The White Falcon - 10.07.1943, Page 12
12
CORPORAL
OFTV'i,
guarp!! >
I THOUGHT
THEY WAS
ONLY FOX,
GENERALS'
To WALK MY POST IN A MILITARY MANNER, KEEPING
ALWAYS ON THE ALERT AND OBSERVING EV0RYTHIN6
THAT TARES PLALE WITHIN SIGHT OX HEARING.. ■ <g
TO TARE CHARGE OF THIS POST AND ALL
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fO REPORT ALL VIOLATIONS OF ORDERS
I AM INSTRUCTED TO ENFORCE. ■ -
UTKIME
To RECEIVE, OBEY, ANP PASS ON TO THE SENTINEL
WHO RELIEVES ME ALL ORDERS FROM THE
COMMANDING OFFICER, OFFICER OF THE DAY
AND OFFICERS ANP NON-COMMISSIONED
OFFICERS OF THE 6LIARD ONLY... g?
TO REPEAT ALL CALLS FROM POSTS MORE
DISTANT FROM THE GUARDHOUSE THAN MY OWN.
CSf 'YM.^5 #///
TO TALK TO NO ONE EXCEPT IN I
To QUIT MY POST ONLY WHEN PROPERLY RELIEVED
-BUT GEN'RAL.'
YOUR CAR WINDERS
WAS CLOSED; YTJ
h WAS CASED.' ,/'
CORPRAL
OF TH'
GUAKD.'C
WHO'S,'
THERE?/
TO BE ESPECIALLY WATCHFUL AT NIGHTAND
DURING THE TIME FOR CHALLENGING, TO 4
CHALLENGE ALL PERSONS ON OR NEAR MY'
POST, AND TO ALLOW NO ONE TO PASS
WITHOUT PROPER AUTHORITY...
<3 (fP? >
Copyright 1943 by Milton Caniff(distributed by Camp Newspaper Scrvii
To GIVE THE ALARM IN CASE OF FIRE OR DISORDER.
TO CALL THE CORPORAL OF THE GUARD IN ANY
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Germans Shoot Leaders
Of Greeks In Crete
The American Scene
Reports came out of Egypt this
week telling of the shooting of
several Greeks and the arrest of
hundreds of others on the island
of Crete hy German troops. The
action was a result of street fight-
ing following recent USAAF raids
on airfields near Salonika.
Cairo heard that the Germans
were reinforcing their Crete
garrisons with storm troops to
help keep down the resurgence
of Greek resistance arising from
American bomber activity over
Greece.
The arrests and executions
were carried out in the towns
of Canea, Retimo and Gandia,
where, according to the Cairo
story, the Greeks staged demon-
strations of protest against the
shooting of women and children
hostages in Athens, Salonika and
other Greek cities.
He’s Lucky He
Goes Along!
Lt. George Ponty of Los Angel-
es, who is flying a bomber in
Africa, has his troubles, but defin-
itely.
Before he and his Air Corps
comrades take off to bomb Greek
held territory he always scurries
sround and points out two small
islands on a map. “Hold onto your
bombs when flying over these
hunks of real estate,” ho says,
“because they belong to me,”
George isn’t kidding either. Ills
grandfather, a Greek, left bifn
the islands in bis will.
FBI Captures Two
After Long Chase
A game of hide-and-seek be-
tween the FBI and a pair of
notorious criminals'ended in Las
Vegas, Nev., this week when the
law caught up with Odie Vernon
Flukar, 36-year-old convicted
killer and robber, and William
R. Delinski, convicted kidnapper.
20 Allied Seamen
Released By Axis
The first 20 of 110 British,
Australian and Canadian seamen
to be repatriated from intern-
ment campij in Germany have
arrived in London. The sailors
said their route took them from
Cologne to France to Spain to
Lisbon, from where they were
flown to England.
RAF Plane
Tows Glider
3,500 Miles
Folks just couldn’t help but
blink and ask thmselves what
next this week, when it was
announced that a fully loaded
glider had been towed 3,500 miles
across the Atlantic by an RAF
transport plane.
The trip was completed in 28
hours, and a new distance record
was set.
There was no cooperation from
the weather on the first leg of
the trip, which began at Montreal,
and a blizzard forced the glider
down in snowy mountains.
The glider is loaded and unload-
ed through a large door in the
nose which was reinforced with
steel attachments and designed
to withstand a pull of 20,000
pounds.
Merchant Seaman George Izabi
was in New York City with two
$500 bills in his possession but
couldn’t get any food. It was
Sunday and he had been wander-
ing- around all day. Finally he
appealed to a policeman who
loaned him $2 because no one
could change a $500 bill. He pro-
mised to pay the kindly police-
man back the next day as soon
as the banks opened.
•
T/Sgt. Robert Root bailed out
of his plane during the battle of
Tunisia in North Africa. Root
floated to within ten feet of the
ground when a delayed action
bomb exploded directly beneath
him. The force of the blast blew
him upward again. That- was all
he remembered until he regained
consciousness in a British hospi-
tal two weeks later.
•
Soldiers at Camp Sibert, Ala.,
have been saluting D. Fuehrer.
However, D. Fuehrer isn’t Der
Fuehrer. He is Ft. Donald Fuehr-
er, a Chemical Warfare officer.
•
A WAC at Gowen Field, Ida.,
saluted a passing major with both
her arms laden with bundles. He
kidded her. about the sloppiness
of her salute. Suddenly she thrust
the bundles into his arms, saluted
snappily, took the bundles back
and glided away.
•
Charlie Scholl, a farmer in
Oneonta, N. Y., was tired of hav-
ing his chickens stolen. In an
effort to combat this situation,
Scholl set up an elaborate chicken
coop burglar tyap. The next
morning he went into the coop
and got a load of buckshot in his
leg. He forgot he had set the trap.
•
The Illiniois House is consider-
ing a bill to require that all State
legislators thave at least an eighth-
grade education. According to
Rep. J. S. Munday, who introduced
the bill, there were two legisla-
tors within the last ten years
who could neither read nor write.
One of these two scholars got
himself elected three times.
•
Blinds for barracks windows
was the first request made by
a group of WAC’s when they
arrived in Gowen Field, Idaho.
•
The original .‘"WAC” is dead.
Mrs. Lizzie Redwood Goode, 98,
died recently at her home in
Dallas, Texas. During the Civil
War, Mrs. Goode worked in a
Confederate military office to re-
lease a Southern man to fight
against the Union.
Send THE • 6 WHITE FALCON Home
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