A telegram from the War Department received at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday
tells the story of the ending of the life of Melvin Magarrell,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Magarrell of Adair. He had been on
the western front in France for some months past and had taken
part in many battles. Once he was severely wounded and spent a
few weeks in the hospital, returning to front line trench duty
June 28. July 19 a Hun bullet found him, and his patriotic
service in behalf of the Stars and Stripes, and humanity, came to
an end.
In the late draft call the government asked for
the services of one of the best and most patriotic young farmers
of the Big-4 section, Roscoe R. Turner, and he is now in camp
drilling to prepare for active work in shooting the liver out of
a number of deluded worshippers of the Beast of Berlin. Mr.
Turner has a good farm and had to leave his crops just as they
were in the fields. So last Tuesday, his neighbors came in and
threshed about 1,900 bushels of wheat and oats. In the bunch of
threshers were H. I. Warner, Orie Arnburg, Paul Woodman, Leslie
Tickner, Ed Burtt, Dudley Holmes, Byrl Ruch, Ralph Schwab, P. J.
Winklemann, R. Howland, Cleve Kempster, Robert Edwards, George
Winkleman, Fred James, Jimmie Pederson, Waldo Conrad, Edd Sachau,
Kenneth Lyle, Jacob Ernst, Mike Noland, Fred Arnburg, Roy Walker,
Thomas Dolan, Frank Howland, Charles Petri, Mike Hollinrake,
Edwin Oaks, Carl Knox and Jake Walker. |