NEWS: Altoona Tribune, Dateline Huntingdon County, PA, August 7, 1918 Contributed for use in the USGenWeb Archives by Judy Banja and Jessica Orr Copyright 2005. All rights reserved. http://www.usgwarchives.net/copyright.htm http://www.usgwarchives.net/pa/pafiles.htm __________________________________________________________ HUNTINGDON Thirty-four more drafted soldiers will leave this county on Thursday Aug. 8, for Camp Wadsworth, Spartansburg, South Carolina. Wilmer Varner, who is employed by contractor Nevin Peightal, took his employers' autotruck without permission and with half a dozen companions, one or more of them fellow employes, went out along the McConnellstown state highway. They ran into Edgar Kidd, driving a horse, and the horse was injured so badly that it had to be shot. The affair is being adjusted by the payment of damages all along the line. (both to Peightal and to Kidd). Lawrence Bowman and Clyde Hoffman, two young employes of the express company at this place, are in jail as the result of taking a package of $8,000 which was to be transferred from P. R. R. train to a Huntingdon and Broad Top train. They have confessed and the express company have recovered all but about three hundred dollars. The money, it is said, was to be used in a payday of the Thropp Furnace Co., of Everett. The youths signed for the package in the name of a fellow employe, who afterward was put through the sweatbox by the detectives but stoutly maintained his innocence. Detection of the guilty ones came about through learning that both had purchased a motorcycle, with attendant details indicating more than usual expenditure of money. They have no bail, hence it is likely that they will receive sentence at an early session of court. Rev. Father C. E. Haley, rector of Holy Trinity Catholic church, of this place, sustained painful injuries of the right knee which have kept him confined to bed for over a week. He was traveling in his auto from Altoona homeward when he had a puncture and while at work with it, a man on a motorcycle with a side car came along and hit him with the attachment. The man just "rumbled along" never stopping to help or inquire. It was with difficulty that Father Haley was able to get home alone, and he has been confined to bed ever since. On Saturday afternoon the local W. C. T. U. lost by death two good and faithful members. They were Mrs. Frances Etnier, of 426 Church street, and Mrs. Mabel Haines, wife of Rev. Dr. A. H. Haines, of 1415 Moore street. The funeral of both will be held this Tuesday afternoon, with interment at this place. Altoona Tribune, Wednesday morning, August 7, 1918 page 11