Sheboygan Merchant Marine Goes Back For Another FlingJoseph Feu sic J, 36, son of Prof, Joseph E'custel, 1123 Clara avenue, has completed 10 trips overseas in the service of Die merchant marine, and left today for another fling1 at the briny deep.He will report to lii.s ship at Now Orleans, La., after spending* a short furlough here visiting his father mid friends.Fcustel was in marine service before the start of the war and has many thrilling experiences to tell of since Pearl Harbor. He brought many souvenicrs back with him this trip and has arranged a display of them nt his father's home, 1123 Clam avenue.The display includes numerous articles left by Rommel’s Afrika Corps, whom Feustcl dubs “stupor-men” instead of the Gorman version of “super-men.”Ho has foreign-mo do compasses, knives, some of which arc hand-carved, guns, ammunition and other Gorman equipment. Included in the display are articles from various countries where ft« ha» shipped since joining the merchant marine.While hi Algeria this last trip Foustel met another Sheboygan boy, Stanley KastolJk, and had the misfortune to miss his own brother by only one week,Keustel was born and raised in Sheboygan and la a graduate of the St. Peter Oiaver school and the Sheboygan (Central) High school. Although he nays very little of his actual experiences since the war he did state that his ship* have been torpedoed twice.The first carload of Mexican tin concentrate ever to arrive in the United States came into this country recently for conversion at a new tin smelter in Texas.Many species of lisinrds are able to detach their tails when pursued in order to distract the foe,