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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • 43

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
43
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

A SECTION THE CINCINNATI ENQUIRER Sunday, May 30, 1943 TT 3 3SH ART wf rty Lieutenant Lieutenant Robert Herzog Lee Greenbaum Lieutenant Arthur J. Barth lieutenant Lieutenant John L. Fairbanks William J. Bohman, Jr. Lieutenant Charles G.

Cllft Lieutenant Harold Cropper Lieutenant Lieutenant Marlon Reid Ray Koehler Paul S. Schaeler Lieutenant Julian Mahaney Lieutenant Henry C. Henn jk vrwf xH Wf s( Sergeant Sergeant Joseph F. Rice Fred S. Kotte, Jr, Technical Serjeant John M.

Gordon Sergeant Robert E. Jones Aviation Cadet jess L. Smith Sergeant Serjeant Sergeant Tom Meckllng Sergeant William Tillett Paul E. Dittgen William r. Calley Aviation Cadet J.

B. Melerdlrks Second Lieutenant Cliltord G. Purvis Stalt Sergeant Albert Wllllns Sergeant Walter Riddle fegSS TO Sergeant Robert Pence Edward A. Scully Norbert G. Baekhus CrC Vl iw? v3 Moorman Herman Frltsch FRnnm iifTTira JHh; dSb Sr-' Petty Officer Petty Officer Petty Officer First Class I ft A I Chief Coxswain Corporal Corporal Jack W.

Pllder Richard J. Springer Guy Calvert jfrj, Eart W. Gelger Donald Ackermann Edward L. Green II 1 hCSri I LrH! 1 I CPS Jfi ifl Corporal Corporal Corporal "'OyTh 'VF3 1 i Corporal Corporal William Freese Edward McArthur Charles McHargue 1 Wif If I- V' Sylvester J. Hornbach Corporal Albert Kouba Robert C.

Raabe l-r lr ilrVn i 1 tr-7li fV? II al Corporal Corporal 1 TV If I Hte 1 Corporal Corporal Corporal Corporal Irwin Todd Herman Kornmann Carl R. Kortt M'iPCSJ-1 '-N John J. Prendegast Stephen Hi Blttner Wendell Cropper '-SS a S3 vl' 4 lTo 5VTV 4T -c' Four generations, wno have served in four wars, are represented in this specially posed fw jf ts 'SCS if Memorial Day photograph at the Lincoln Statue in Lytle Park. Left to right, Civil War, oVv siss Frederick Pfiester, 3020 Harrison Avenue; Spanish-American War, Herman Rettig, 1739 Xj -V "fl I I I I I Avonlea Avenue; World War Elmer F. Hunsicker, 4501 Perth Lane, and World War II, 1 Four generations, wno have served in four wars, are represented in this specially posed Memorial Day photograph at the Lincoln Statue in Lytle Park.

Left to right, Civil War, Frederick Pfiester, 3020 Harrison Avenue; Spanish-American War, Herman Rettig, 1739 Avonlea Avenue; World War Elmer F. Hunsicker, 4501 Perth Lane, and World War Radioman Arthur M. Tally Seaman First Class Private First Class Bernard Fath Hardin Middletown Seaman First Class James Ahrens Fireman First Class Seaman First Class Carl Brafford B. Fennell 81 I lr Private First Class Private First Class Thomas Middletown William G. Holmes Private Roscoe Poling, Company Fort Thomas, Ky.

Enquirer Photo by Herb Heise. Why We Stay FREEDOM is gained and held the hard way. This free air we breathe today was bought with the blood of heroes. They paid in the cold cash of suffering and death for the difference between the America we all know and love, and the vassal state we might have been. The United States of America have never lost a war, and we are not losing this one.

There is no mystical for that. Just a simple fact. American manhood and patriotism have been equal to their every test. We are, by inclination and tradition, a peace-loving people. We have not sought to make ourselves great by the sword.

We have never trained armies to seize our neighbors' possessions and trample over their rights. But on each occasion when our national interests confronted us with the necessity of war, we have not shrunk from it. Our men have squared their jaws and gone to war; our women have clenched their teeth and watched them go wherever the Stars and Stripes led. It was so in our first beginnings as a nation, or we would never have been independent; it has been so ever since, or we would not have remained free. In this edition of the Artgravure Section of the Enquirer are several hundred picturei of typical Cincinnatians now engaged in our latest and greatest war.

Their pictures represent an accumulation we regret that so many have been sejjt to this newspaper that space hasjiot permitted their publication previously. We regret, too, that no more can be accepted for publication until those already on hand are published. As we said, these are typical faces of the men who are fighting our nation battles today. In the picture which dominates this page, Enquirer Photographer Herb Heise has epitomized the series of men who have fought to keep America free and united for the last century. Altogether, they ctn tell you why we are free.

Private First Cliss William S. Jaeger Private First Class Morris J. Shradsr Private First Class Jacob Riddle Private First Class William W. Lfpps Private First Class William J. Lemming Private First Class Prlvl)i Kohlir james biii Private First Class Joseph Mollaum Private First Class Charles V.

Woelfer PrlvMe First Class William R. Speeg PflVftti Private Bruce League Edwarrd Private William F. Brown Private Thomas Ackermann SnVdhof, Jr. Merrill Lud.ow CourtnyTcilberf stevS: K.ro.eff Private Private Private Private E. Norman Jackey -'x Ivl 1 i 1 1 -j I I 'i I 1 I I 1 I 1 IS Saiman tmrr.d taiDOK jtaennct P.liti (aairiin Sieond Cllli i.k.

Seaman StCOnO GUSt Private Hobert E. 'akir Private Clifford McArthur rnvare uavio Towniey private wmiam gner rriTsu in noiu seaman vernon neis r.i iinnviim Al H. Lambers William Maringer JacK Li.idimann Jack Calvert H. Lambert mr.

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,581,676
Years Available:
1841-2024