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World War 1 |
OVER THERE! OVER THERE! |
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| Ernest Cravens | Raymond E. Mc Graw | Barney Carroll | Israel S. Kanepsky | Thomas D. Griffey |
| W. Farnett Fields | John Smith | Milus J. Cooper | Claude E. Grau | Thomas T. Cunningham |
| Ernest L. Sharber | Fred Cain | Eugene Carter | E. Trice Waller | Millard F. Gilliam |
| Oscar Porter | Walter W. Wright | Hiley Cobb | Newton M. Moss | Gordon Sheppard |
| Reggie L. Jones | Lawrence Draper | William E. Price | Claude E. Barnes | Charles Ira Wood |
| Thomas J. Bryant | Russell Hester | James E. Laffoon | Estell Vanractor | Lucian S. Sadler |
| William Reese | Marion Rutland | Lucien McGee | Charles W. Griffin | Robert B. Waller |
| Samuel P. Elgin | C.H. Henderson | William P. Hayes | John T. Wall |
On June 20, American deaths reported: all causes, 3,367 in the war. Soldiers killed in battle to date, 940; marines, 191. The latter part of June, the Americans captured Belleau Woods, after
three days of fighting. Early in July, another smashing advance of two
miles was made.
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In July, much patriotic work was done by the Red Cross organization of Hopkinsville by the following workers: Mrs. F. P. Thomas, supervisor; Misses Susie Stites, Mary Cook, Mary Danforth, Mary McPherson, Mary Cloud, Mary Rice, Mary Goldthwaite, Lula Moseley and Mesdames J.O. Cook, J.H. Rice, G.A. Johnson, A.W. Wood, E. P. Barnes, F. L. Friedman, Sallie Warfield, Tillie T. Thomas, W. H. Cobb, Saul Sacks, Archie Higgins, Bailey Waller, Jouett Henry, J.W. Downer, M.H. Nelson, Garner Dalton, R. E. Cooper, J. H. Ware, R. M. Wooldridge, J. L. Harvey, L. H. Davis, B. E. Jones, W. T. Tandy, Mattie Roper, T. C. Underwood, E. C. Frye, J. C. King, D. W. Kitchen, Cora Manson, S. U. Woodridge, George T. Callis, J. L. Freedman, and J. C. Johnson.
ORDER - that electric street lighting be dispensed with, on moonlight nights, was issued to save fuel. By July 20, these doctors from Christian County
had gone to the front:
SUGAR control was tightened, and no one could purchase sugar in the county without a certificate from the food administrator. MISS BETSY WARE volunteered for Red Cross work, and was assigned to a naval hospital at Norfolk, Va. PRESIDENT WILSON vetoed an act fixing the minimum price of wheat at $2.40 a bushel, an increase he said that would cost the people $387,00,000. CONGRESS empowered the President, in July, 1918, to take over the control of the telegraph, telephone, radio, and cable systems during the war. The radio was then in its infancy. WORD received that CAPT. JOSEPH G. STITES was in a hospital in France, suffering from a gassing received in action. A SANDWICH SALE, for the benefit of the French and Belgian children, held in Hopkinsville the first Monday in August, netted $50, which was turned over to MRS. CHARLES M. MEACHAM, chairman of the Relief Work Committee of the Woman's Council of National Defense. A LETTER from JOE M. KELLY to his father, M.
D. KELLY, under date of July 30, 1918, told that his ship, the U.S. transport
Tippecanoe, off of the coast of France had been torpedoes and the crew
taken off in life boats, and all rescued but one man. Kelly was in charge
of the gun crew.
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The following Christian County women
OVERSEAS
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