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Show I "We Are Buying War Bonds Are You?" f --. , . - ' , I I f 4 , I ... '. . . Y, -. '-; . V ' ' it '- r - ,r ' r -' '" ' t ' ' 1 I ";; j; ,... ! i ..ft-' i 1 ' t K'- . ' i....."s.'--.' '- . i , . , , . j jST --. .vyjw TT : II " 1 c ' , y i '..'" ' x r J I , & "' - i s"'. X: - ; r?i Pvt. William F. Morris, Long Iioarli, C'al., is above draft ao -but has seen three years of serv j ice. He lost his left leg bclnw h knee in Tunis'a. lie wears i Purple Heart and Good Cone Ribbon and continues his Bond purchases. Pvt. Ponat Cartier, Dcrrv, N. I?., suffered a fracture of the leg above the knee in Sicily when struck by an 88 mm. she!!. He was held prisoner for two days by the Germans, traveling in a tank. He is a regular purchaser of War Bonds. Pvt. Thomas Dellarossa, Trenton, N. J., 18th Infantry Patrol, was wounded by shrapnel at El Guitar, Gui-tar, Africa, and now must wear n, special brace for his left, knee. He won the Purple Heart. He buys War Bonds regularly and urges you to. ' Sgt. Carl Funk, 26, Cincinnati, lost his right eye and sustained a fractured left knee in Sicily. He has been buying War Bonds regularly. regu-larly. He will return to civil life as soon as he is discharged from Halloran Hospital, N. Y. Pvt. Irwm Lcvmsc Baltimore, was struck by shraprcl in the lc.t shoulder at Palermo. The fingers of his left hand are paralyzed. When his father asked if he needed anything, his son rcr 1: "Buv War Bonds." His fa.ur-bought fa.ur-bought 51,500 worth. |