NEWS: Blair County Soldiers, August 9, 1918, Blair County, PA

Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja and Donna Thomas

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NEWS OF SERVICE MEN AT HOME AND ABROAD

Albert Nicodemus, of the Eighth Ward, Wounded Fighting in France

  Albert Nicodemus, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. N. Nicodemus, of 304 Sixth 
avenue, is another Altoona boy that has been wounded fighting in 
France.  His parents yesterday received word that he had been wounded 
in the engagement on July 19 but did not state the seriousness or 
extent of the wounds.  He is a member of the 103rd Engineers, and has 
been in France for a couple of months.  He enlisted on July 19, 1917 in 
the Sheridan troop and when it was disbanded at Camp Hancock, Ga., he 
was transferred to the engineer service.
  Mr. and Mrs. N. Langguth, of the East Side, have received the news 
that their son, John Langguth, of Company C., Fifty-third Engineers, 
now in France, has been promoted to the rank of corporal.  Four letters 
have been received by the parents in which he tells of his work and 
some of the experiences.
  Samuel Festenstien has arrived safely overseas according to word 
received by his father, Jacob Festenstein, of Thirteenth avenue and 
Nineteenth street.  He was trained at Camp Custer, Mich., and has been 
in the service for several months.
  William W. Nunemaker, formerly a clerk in the McCartney stationery 
store on Eleventh avenue, has arrived in France according to word 
received by friends in this city.  He resides in Harrisburg but was 
called to the colors together with a number of Altoona boys some weeks 
ago.  He is a member of the 146th regiment.
  For the first time since the arrival of his son in France, three 
months ago, William C. Gairth, custodian at Trainmen's hall, was 
yesterday gladdened by a letter from the soldier boy.  William C. 
Gairth, jr. writes hopefully from the land of lilies - and of battle 
but does not mention the part he is playing as a soldier in Company G., 
One Hundred and Tenth regiment, U. S. N. G.  The gallant lad who is 
somewhere in France was eighteen years of age on Feb. 4, 1917 and 
enlisted on March 18 of the same year. 

Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 9, 1918, page 5

MISS ANNA WRAY IN RED CROSS SERVICE

Former Altoona Hospital Superintendent Now Located at Camp Dix

  Miss Anna Wray, of Bellwood, for several years the efficient 
superintendent of the Altoona hospital, has entered the Red Cross 
service.  She decided that her knowledge of nursing could be utilized 
in assisting to care for the Americans that are fighting to help win 
the war and decided to enlist.
  She tendered her services several weeks ago and they were accepted.  
She departed last Monday from Philadelphia, where she has been located 
for some time for Camp Dix, where she will be in the service for a 
time.  Her ambition is to make the trip across the Atlantic and to lend 
her aid to the boys Over There.

Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 9, 1918, page 5

Altoona Girl Enlists.

  Miss Norma Mary Costlow, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Costlow, of 
2307 Sixth avenue, has enlisted in the Red Cross service.  She departed 
yesterday for her new field of duty and for the present will be located 
at Waynesville, N. C.  She graduated from Mercy hospital with the class 
of 1915 and is ready and anxious to get to France to aid in winning the 
war by nursing the Americans and getting them back to the front.

Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 9, 1918, page 5

ESCAPES JAIL SENTENCE

Private Hemmaker Furnished Ticket To Camp.

  Albert Hemmaker, aged 48, of Lima, Ohio, wearing the uniform of Uncle 
Sam and attached to Company F, Fifth regiment, cavalry at Camp 
Humphries, Belvoir, Va., escaped a jail sentence in Blair county at a 
hearing yesterday but the soldier faces a guard-house sentence today as 
a result of the loss of his train ticket early Wednesday morning.
  Private Hemmaker was traveling on train No. 32, eastbound, due at 
Altoona at 4:17 o'clock Wednesday morning and en route to this city he 
had words with the train crew over his ticket.  Arriving here he was 
turned over to Pennsy officers and given a hearing yesterday before 
Alderman John C. Gorsuch.
  Transportation was furnished the soldier so that he could get back to 
camp and sentence suspended.  A guard house sentence faces the private, 
however, due to his delay in reaching the camp before the furlough 
expiration.

Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 9, 1918, page 5

ALTOONA BOYS DEPART FOR CAMP WADSWORTH

Thirty-three Young Men, Mostly Married, Entrained Yesterday Afternoon

  A big crowd of people assembled at the local station last evening and 
at 5:30 o'clock saw a special train pull away from the city that 
carried thirty-three Altoona boys off to war.  It was a train of 
tourist sleepers, was made up in this city and was taken possession of 
by the local boys together with several hundred others from points 
along the Pittsburg division as far west and Pittsburg.  The train was 
sent away with the cheers of the friends and admirers of the new 
soldier boys and were lustily returned by the departing lads.
  The selection of the thirty-three young men for training at Camp 
Wadsworth, Spartansburg, S. C. caught quite a number of young married 
men who took, unto themselves wives after the passage of the selective 
service law.  They went away without and (sic) grumbling and all had 
the same cheerful spirit that makes Americanism.  They will reach camp 
sometime this evening.
  Bernard R. Sillinger, of 1207 1/2 Seventh street, was among the 
registrants called to the colors by Local Board No. 1, of the West 
Side.  Both he and his brother were traveling with the Hagenbeck-
Wallace circus, wrecked at Hammond, Ind.  Yesterday morning the board 
received word that Sillinger was among the victims of the fatal wreck.  
His place was filled by an alternate.
  The selected men from the West Side gathered at the headquarters in 
the federal building and at 4:30 o'clock they went to the station and 
there mingled with their friends until train time.  The East Side 
soldier boys also assembled at their headquarters and marched to the 
station and mixed with the crowd until summoned for entrainment at 5:20 
o'clock.  The list of men departing follows:

West Side Board No. 1.

  Edmund Levan Zeek, 304 Lexington avenue.
  Harry Francis Hetrick, 816 Chestnut avenue.
  Maurice Levine, 1817 Fifteenth avenue.
  Carl Melvin Grove, 916 Seventeenth street.
  Patrick O. Conrad, 1211 Sixteenth street.
  Saleem Shahabledin, 1908 Union avenue.
  Bernard J. Plunket, 129 Washington avenue.
  Harry A. Long, 308 Chestnut avenue
  Carl E. Landstorm, 1916 Twentieth street.
  Charles Conrad Ray, 1423 Thirteenth avenue.
  Edmund E. Arbuckle, Marshall, Ill.
  Nunzio Di Leo, 2009 I-2 Ninth avenue.
  John E. Shaffer, 1410 Seventeenth avenue.
  Joseph Hess, 1512 Nineteenth street.
  Clarence E. Weible, transferred here from Ft. Wayne, Ind.

East Side No. 2.

  James W. Green, 216 Jaggard street.
  Paul C. Statler, 2018 Second avenue.
  Charles H. Ackerman, 319 Second avenue.
  James Croft, 522 Bell avenue.
  Charles M. Way, 929 Sixth avenue.
  William M. Roberts, 713 Second avenue.
  Charles N. McCarl of 227 Fifth avenue.
  William C. Bailey of 129 Sixth avenue.
  Frank L. Koelle of 2014 Third avenue.
  Perry J. Kanar of 228 Fifth avenue.
  Louis Neugebauer of 1717 Fourth avenue.
  Harvey Muselman of 507 Twenty-third street.
  Ralph E. Megahan of 809 Twenty-third street.
  Edgar A. Weyandt of 811 Fourteenth street.
  David Ira Dibert of 615 Second avenue
  Oliver E. Forsht, of 321 Second street.
  Christ G. Hauser of 805 Crawford avenue.

Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 9, 1918, page 10