NEWS: Blair County Soldiers, August 2, 1918, Blair County, PA Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja and Donna Thomas Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/blair/ _______________________________________________ SEVENTEEN MEN WILL GO TO SPARTANSBURG Local Board No. 1 Selects Registrants to Enter Service at Camp Wadsworth The war department recently called upon Pennsylvania to furnish several thousand men for war training at Camp Wadsworth, Spartansburg, S. C. Altoona has been asked to furnish thirty-three men, the West Side seventeen and the East Side sixteen. They will leave the city on Thursday, August 8, at 5:05 o'clock. Local board No. 1 yesterday made its selection of men and sent out the induction calls to the boys who will enter the service. The registrants chosen are: Charles Bradley Campbell, 1613 Twelfth avenue. Edmund Levan Zeek, 304 Lexington avenue. Harry Francis Hetrick, 816 Chestnut avenue. Maurice Levine, 1817 Fifteenth avenue. Carl Melvin Grove, 916 Seventeenth street. John R. Wood, 821 Bell avenue. Edward Earl Berney, 1440 Thirteenth avenue. Bernard Roy Sillinger, 1247 Fifth avenue, Akron, O. Patrick Otto Conrad, 1211 Sixteenth street. Saleem Shahabledin, 1908 Union avenue. Henry Rice Steward, 1206 Seventeenth avenue. Bernard Joshua Plunket, 129 Washington avenue. Harry Alonza Lang, 308 Chestnut avenue. George Fonner, 1501 Fourteenth street. Francis Martin Weisel, 2015 Twentieth street. Alternates. Charles Conrad Ray, 1423 Thirteenth avenue. Admund E. Arbuckle, Marshall, Ill. Leo Nunzio Di, 2009 1/2 Ninth avenue. John E. Shaffer, 1410 Seventeenth avenue. Joseph Hess, 1512 Nineteenth street. Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 2, 1918, page 12 WILLIAM M. RHODES SERVING NATION AS YEOMAN IN U. S. NAVY WILLIAM M. RHODES [photo] William M. Rhodes, better know as "Billy" to innumerable friends, is a yeoman in the Brooklyn navy yard and was enlisted February 11, 1918. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. Z. Rhodes, of 306 Willow avenue, and is a talented tenor vocalist and pianist. He was recently home on a brief furlough and is loud in his praise of the service. He has been touring various army and nave camps on Long Island and in New Jersey and New York state, singing to the jackies and the boys in khaki. Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 2, 1918, page 12 NEWS OF SERVICE MEN AT HOME AND ABROAD Lieut. Percy A. Bay, Former Hospital Interne (sic), Ordered to Sail to France Lieutenant Percy A. Bay, a former interne (sic) at the Altoona hospital, has received orders to sail to France, word to this effect reaching the city this week. Lieutenant Bay completed his interneship (sic) at the local institution June 30 of this year and returned to his home at Jersey Shore to wait orders. During the middle of the month he went to Philadelphia, where he took the state board examinations of registered doctors. On July 3 he was ordered to active service and reported to the reserve medical officers' training camp at Fort Oglethorpe, July 15. Following a week at the Georgia camp, he was appointed an instructor to the enlisted personnel of the sanitary corps at Fort Oglethorpe detention camp. The company to which he is assigned left Chickamauga park, Ga., July 29, for Chattanooga, Tenn., and thence to Allentown, Pa. Following the receipt of additional equipment, the company proceeded to Hoboken, J. J., for overseas. Dr. Bay is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania medical school with the class of 1917 and finished his training at the Altoona hospital. He was commissioned as first lieutenant last June. His many friends made during his sojourn in Altoona will be well pleased to hear of his advancement and his opportunity for active service. D. V. Cassidy, of 2129 Eighteenth street, has arrived overseas with company D, Sixty-sixth Engineers. He enlisted several months ago and was trained in one of the southern training camps. James R. O'Connor, a member of the Third field artillery, has arrived safely in France. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. John O'Connor, of 721 Second avenue, Juniata. C. M. Gilliford, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Gilliford, of 1222 Sixteenth avenue, has been transferred from Hancock, Ga., to Washington, D. C., for duty in the ordnance department. He took the State college course. Captain W. H. Slep, son of Ed. J. Slep, of 2545 Union avenue, has arrived in France, according to word received by his father yesterday. He has seen service in several branches of the service and went to France in command of a munition train. He was formerly with the Penn Central company. Richard S. Orange, a member of the coast artillery and stationed at Fort Hancock, Sandy Hook, L. I., is spending a short furlough with his sister, Mrs. F. H. English, of 113 East Sixth street. He expects to sail overseas in a short time. Altoona Tribune, Friday morning, August 2, 1918, page 12