NEWS: Blair County Soldiers, June 1, 1918, Blair County, PA

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ALTOONA BOYS LEAVE TONIGHT FOR SERVICE

Twenty-Four Will Depart at 11:20 O'clock for Columbus For Assignment

  Altoona at 11:20 o'clock tonight will send twenty-four boys away on their 
journey to join Uncle Sam's fighting force. They will go to the Columbus 
barracks for assignment. Local board No. 1, comprising the west side of the 
city, will send nine registrants, while No. 2, of the east side of the city, 
will send away fifteen. In addition, several other young men, transferred to 
this city for induction, will be sent away with the Altoonans.
  The new soldiers will report to their boards at 10 o'clock and will receive 
their final instructions regarding their journey to the barracks at Columbus. 
George A. Pennabaker will be captain of the west side squad. Two of the 
selected men will be entrained from other cities. Nathan Kohler will be sent 
from Knoxville, Tenn., while Alvin Steele Wambaugh will travel from Morgantown, 
W. Va., with the men that are entrained there.
  Local board will send Alexander Kisielenski, of 2123 Nineteenth street, and 
Peter Regis, also of the city, to Fort Myer, Va., to be assigned to an 
engineering regiment as boilermakers. Kenna Stewart, of 2230 Tenth avenue, goes 
to Fort Wayne, Mich., as a bricklayer and is one of the board's twenty colored 
men who await the call to the colors.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 5

EIGHTY-ONE RECRUITS IS MAY ARMY RECORD

Shift in Personnel of Soldier-Getting Party Is Made Temporarily

  Eighty-one volunteers for the army is the May record for the Altoona 
recruiting party, with headquarters in the Goldschund building, one lone man, 
Joseph Cornely, of Madera, being accepted yesterday.  Cornely was forwarded to 
Harrisburg and will be assigned to the cavalry. The rush of youths affected by 
the next registration day and the psychological effect of the German drive on 
the west front brought up an unusual interest and spurred on recruiting.
 Corporal John Greiner, of this city, is now in charge of the local office 
succeeding Sergeant Casteen, sent to Bedford. Corporal Potter, also of this 
city, will spend several days at Tyrone station, helping to enlist more men.
  Raymond M. Faber and Clyde P. Chirdon, both Altoonans, were accepted for the 
marine corps yesterday by Sergeant Nale, of the Mateer building office, and 
were sent to Pittsburg, en route to a training station. A large number of 
prospective recruits has been signed up by the officer and many will leave next 
week.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, pages 5-6

NEWS OF SOLDIERS AND SAILORS

Thirteen Altoonans Join Navy at Johnstown, Soldiers Visiting Here With Friends.

  Wilbur A. Morgan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Morgan, of 1211 Third avenue, is 
spending a short furlough with his parents. He is in the naval service and is 
stationed at Washington at the present time on special duty. He is better known 
to his many friends as "Dick," and was formerly employed as a stenographer at 
the Juniata shops. He will return to duty Sunday evening.
  Lee H. Riling, formerly of this city and an employe of the Pennsy as a car 
inspector, for the last two years engaged in the traveling motion picture 
business, will leave today from his draft board headquarters at Huntingdon for 
army duty as an air brake inspector at Camp Meade.
 Luther K. and Paul R. Lotz, sons of Mr. and Mrs. George L. Lotz, of 2826 Maple 
avenue, have arrived safely in France. They are connected with different 
commands. Paul is a member of Battery C of the Sixtieth coast artillery. Luther 
is a member of Company C, Fifty-eighth infantry.
  Sergeant Clarence B. Mock, of Company G. 110th infantry, has written to his 
mother, Mrs. Florence Mock, of 1006 Green avenue, saying he has arrived safely 
in France. Another son, Arthur, of Company H. Twenty-eighth infantry, has been 
in France nearly a year.
  Earl George Rhoades, of 430 Fourth avenue, was inducted into federal service 
by the No. 2 East Side city draft board and left last evening for Camp 
Greenleaf, Ga., where he will enter training in the army medical corps.
  During the month just passed thirteen Altoona lads have enlisted in the 
United States naval service at the Johnstown naval recruiting station.  The new 
recruits are as follows: Reserve corps, Frank John Cowan, Carl Victor Hoffman, 
of Tyrone; Robert Hughes Lindsay, Leo Michael Hoolard, J. Richard Fagan, Lester 
Lloyd Remanley and Jesse James Behe; regular naval service, Adie B. Gibson, 
Thomas Nathan Layman, Daniel Callien Borger of Duncansville, William Henry 
Proudfoot, George Edgar Furry and James Ernest McKnight.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, pages 5-6
TYRONE TOPICS

Remember to Register

  Young men who have attained the age of 21 years since June 5, 1917, are 
reminded of the fact that they will be required to register for military service 
on June 5. For the Second district of Blair county, those residing in Tyrone and 
Bellwood boroughs and Snyder township will register in the Municipal building at 
Tyrone; those living in Juniata borough and Antis township, at the office of 
William H. Baird, Juniata, and those living kin Logan township will register at 
the Chamber of Commerce rooms in Altoona. If in doubt as to what to do, consult 
the local draft board, but remember that it is compulsory that all young men 
having reached 21 years of age within the time stated should register.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 9

BRINGS DOWN GERMAN PLANE

  Lieutenant Alexander McLanahan, of Philadelphia, who is the aviation service 
in France, and is a son of Hawley McLanahan, a prominent architect of 
Philadelphia, and a grandson of J. King McLanahan, of Hollidaysburg, with four 
other flyers, recently, brought down a German war plane on a French battlefield. 
Yesterday's Philadelphia Ledger gives an account of the feat. The encounter 
occurred last Monday on the Toulsector, where young Mr. McLanahan had been for 
several weeks. The young man has frequently visited his grandfather and other 
relatives here and is well known in Hollidaysburg.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 10

THIRTY HONOR MEN LEAVE

  Thirty honor men from County Draft District No. 1 will leave Hollidaysburg 
today for army camps at Columbus, O.; Fort Myer, Va.; Camp Dix, N.J., and Ft. 
Wayne, Mich. The men will assemble for roll call at the office of Secretary 
Robert W. Smith, of the board, on Allegheny street, at 2.30 o'clock this 
afternoon. The parting honors will be given in front of the court house at 6 
o'clock p.m. President W. Lovell Baldrige, of the draft board, will preside over 
the gathering and a fitting speech will be made to the departing boys by Hon. J. 
Lee Plummer. The Liberty band will furnish the music for the occasion, the boys 
to be escorted to the depot for the 7.10 train, upon which they will take their 
departure for Altoona.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 10

FLYING CADET KILLED.

  Montgomery, Ala., May 31 - George H. Lacoske, 24, Cadet aviator, was killed at 
Taylor field late today when his plane went into a nose dive and fell about 200 
feet.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 10

DEANE FINNEY IS SELECTED FOR ENGINEER DUTY FOR UNCLE SAM

  Deane Finney, grandson of Thomas J. Armstrong, of 1420 Eighth avenue, and a 
graduate of the Altoona High school in the class of 1914, has won distinction at 
the University of Pennsylvania.  He would have graduated as an engineer on July 
19, but instead has been specially selected for government service.
  He ranked as one of the highest men in his class and when the government made 
a request for engineers from the graduating class he was among the first to be 
selected for service and he accepted the offer. He has entered the enlisted 
reserves, goes to Camp Lee for training for a period of three months and then 
will be granted a commission.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 16

WORKMAN NABBED AS DRAFT EVADER HERE

Man Sought Work Several Times at Labor Bureau, Giving Various Names.

  Raymond Diehl, alias John Williams, of Cessna, Bedford county, was arrested 
yesterday afternoon, charged with trying to evade the selective draft law by 
losing his identity.  The arrest was made by Walter S. Greevy, superintendent of 
the federal-state labor and employment bureau, a major in the Home Defense 
Police organization.
  Since February, the time Mr. Greevy took charge of the employment bureau, 
Diehl has applied for work four separate times, in each case giving his name as 
John Williams and his address as 37 Brummel street, Johnstown.  The last time he 
applied was yesterday afternoon, the fourth try proving his undoing.
  Mr. Greevy has given him work at the powder works at Mt. Union, with the 
Lovett Construction company at Loretto and at the Cambria Steel works in 
Johnstown. Yesterday he turned up again, saying he was out of a job.  Once more 
he gave the name of John Williams of Johnstown. Then he was given a surprise. He 
was asked for his registration classification cards.
  He produced them with alacrity but when the labor superintendent looked them 
over he found they bore the name of Raymond Diehl, of Cessna, and that he was in 
class 1-A.  The man admitted upon questioning that his real name was Diehl and 
that he was 28 years of age.
  Mr. Greevy then placed him under arrest and phoned for Adjutant B. F. Barr to 
take the man to the police station. Diehl finally admitted to the two men that 
he was lying about living in Johnstown and that as far as he knew no one lived 
at 37 Brummel street, the Johnstown address he gave.
  It is suspected that Diehl has been trying to lose his identity by moving 
about from job to job and from town to town to confuse his draft board so that 
he may evade selective military service. He will be kept locked up until it can 
be learned from the Bedford draft board whether he has been called in any of the 
past draft quotas and is classed as a deserter.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 16

TWO ALTOONA BOYS SECOND LIEUTENANTS

Owen F. McDonnell and John M. Klepser Are Graduated from O. R. C.

  Two Altoonans, Owen F. McDonnell and John M. Klepser, are among the hundreds 
of former Pennsylvania National Guardsmen who were graduated recently from the 
third officers' training course, at Camp Hancock, Augusta, Ga., and will be 
entitled to the rank of second lieutenant.  John Klepser has been transferred to 
Camp Jackson, Columbia, S. C., appointed as sergeant until he receives his 
commission.
  A list of the graduates was issued at Washington by the adjutant general of 
the army.  They will be commissioned and called into service as vacancies occur.  
Many western Pennsylvania men are included.
  In addition to the Altoonans, Henry Keller, jr., Bellefonte; James E. Strange, 
Mount Union; Raymond P. Lingle, DuBois; Alexander M. Russell, Bedford; Russell 
K. Davis, Charles F. Pinder and John F. McCloskey, all of Johnstown, have 
successfully passed the tests following the course.
  All the graduates mentioned, save Klepser, are assigned to infantry units, the 
other Altoonan being in the field artillery corps. Both Klepser and McDonnell 
enlisted with Sheridan Troop, Tyrone, last year, and went with that organization 
to the Georgia camp.

Altoona Tribune, Saturday June 1, 1918, page 16