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HomeMy WebLinkAboutErvay Paullynn nit Ne low Ave-, left to Gfr,t"' Army TrAining course in port, R. it to t. to ft plinrrltacy for tiR y " "' in New Its- enlist (i .1d• York city T t h >a C3rAdltAted frr,m School with the ('inat ofTA ti'At Actfi'e ill cl)nrtt arhnllwtr T ngrr of the crhool },n. hit filndllntion 1, rr 1Aq7. Cillrr nt the Vort" (.1 herll rllll,lov('d 1111 In,nrN' Tiia nmhition fA i O eoltte n 1 ci rlllat phArmi,q nlAte• {hr i,nat trvo V,AT� hollh�'i,llna hrrll l,n'cvlin�. late r ,� mrmllr, l,f trnma in thr ('Wnmer- c{A1 And Tnrinatlinl 1,rapnoa, Tfic fa A ntrll,hrr, hf ltharn I +,r11'r• RRR, W. Rl,r l�m'nl llril`r r,f ?�Qru,sr. 1 Vrt 4n, Cana of 1"nirin PrAnP• and l'nrv{;n iintr ('nlm Oil May PAUL L. ERVAY Corporal Paul L. Ervay, son of Mr, and Mrs, Grant Ervay of En- field, is with the U. S. Army Air Force in England. He attended Newfield High School and was for some time em- ployed at the Hotel Ithaca,. En- listing in the Army in August, 1941, he was sent first to Fort Totten, N. Y., then to Camp Upton, L. I,, and later Fort Monroe, Va, In September, 1941, he finished a course in field artillery and became corporal in December. This June Corporal Ervay trans- ferred to the Air Corps and went overseas a month ago. He writes to his family that England , and Scotland "enjoys "both very nice'/ and that he enjoys the climate of til British Isles very much," "A z