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8 February 1945

8 February 1945

Dear Folks,

Just unloosened my belt after a good meal and now before beginning a bridge game better write you a while.  I’m in the mood and have some news.  All day today I tore down the mimeograph machine and of course I had to get good and black as I usually do.  I can remember you wondering how I got so dirty.  I had parts all over but I got it back together and pretty good job too.  After I finished took a dip and then showered.  Feel swell now.

Yesterday three packages came—two from you and one from Mrs. D. A. Grove.  Your packages were in perfect condition and everything completely intact.  The birthday cakes were in very good condition not even smashed.  Ate a little of them last nite and they are right in line with your good cooking.  They were especially welcome now that the only eats before bed is what you get from home.  In the other box was the Absorbine and olives and tuna.  All came thru okay.  I’m looking forward to some cake and beer tonight after the show.  Of course as always when I get a box from home I get sentimental as the devil and catch a tear coming loose.  Mrs. Grove sent me a lot of candy and small stuff.  I must write her very soon.  And today two letters and 4 Free Presses came.  One was a Valentine card from you two and one a letter from Dad.  The Free Presses were fairly recent—last November.  Perhaps all of our second class (mail) will now arrive.

Finally found two bridge players for me and my partner so tonight will have a game.  Probably make a lot of boners.  A few of the officers play and I hope we can play them sometime.

I was a little surprised to read about what Dad had to say about the Helmicks and if that’s right I hate ‘em too.  If he has no feeling for the war effort I would like to personally slug him but hard.  I wish to hell he could get over here for a while and see what the hell’s going on.  I have no use for anyone who doesn’t know there’s a war going on.  Perhaps he should get a look at some young kids lying in a ditch all blown to hell, he’d change his mind.  I’m working to a boil—better slow down.

Had a letter from June a few days ago and I’ll bet she’s very lonesome.

One day my hopes go up for rotation and the next time they go down so I’m staying noncommittal.  Today took my hopes up again as I understand all over 30 months are being reported.  I complete 30 next month, but I can’t imagine me going home.  Just too good to be true.  There are no furlough quotas.

I guess this is all, better shape up for the show and bridge game.  Boy I’m getting to be a terrible writer.  Get in too much of a hurry.  Thanks again for the boxes and let’s hope next Christmas you won’t have to send any.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
2 February 1945

2 February 1945

Dear Dad:

Let’s make this a man-to-man talk only put it on paper.  Now that I have a little free time thought I better attempt to catch up a little and maybe write you a letter.  Just opened a nice beer and earlier had a swim, and a shower so I feel good.  And later will go to the show.  Pretty good movies have been coming in lately.

Well my law books have caught up with me and the last two nights have looked into them some, however I believe I better send them home – you can never tell what may happen – and then of course I’m going to be home in 1945 – hm.  I hate to send them back but I think it’s the best.

Well no packages have arrived so now I think the Christmas mail must have been sunk – I can’t understand where they can be.  I wish more positive action would be taken by the proper authorities.  And I surely would like to have some of that popcorn – with our small stove we can always pop it.

The last few days have been rainy ones and on a few occasions a blinding driving rain. I hope it never blows the tents away.  It’s a job to keep dry.

For the first time in many months I put on a pair of suntans and I feel like a Sunday School boy.  Before it has been fatigues.

Before I started writing you I was talking to a Sgt. in the guerillas and he was telling me of his experiences in fighting the Japs.  He seemed fairly intelligent as Filipinos go.  Said his brother was shot and hung by the Japs in October 1943.  Some interesting tales.

Had a letter from Dick a few days ago and he seems in good spirits.  I hope he continues to take it easy.

Well better quit I guess but I’ll write more tomorrow when I will have a little more time.  Sent you $50.00 today.  Have you received the $40.00 I sent?  Are the bonds coming?  You’re doing a good job of writing and they mean a lot.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
31 August 1944

31 August 1944

Dear Folks:

Oh what a day rain, rain, rain.  And when it rains it is a scramble to see that everything is dry and will stay that way.  A few days ago my roommate and I built ourselves a home from the remnants of a Jap barn and covered the top with tin, shelter halves and ponchos.  We thought we had it pretty well waterproofed but the acid test today proved differently, and before I knew it, the center of my bed looked like the old swimming hole.  Later I put out my blankets to dry and then forgot to bring them in when it starting raining again.  But, a few tent poles and some redecorating, patched the place up pretty well.  Just after supper when it started to rain so hard, I stripped off and showered in the rain water.

Last night was a little different and for the first time in quite a while played a little bridge. We bid five twice, made it both times and was doubled once.  We had a hot streak.  Players are pretty hard to find and lately we haven’t found time to play much.  Besides this diversion we have two volleyball courts laid out and occasionally get out to play a game, but I seem to be getting worse instead of better.  A few days ago we went off daylight savings time and now it gets dark so early that we don’t have much time after supper.

I suppose everyone at home is very optimistic especially since the fall of Paris and the surrender of Bulgaria and Rumania.  It certainly does look bright in Europe and probably it won’t last another ten months.  Our group colonel told us yesterday he thought the war here would last probably until late 1945.  If it ends that soon it’ll be sooner than I expect but I hope I’m wrong.  Tokyo continues to broadcast especially for the GI’s on Saipan and calls us ‘orphans’ and ‘boneheads’.  Also they have ‘Moby Dick’ who drawls along and gets sarcastic cracks in often.  Tokyo like Germany is withdrawing according to plans, etc. etc.

Our mail has been delayed for some reason and haven’t heard from you in over two weeks and so I haven’t any of your mail to comment on.  But someday it will catch up with me and I’ll have reading to last a week.  But it isn’t so good getting along without it.

Well the boys are paging me for a pinochle game and there isn’t a lot of time.  I think I’ll stop and come back again soon.  The watch is running perfectly and just the thing I wanted.  Well so long for tonight.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
1 September 1943

1 September 1943

Dear Folks:

Although I just wrote you last night I guess another letter won’t be wrong after I laid off for a while.  After recall we usually manage a volleyball game with teams from the other offices, then follow it up with a shower before supper.  Now that I have showered and ate, I feel pretty good and ready to relax or get in a bridge game tonight.  With the abundance of avocadoes on the nearby trees we usually have one for dinner and supper, although I can’t remember ever eating one in the states.  Well the school kids are starting school again and everyday the little Japs etc trapaise by on the road on the long walk home.  They look about the same anywhere I guess.  I saw a class of small children at the Catholic parochial school and what a variety of brands.  From the whitest to the blackest and shades in between.

Tomorrow is my day off and while I’m in town I think I’ll have the photographer work on me.  Perhaps I can make the pictures suffice for Christmas presents.  My friend in Washington is sending me a book—she always writes regularly and I consider her a very close friend.

I hope my allotments are arriving regularly and in the right amounts.  Being so far away from the War Department offices we have many cases of incorrect and delayed allotments and I wouldn’t want to have them get messed up.  Handling these things, together with other personnel work is the job that I am in, and I think it is one of the most desirable jobs in the regiment.

My Reader’s Digest came yesterday but it immediately starts the rounds in the billet and so far I’ve just read the jokes and shorts.

And of course the first of the month is that day that we are rewarded for efforts, payday, so I suppose the dice and cards will see plenty of action tonight although our billet seldom gets away from the bridge games long enough to try their luck.

I guess I’m like everyone else in enjoying the Free Press and especially the comments about the servicemen.  Now perhaps I can keep track of those monkeys that made high school and after, the clutter of mischief and fun that those years were.  I think I’d rather see Bill Emick more than any other one fellow.  I wonder when you were digging around among the stuff I left you, came across my old model planes.  You know I get a hankering to get out a bottle of glue and wood and start on another one.  I guess the gas model is pretty well beat up, but I wouldn’t be surprised if I someday patched it up again, even if my glasses are an inch thick.

I heard a broadcast of Winston Churchill’s speech from Canada last night and also the Pope’s today.  It seems pretty certain that the culmination of the war is in the home stretch, and our turn to swing the final punch, but too much optimism is not good.

The mountains look beautiful in their purple robes as the sun goes down, and the ocean is deep blue and quiet, so I’ll get in this mood too and take it easy for the rest of the night.  I guess this (is) goodnight and the end of another column.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
12 June 1943

12 June 1943

Dear Folks:

I can’t put off writing you much longer—the last five days have been busy ones for me and this is about the first time I could sit down for awhile and catch up on my correspondence.  Had a letter from June today—about the first one I guess.  And yesterday had another letter from Dick and we are just waiting for the day.  Arrangements for transportation are difficult for any certain day but I’m sure we can get together alright.  I’m going to ask you to send me twenty dollars by money order to help me with this trip.  It will cost me fifty dollars or more and with my allotment and bond it will cut me pretty short.  If you register the letter it will arrive much faster.  Has the thirty-five dollar allotment been arriving?  Well, I’m going to take a shower, go to the show and tomorrow go on pass and to the dance.  A short letter but at least it’s something.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
20 October 1942

20 October 1942

Dear Dad:

Your V letter caught up with me so to end up another day will answer it now.  I’ve been waiting for a letter to tell you that you had received mine and probably by the time you read this you will have a room full.  As usual I can’t think of much to write about.  Days are about the same with the same routine.  I’m acting as correspondent of our battery for the island Army newspaper and spent part of the day writing news and the ballgame last Sunday.  We were defeated 15-0 but we’ve just begun to practice.  Perhaps yesterday was memorable-my first hot shower since my stay on the island.  Received a letter from Gram about Sonny Bennet—have been writing her about twice weekly.  Sent a card.  Waiting for Bob Hope to come on.  Had a letter from Mrs. Carroll giving me Duane’s address.  Perhaps I’ll write him.  Don’t worry about your literary style, Dad and wear out a few typewritten ribbons.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature
24 April 1942

24 April 1942

Dear Folks:

Well I’m a long ways from Escondido.  This is the third day out and now I’m in Redding in northern California not far from Oregon.  The first day we came through Pasadena, Los Angeles, and ended up in Bakersfield and stayed all nite at Minter field; the second day we came through Fresno and stayed at Modesto.  Today we came thru Sacramento, Williams here to Redding.  Our battalion met up with another outfit of quartermaster so our convoy is a plenty big one—well all three nites we have bivancaced on airports and covered nearly all the field so you see how large it is.  They (the trucks) look like a great herd of pachyderms grazing.  Here at the Redding airport we are surrounded by snow covered mountains and in the distance can see Mount Shasta.  The airport is on sort of a rock covered plateau over which the wind is howling.

I think this trip will be remembered in my future years as one that took plenty of patience and roughing.  In the back end of our truck our six men with fourteen barracks bags, rifles and equipment besides wire pharaphenalia.  It is one constant effort to keep everything together.  The first thing we do upon getting into the nite area is to set up the kitchen and get it going, then put up pup tents, and finally after a cold water shave and bath crawl into our sleeping bags.  We get up at 4:45 and have chow at 5:00, pull tents, police up, and leave again at seven.  For noon dinner we have two sandwiches but we make up for it with a hot supper meal, and do we eat.

Our ultimate destination is Vancouver, Washington so will be on the road for four more days.  Tomorrow we go thru Klamuth Falls stopping at Bend, Oregon.  Perhaps you can follow our itinary.

Tonite there is a show at the high school so a few of us are going in and perhaps get a shower and get this letter mailed.

You should see the guys shaving in a truck mirror while the wind dries the lather as fast as it is put on.  I was one of the first ones to get to the small waiting room in the airport building, but with about a thousand guys on two sinks that didn’t last long.

Well I better wind this up so I can walk into town a couple of miles away and get back fairly early.  Four o’clock comes around early.  Remember my address:

Btry C, 222 FA Bn
APO 40, Los Angeles, California

Well goodbye for now, write you tomorrow if I can get to a post office.

Love,

Harold Moss Signature

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