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22 July 1945

22 July 1945

Dear Folks:

Sitting on my bunk in a pair of drawers trying to keep cool and trying to decide whether to write or just be lazy.  Well I decided to do both  – write a while then relax.  Today is Sunday and it is a day off.  A few days ago we moved into our permanent area which means rehabilitation and taking it fairly easy.  Afternoons will be given to baseball or some kind of athletics.  This morning I went to church at eleven o’clock in the artillery chapel.  A simple but impressive altar was built by a couple of carpenters.  It makes a better place than out in the open as it was before.  Now we have a PX and a choice of four movies in the evening, also the Red Cross has a canteen but I haven’t been down yet.  Having lights in our tent I hope to get some reading done also.  We don’t black out in the evenings as you might think but it blacks out fast if a red alert comes in.

Had two letters today one from Dad and one from Gladys Davis who is now Mrs. W. R. Johnson.  She’s pretty happy.  I certainly think you and Dad should go to Denver and take a good vacation and just do nothing or whatever you feel like and the longer the better.  I hope you go.  Dick and I will not be in combat and you shouldn’t be disturbed as you were last year.  So you better be sure and do it.

Sent you a check for $108.00 about a week ago so let me know if you get it.  You should also get four bonds for the months of March, April, May, and June.

Nothing new to report on getting home although my hopes are still high.

Glad to hear you are better Mom and perhaps the vacation will do you some good.

This is about all I have so until next time.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
5 May 1945

5 May 1945

American Red Cross
Scotts Bluff County Chapter

Gering, Nebraska
May 5, 1945

Mrs. V. R. Moss
Box 393
Minatare, Nebraska

Dear Mrs. Moss:

We are attaching hereto letter received this morning from Home Service Correspondent, St. Louis, Missouri, in answer to our letter written in March for a health and welfare report of your son.

Yours very truly,

/s/L. B. Harrison
L. B. Harrison
Home Service Chairman
Scotts Bluff County Chapter
jr

Attached with the Letter
Office of the Field Director
Hqs. XXIV Corps APO 235
c/o P. M. San Francisco, Calif.April 22, 1945Miss Mathilde M. Enes
Home Service Correspondent
Midwestern Area
American Red Cross
1709 Washington Avenue
St. Louis 2, Missouri

Re:  Moss, Harold G. T/Sgt.
37086474
Hqs. 225 FA Bn
APO 235

Dear Miss Enes,

In reply to your letter of March 28 in regard to the above named soldier, we have contacted Sgt. Moss and find that he is in good health, good spirits, and on active duty.  His commanding officer says there is no reason to worry about either the soldier’s morale or his health.

There are many men here who have been overseas three years, but there is a good possibility that those with combat experience will soon get an opportunity to return home.

If we can be of further service, please let us know.

Very truly yours,

Willis H. Bowen
Assistant Field Director

22 April 1945

22 April 1945

Dear Folks:

In keeping with my promise to write often here is another letter.  I was told today that a Red Cross message had been received, which was sent by you.  I know how you must be worried and what a strain it is on you, much more so than you indicate in your letters.  But I am really fine and feeling well and in little danger.  I’m sure before the year is over I will be home then all this period of worry about me will be over.  I can well imagine how you feel with Phil gone, but we’ll have to ride it out, and remember it is always darkest just before the dawn.  So believe me Mom, I’m okeh.

Today was Sunday but it was noon before I realized it.  I had intended to write a slug of letters today but something always came up to keep me from it.  Getting the news each day for the paper takes some time and in addition I collect individual stories for the hometown papers.  Anyway about four, I managed to get a bath such as it was, so now I feel pretty good.  For dinner today we had steaks, yes, good fresh steaks.  Some of the boys killed a cow and they did a good job in butchering and cooking it.  We are eating from the kitchen which beats cooking your own rations.

They say the good souvenirs on this island are lacquer vases and dishes, supposed to be rare collector’s items.  I hope I can manage to find some, although Dick and I resolved not to hunt military souvenirs as it is sometimes too dangerous and it’s getting too close to rotation to be taking any chances.  In Dick’s jeep the other day, he already had a candry sword taken from a Jap they killed near his foxhole.

I rode through the civilian camp the other day and had a close look at the people.  Almost all of them are really young or very old, the rest behind the Jap lines.  The old people are sorry sights.  Their skin is deep wrinkled, they are bent over, and they look all the worse for the black clothes they wear.  They are unemotional although some bow low from the waist as though we were Jap gods or something.  I guess they are cooperative and harmless.  The young children smile and wave or laugh.  Our troops hardly notice them and probably they will be better off than ever after it’s all over.

Well I’m going to amble over to the radio for awhile and hear a little music and shoot a little bull, then get ready to turn in.

So much for this time.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
27 February 1945

27 February 1945

Dear Folks:

Had a nice letter from Dad today so as long as I couldn’t stand the show just as well spend the time writing.  Have been feeling very bad all day.  My old kidney attacks began early this morning and haven’t let up all day except that I feel pretty decent now.  I went to the hospital again this morning for a urinalysis but won’t know the result until tomorrow.  Later the doctor felt around, took my blood pressure, and thumped a few places.  He thinks it is urethral colic or perhaps auritis.  It has been effecting me on and off for the past two weeks.  Sometimes it gets pretty bad. Well the doc told me to go to bed for a few days and wait to see what the hospital does.

I’m keeping very busy but feeling like I do, I don’t have much ambition sometimes.

Pat sent me her picture a few days ago and she is an attractive girl.  She writes me often.

I’m sure I’m not getting too much beer – perhaps it would average up to about a bottle every 3 days and lately we have had none at all.

As far as Christmas packages go, I have given up – they are surely sunk.  The other mail comes good and I think the others would be here if it was possible.

Now as far as my experience with the Red Cross and what they are doing here.  Practically all our emergency furloughs are based on their recommendations and that’s practically the only way to get one.  That’s why it is important to contact them first when something serious happens at home.  Other than that I’ve had no dealing with them.  I think they do most of their work at the  hospital.  Occasionally a Red Cross girl comes around in a truck with cokes, a little candy and a ready conversation.  A field worker is always handy and they have been every place I have.

The wind has been blowing all day and the dirt and sand is something fierce.  I hope it rains soon.  It raises hell with our typewriters and everything rusts overnight.  What a country.  But last night was very beautiful with a bright moon and the tall palm trees.  For the moment at least, I imagined the war was non-existent.

I have nothing more, I feel like hitting the hay and calling it another day.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
17 February 1945

17 February 1945

Dear Folks:

What a pleasant day this has been.  After I got through today there was a small package for me and of course it was the pen and pencil set.  It is certainly a nice and beautiful set.  I will have much use for it.  I am always writing or doing paper work.  You are a good shopper and it’s exactly what I wanted, and Schaeffer is my favorite brand.

Also had a letter from Pat and she always writes a long rambling one that is really good to read.  She wants to send me something.  And also received the October issue of Reader’s Digest.  Things are gradually catching up with me.  Perhaps all packages will arrive before long.  And also had a letter from Mom.  I think I’d have a hard time finding that fellow you mentioned, it’s quite a job to locate anyone and tougher to get around.  And as he is in the Marine Air Corps, it would be harder yet.  But you can never tell.  Was glad to hear Gramp is better and especially that the pain has subsided.  But I wonder what they will do now – probably wind up back in California.  With all the Red Cross work you have, I imagine you will be very busy. But I guess all the Mosses are busy now.  How different it must be now from what it was a few years back when the care and maintenance of your brood was more than a full job.  I hope it will always be easy for both of you from now on.

It will be suppertime soon and after that will probably drink a beer and play a little cards.  Perhaps there will be a show tonight.  Got another shot yesterday and today the arm is a little tender.  Tried to get a refraction at the hospital a few days ago but they were too busy.  I have one pair but you can never tell when you might break them.  Well this is all.  I wrote this with the new pen – good stuff.  Thank you many times.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
16 February 1945

16 February 1945

Dear folks,

I just finished cleaning up my mess then lit up a cigar and opened a beer and now ready to spend the balance of the evening writing letters—and always you’re the first on the list.  I made the mess while trying to build a box to send the bolo and the scandals and finally completed the job and I think it will stick together at that.  I had a Filipino girl get the scandals for me and she did pretty good.  She’s also the laundry girl.

About four nights I saw a leg show with real white girls and civilians.  The USO put on ‘Hellz-poppin’.  There must have been a dozen chorus girls and two or three men.  Needless to say the theater area was packed and the fact that a brisk shower cut loose had little effect on the guys.  Neither did the singer complain—she just stood in the rain and kept going.  It was full of laughs and with the right amount of spice.  It was the best overseas show I’ve seen yet.  I hope we can have more of them.

Had another letter today—a V-letter from Mom.  I’m afraid I can’t answer the questions you put in that one.

Also two Free Presses came along but haven’t had much time to read them yet.  Did see the pictures of the Sage boys, but the boys.  I can imagine the banker Sage is quite a cigar smoking important individual.

A few days ago last week a Red Cross dame came around with a truckload of cold Coke and peanuts so we lined up with our mess cups and drank up.  She had on slacks with the pants rolled up and about everyone was looking in the same direction.  We must be getting to be wolves, huh?

I wished I could think of more to write about but nothing seems to want to pop up.  I can’t help but feel that this year sometime we will either get a few furloughs or rotation.  In every Free Press I read about fellows getting back.  It seems like everyone has been home at some time or other.  It’s hard to imagine myself getting home.  About every night we get a strong blow and lots of rain and sometimes I think the tents will come down.  If they would we’d be a sorry bunch of wet rats.  A rain can from out of a clear sky in five minutes and then it all cuts loose.  And after that it’s hot as hell.  Had steaks for dinner yesterday with good dark gravy so that was a treat.

That’s really all I’m good for so this is it.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
16 March 1944

16 March 1944

Dear Folks:

The mail dammed up for a while and today the dam broke and a deluge of letters came – at least it seems that five is a deluge.  I had been wondering what (was) the matter but knew that it wasn’t your fault.  Two came from you and one from Dad.  Your letters are the only ones I pay any real attention to and the ones I look for the most.  Also had a letter from Helen Barton Hartnett in Lincoln.  She has a brother in the Air Force here and I saw him last December.  Guess I better dig out the letters and see what I can put together.  I’m glad you heard the Army Hour Program and about the Jungle Center here.  You guessed pretty good.  I wish I could tell you more about it.  Although I didn’t hear the program I hope they did it justice, for it is certainly something.  It must seem like old home week around there with Gram and Gramp back with you.  I certainly hope they will find all they expect to in the farm, and that Gram doesn’t become to sick to enjoy it.

I read in the Free Press about the hot basketball team and Phil being high point man, and now your letters tell me that the team is going to Lincoln.  It reminds me of the fall when I was at the university and saw the boys lose out by one point for the championship.  I hope they come through and this time bring the bacon home.

You sound like you are really keeping busy with the Red Cross and getting the house cleaned up.  But even with this I imagine you don’t have all the work you used to have riding herd on the five of us.  What a busy bunch of years those must have been for you.

Yes, meeting anyone from the North Platte Valley would seem good.  Anyone from Nebraska is a rarity here and even if they live four hundred miles away you can usually find something in common to talk about.

Dick called last night and it looks like we may be able to spend the weekend together although very little is certain.  Monday he came in for a short visit and had supper with me.  I know you are anxious to know something about him but I couldn’t intimate whether he may leave or not, and if I could say anything it would at most be only as the rumors have it.  The prospect of seeing India appeals to me for having seen Hawaii, I want to get a look at more places of the world.  It seems funny to us here how so many troops are still stationed in the states and especially outfits as what Berg must be in.  And reading in the Free Press about fellows back on furlough brings a good howl.

When I first read about Swindell getting mixed up with the FBI over the draft deferments I had to laugh good and hard, but then thought I would like to choke everyone like him.  Perhaps when I was drafted I should have offered to slip him a hundred bucks or so and maybe I would still be around.  Perhaps the trial will bring out some even more surprising facts.  How did they happen to catch up with him – did someone squawk after paying him?

Right now I’m deep in an outline of one of the law books I received and every evening I finish a page or two.  It’s a big job but self-satisfying knowing our time is not being entirely wasted.  Give Grandma a good kiss for me and my best hopes that she will get better quick.  She has always been so kind to me that I kick myself for remembering the times I’ve been unkind towards her.  I know it must be an effort for her to write and I do appreciate it.  And the same goes for Gramp too.  Well, quess this is ‘pau’ until the next time.  As you never sit down at the table without remembering something or me so I never go to bed without thinking of you and wondering just how I would act the first minute I could walk in the door, and say hello to you both.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
10 December 1942

10 December 1942

Dear Dad:

It has been a long time since I last wrote but if the family tatters the edges of those I write then I guess I can be excused, but I do want to write you often and keep as close to all of you as I can.  Tonight was a landoffice business on mail and about everyone rated something.  I had two and a postcard; one from Pat and a card from the Reader’s Digest about the subscription.  I have about a dozen books on my bed but the Digest is a must.  The town nearby operates a free library or rather a traveling free library.  Also the Red Cross supplies us with plenty of old magazines.

Tonight the radio is going on as usual and right now it’s Major Bowes.  Radio batteries are pretty non-existent.  I guess the WPB has ruled them out for commercial purposes.  For other entertainment the USO makes movies possible.  They are shown in the recreation room of the hospital.  Most of the fellows are attending.  But I walked to the irrigation ditch for a bath and didn’t make it back.  The army has a PX in town that is pretty well stocked and where soldiers can get essentials and supplies at reasonable cost.

There is a little news—have a pass on Saturday to go to the beach, wouldn’t you like to swim in December?  The flowers are getting prettier all the time.

Last night I sent you the paper and a letter so I’ll slack off.

I’m in good spirits and better health—this sunshine is a good tonic.  Hurry with Katie’s pictures.  Goodnite and I’ll take you up on the jacket.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
21 October 1942

21 October 1942

Dear folks:

Here is another letter before I blow out the candle for another day.  As I do about every night, I’m sitting in the day room with one ear on the radio and reading a little.  I’ve been working on Sandburg’s Lincoln for about three weeks but have it about read.  With the Red Cross books I’ve a long way to go yet.  Also we have a mobile library that makes the camp about once weekly.  Hope we’re beginning to look up in this war situation.  I think so and hope I’m right.  Think something will happen this winter.  Sunday a card to June and Loyd yesterday.

Guess I’ll have to throw in the towel on this letter.  I’m out of news.  Should write Kathleen again soon although she hasn’t answered my last letter yet.  Suppose she’s walking around on a magic carpet.  Goodnight until next letter.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
3 October 1942

3 October 1942

Dear Folks:

While I’m killing time until chow I might as well be writing you a paragraph or two.  Yesterday was riding around in a jeep in town on various errands and tried to find something suitable for you but the stocks are so limited and with the short time I had came, back empty handed.  Hope I get a pass soon.  Listened to the third game of the World Series this morning—still pulling for the Yanks.  We have a day room, or a blackout tent, now that gives some diversion after hours, stocked with Red Cross books and magazines. That reminds me don’t forget the Free Press.  Read the one in the box. I’m fine and not in the least worried or downhearted.  Don’t get that way.  It isn’t all agreeable but then should it be?

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
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