. Illinois in the World War; an illustrated record prepared with the coöperation and under the direction of the leaders in the state's military and civilian organizations. GENERAL BELL AND HIS HORSE. COMPANY E, 130TH INFANTRY, WAITING FOR THE ENEMY io6 ILLINOIS IN THE WORLD WAR Grant announcing that he had been ordered to transfer 2,700 men to theThirty-third within the next eight days, and on the 22nd instructions were re-ceived from the adjutant general of the army to report immediately the short-age of men in each arm of the service and to specify the needs of each regi-ment and other unit.
. Illinois in the World War; an illustrated record prepared with the coöperation and under the direction of the leaders in the state's military and civilian organizations. GENERAL BELL AND HIS HORSE. COMPANY E, 130TH INFANTRY, WAITING FOR THE ENEMY io6 ILLINOIS IN THE WORLD WAR Grant announcing that he had been ordered to transfer 2,700 men to theThirty-third within the next eight days, and on the 22nd instructions were re-ceived from the adjutant general of the army to report immediately the short-age of men in each arm of the service and to specify the needs of each regi-ment and other unit. April, 1918, was a strenuous month for the Thirty-third Division and wasreplete with important events. During the opening week the question as to the disposition of the alien ene-mies, which had been a source ofnever-ending annoyance for months,was at last solved by the official an-nouncement that enlisted men bornin enemy countries might be sentoverseas if they had been completelynaturalized but that those who hadnot become wholly naturalized wereprecluded from service abroad, re-gardless of their desire. On April 4 anumber of the officers who had at-tended the three months course atthe Bri
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Keywords: ., boo, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectworldwar19141918