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... rrV DON'TTELL) POUNDINO, POUNDINSO (HORSE'S AHA, MY LovlXWe INCITED VR VmSS'lcy ) ( EVfll 1
j (S e o
Mod.. March 13, 1961
Pge 8
Basin Briefs
PVT. ARNOLD O. BEYMEB
has returned to the Marine Corps
base at Camp Pendleton, after
a furlough during which he visit
ed his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Beymer.
BONANZA
DICK ATKINSON has-returned
to Bonanza after several weeks
in Missouri where he visited his
mother and other relatives.
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MR. AND MRS. BILL LANG
DEN and four children have
moved to Langell Valley from
Los Angeles. They bougnt tne
former Haley Shaw ranch.
MRS. JIM STEVENSON SR.
has returned home after spend
ing a week in Miami with her
sister, Mrs. M. D. Jensen.
MR. AND MRS. LLOYD BEE-
BE have moved back to their
ranch in Langell Valley after
living in Shelton, Wash., for sev
eral years.
MR. AND MRS. CHARLIE
SCIIMIDLI and Connie spent the
weekend in Washington with Mr.
and Mrs. Maurice Schmidli.
MRS. ENOS BLAND and Deb
bie are spending a week in Sac
ramento with her daughter and
family.
MR. AND MRS. GORDON GIV
AN recently visited his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Givan of
Bonanza. Gordon Givan broke his
ankle while skiing at Mt. Shas
ta. Ernest Givan took them to
their home in Portland.
STEVEN CASEBEER, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Casebeer,
is a patient at Hillside Hospital.
Cards from his friends would be
appreciated.
AMANDA McCORD is seriously
ill in Sacramento. Her two daugh
ters, Mrs. Mike Ketchum and
Mrs. Roger Boyer, will visit her
this weekend.
Mystery Of
Missing Boy
Finally Ends
WINDOM, Minn. (AP)-The be
lief that their son was "too good
a boy" to desert the armed forces
has been justified for a father
and mother after 16 years of ef
fort to clear his name.
Mr. and Mrs. John Sogge have
been informed by the U.S. Army
adjutant general that the remains
of their son, Gehart, have been
located and that an honorable
discharge would be forwarded.
The information climaxes years
of research by the Red Cross, the
FBI. England's Scotland Yard, a
Windom law firm, the armed
services and the Sogges themselves.
The mystery began in the
waning days of World War II at
St. Dizier, France, where Gehart,
a staff sergeant, reportedly had
booked passage on a channel-
crossing flight to England after
being granted a seven-day pass.
When he failed to return he ::zt
listed as AWOL.
As the facts unfolded, Sogge ac
tually had boarded, as an unlisted
passenger, a cargo plane taking
the same route. Why he had for
saken his seat aboard a passen
ger plane isn't certain.
Minutes after take-off the plane
was shot down by German anti
aircraft fire. All occupants were
killed. The date was Sent. 25.
1944.
First definite information on
Sogge came June 13, 1945, when
his commanding officer replied to
a letter from the missing man's
sister, explaining thai young
Sogge never had returned from
his sevemday pass.
But the Sogges didn't give up.
From that moment until now.
they and a handful of official and
private agencies pressed for aci
lion.
The climax came in a letter
from Maj. Gen. R. V. Lee, slat
ing: "I am happy to inform you
that after a thorough analysis of
statements and documents con
tained in your son's records, not
one shred of evidence was found
to corroborate statements that
Sgt. Sogge had ever arrived in
l London."
Gen. Lee said further checks of
the burial records of an unknown
soldier near the St. Dozier air
strip indicate Gehart had gone
down with the cargo plane.
So the record has been cleared,
and with it comes a big relief for
Mr. and Mrs. Sogge.
"It still was a shock, though,"
Mrs. Sogge said. "In the back of
i my mind was always the ray of
I101 that some da' e would walk
"It is not so bad when you think
of all the other people who lost
boys." added her husbacd. "Four
of ours came back."