On October 17, 1944, a 28-year old sailor by the name of Russell D. Dils from Ohio was approached by Pensacola Police Officer L. W. Taylor for acting in a disorderly fashion. Dils had thrown an empty whiskey bottle along with a soft drink bottle onto Palafox Street in downtown Pensacola. Both bottles broke scattering broken glass in the pathway. When apprehended for his misdeed, the sailor refused to be taken into custody and began cussing out the officer for his audacity. Pensacola was very lenient with our military personnel during WWII, given the sacrifices they were making all over the world.
However, the Ohioan sailor began using language that even a veteran police officer had never heard before. This profane conduct added to the resisting arrest earned the sailor a trip to the jail house. He was charged with resisting arrest, drunk and disorderly conduct, breaking glass on public streets, and using "unheard of" obscene language. He was fined $25 and turned over to the Navy's Shore Patrol to face military charges. He left the Navy after the war in 1945 and would pass away in Dayton, Ohio in 1987 at the age of 71-years old as a retired roofer.
To this day, I would be greatly interested in what profane words that the US Navy could use that would shock a police officer! However, those choice words were never recorded!

Pensacola News Journal 10-19-1944

Pensacola Police Officer 1938