N. Long joined the temp. duty October 23, from
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Mass. Assigned to the Surgical Service.
1st Lt. Leonard Dursthoff joined October 23 for
temp. duty on the surgical service, having completed a course of instruction at
Rockefeller Institute, N.Y.
Lt. Wallace, Hamilton, Ohio, was transferred October 24th
to U.S. Army Base Hospital No 92, which was stationed at Camp Greene, N.C., and
left a few days ago for “over there.”
Captain Ellen left on a five days leave October 26th,
at Rocky Mount, N.C.
1st Lt. Beckwith left Campe Green October 26th
en route to Walter Reed Hospital for treatment.
2nd Lt. Ringstom, Hugo joined October 27th
for duty from Yale Army Laboratory School, New Haven, Conn., and was assigned
to the laboratory service.
1st Lt. Thomas T. McGurl joined for duty October
27th from Camp Greenleaf, Ga., and was assigned to the medical
service.
1st Lt. Samuel Gayman joined October 28th
from Camp Greenleaf, Ga., and has been assigned to the surgical service.
Faithful service and efficiency now brings it’s own reward,
is an old axiom that was upheld by the recent promotion of sergeant 1st
class Richard H. Dickinson to the rank of first lieutenant in the sanitary
corps. For the past year he has been mess sergeant at the patient’s mess at the
Base Hospital Camp Green, and for that period he has toiled in a seemingly
tireless fashion, day after day for the welfare of the sick boys. All through
the long winter of 1917-18 he was to be seen in the kitchen and mess hall from
early morning to late at night, supervising the preparation of the food and
looking after the sanitary conditions of the building. “Dick” as he was
affectionately called by the boys who knew him, was always at hand with a smile
and a cheery word for the men who stood with him in the fight to give the
patients the best “grub” that the mess allowance afforded. Now, they in turn
are the first to come forward with congratulations and wishes for the best
success for him in the future.
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