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Show 5 MORE SOLDIERS RETURNED ROUE Carl P. Terkelsert, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Terkelsen of this city, returned home Friday, February 28 after having been in the service of Uncle Sam for ten months. Mr. Terkelsen Ter-kelsen left Mount Pleasant on April 28, 1918, and received all his training train-ing at Camp Lewis, Washington. Wells Bradley returned home Sunday, Sun-day, March 2nd from Camp Fun-ton, Fun-ton, Kansas, where he was mustered muster-ed out of service in the U. S. army. Mr. Bradley was in the service for more than seven months, having left Mount Pleasant on August 1, 1918. He was in training at Camp Fremont! California until October 18th, when he left for France, landing there on November 9th, just two days before the Armistice was signed. He remained re-mained in France for over three and a half months. . Mr. Bradley was a member of the 8th Infantry of the 8th U. S. Army disivion. E. F. Gardemann arrived in Mt. Pleasant last Friday, March 7th, after af-ter an absence of nearly eleven months, during which time he has been stationed at Camp Lewis, Washington Wash-ington as a member of the Headquarters Head-quarters detachment of the U. S. army. He left here about the middle of April, 1918. Mr. Gardemann was an instructor at the Washatch Academy Aca-demy last year. Vernon Mcintosh, son of Bishop and Mrs. A. E. Mcintosh of this city, returned home Monday after having served in the United States army for one year. Mr. Mcintosh left here on March 16. 1918 for Camp Logan, Colorado where he joined the Coast Artillery. Later he was sent to Fort Banks. Mass., and then to Fort An-.drews. An-.drews. Mass., from which place he left for France, landing there about the last of July. He was in French training camps for six months before returning home. He was scncduled to go to the front sometime in December, Decem-ber, but the early termination of the war prevailed his seeing service on the battlefields. Eugene Cowan returned home this week after an absence of more than twenty-two months, which time he has spent in the service of Uncle Sam. Mr. Cowan did the greater part of his training in Panama and Cuba. |