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Show I Utah Men Who Have Joined-Various Branches of the U. So Fighting Forces 5? JESSE KELLER. E. LOWELL ROMNEY. . ROBERT J. GOODWIN. j CORPORAL FRANK ZIMMERMAN. I FRED A. SUTTON. I ADELBERT F. JUDD, JR. LIEUTENANT MOSES F. COWLEY. I ; I 1 " I; h o 3vr 1 j! I: I i " CEuauasttni I M ' 'm HI Iff! J . . if r " if If " m WW &r WMw rw ' ' Ww j L ! 1 - CORPORAL WILLIAM H. COWLEY. JAMES KELLER. lKANK ZIMMERMAN, .-on of Mr. and 1 Mrs. Henry Zimmerman and brother of Mrs. A. E. Selnsoth of Salt Lake, member of Sprague'S ambulance corps, recently was promoted to the rank of corporal, cor-poral, messages to relatives state. The organization is encamped at Camp Grant, Rockford, ill. Corporal Zimmerman is elated with army life and is waiting eagerly to take part in the work at the front. The boys are enjoying themselves ''immensely' in both work and play, he states. They are being materially assisted in their work by the L-a Marrnine society of Salt Lake. fTtHE safe arrival in France 'of Ser-geant Ser-geant Fred A. Sutton, son of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Sutton of 1:144 East Fifth avenue, is announced. This young man left the University of Utah to enlist en-list last fall. He went to the American university at Washington, D. C. for final training. He is now sergeant of D company, tire and flame brigade of the Thirtieth en- gineer corps. T KADEKSHIf in university scholasi lc and athletic life has pointed the way j. lor rnanv men now occupying high rank in tlx- Unihd States army. No HlurlenL athlete has poriormcil with greater brilliancy bril-liancy at the University of Utah than E. jP.jl Lowell rtoinney, who, upon being called if' into i be tia I ioual army, found lime, just ; as hr did in college, to pursue his a thiol th-iol lc activities while performing military it ; duties. Mr. ftomney went through the various I ,j minor grades' at Camp Lewis and grad-l grad-l j uateJ from the third officers' training i f tamp as a provisional second lieutenant. : f ,, IMs appointment to a commission Is a II ' juatter of tjie convenience of the war 1,1 department and the needs of the service. ONE of the well-known young men of Salt Lake to receive pr.Tsiiouon to a j provisional second lieutenancy at Third officers" training camgj at FunW I Oglethorpe, a.. is Robert J. Goodwin, son of the late Judge George V. Goodwin of 21S Eighth East street. I Mr. Goodwin enlisted in the raviks with the 43rd regiment and had worked hjs way up to a sergeancy before leaving! Salt Lake. He was selected to attend t!i officers' training school from whfch lie was just graduated. His mother is visit-ing visit-ing him at Fort Oglethorpe. TX a letter to his parents, Adalbert F. Judd, Jr.. now with the American expeditionary ex-peditionary forces In France, writes that he is enjoying the best of health and Is well pleased with the treatment accorded him. He relates many amusing incidents of his attempts to make known his wants to the natives. Private Judd enlisted in the motor mechanic branch of the aviation service and left Salt J.ake for Kelly field. Texas. December 13. shortly after being transferred trans-ferred to Camp Hancock, (Ja. During early March lie sailed from an Atlantic port to Europe. Private Judd is the son of A. F. Judd. manager of the Utah Casket company, and was employed by that concern prior to his enlistment. WILLIAM R. PATTERSON. I . ALONZO SCHOENFELD. S. J. FOLLAND. I L. WEBSTER WAKEHAM. WILLIAM C. RITER 1 V !! fQ mm llSP"!ll DESIRING the healthy air of a tar, two brothers, Jesse and James Keller, Kel-ler, formerly of the firm of Keller & Keller in the Kearns building, enlisted in j navy and are now at the training station at San Diego, Cal. rVNE of the lucky men to win laurels in the -service of Uncle Sain is Lieutenant Lieu-tenant Moses F. Cowley, son of W. F. Cowley, 123 Nortli West Temple street. He won his commission as lieutenant at the Presidio officers' training camp. He is now in service at Camp Lewis, Wash. His brother, Corporal William Hyde Cowley, is attached to the medical . department de-partment of the United States army in MARK V. GROESBECK. . ! 1 Washington. WILLIAM V. YARD. " TP HE work at Camp Kearny is not only enjoyable, but has been of great benefit to him, Alonzo Schoenfeld, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schoenfeld, S30 East Eighth South street, writes his parents. Mr. Schoenfeld is bugler of A battery, lSth field artillery. He has won a'' marksman's rank. Mr. Schoenfeld is 21 years old and enlisted with the national guard shortly before it was federalized. He formerly was employed at Zion's I Co-operative Mercantile institution. . . JQ J. FOLLAND. son of Mr. and Mrs. j h. Folland of 742 West South Tem ple street" enlisted in the aviation service ser-vice last January and joined his com- I pany at the Berkeley training school o? j month later. On May 2 he was gradiTV t ated for active service and advised his parents he- would probably be sent abroad. Young Folland is 24 years old and grad- j nated with the Salt Uake West high class of 1013. Before enlisting he oper- ated a garage in Malad, Idaho. AN'K of the first to enlist from Magna, Utah, was William R. Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Patterson of Magna. He joined M compajfy of the Thirty-second Thirty-second infantry and is now stationed at Honolulu. He is 22 years of age. WALTER W. BORN. HAROLD WALKER. T WEUBTKK WAKEHAM, son Of Ml'. and Mrs. L. T. Wakeham of 1S1 East Fifth South street, enlisted in the DJ signal corps of the aviation service on January 25. and left for Texas February ! L9; Mr. Wakeham was very popular with 1 j : Salt Lake's young society set, and the 9 good wishes of his many friends here j i follow him in his valiant undertaking to i 1 do a good-sized bit for Uncle Sam. PAUL C. LIENHART. . ... "IVT LLDIAM C. RITER of Logan. Utah, T has graduated from the Third officers' of-ficers' training camp at Camp Stanley, Texas, as a provisional second lievitenant. He was born September 2, 1890. and Is the son of B. P. Riter, one of the oldest druggfets in northern Utah. Lieutenant RUer was graduated from the Agricultural college with the degree of Bachelor of Science and from the University Uni-versity of Utah as Bachelor of Arts. He is a member of the Benevolent and Protective Pro-tective Order of Elks.' the Sigma Chi, national Greek Letter fraternity, and the Sons of the American Revolution. He worked for the Oregon Short Line and more recently in Chicago and New" York for one of the largest film manufacturing companies, sacrificing a large salary to jenter the army. ALTON R. MAYERS. 9 pi FRED M. BRIMLEY. I THE many friends of Mark V. Groes-beck, Groes-beck, son of Mrs. Ann D. Groesbeck of 255 First avenue, are pleased with the news . of his graduation from the third officers' training camp at Fort Oglethorpe, Georgia, and his qualification qualifica-tion as provisional second lieutenant, eligible to appointment to the first vacancy va-cancy in the commissioned ranks. Groesbeck, who is 29 years oid, was employed by the American Smelting and Refilling company when the call to enlist en-list came. He went with the Forty-third regiment, . which was formed of the Twentieth and recruits at Fort JJouglas last year. He went with this regiment when it was assigned to a middle western west-ern post. Iater, when it was broken into battalions for guard duty along the Atlantic At-lantic coast, he took the opportunity to enter the officers' training camp, which privilege was granted to selected enlisted men. While at Fort Douglas. Groesbeck was in the office of the sergeant-major and added to his list of many friends. rp HAT he appreciates service in the United States navy is amply indicated indi-cated in a letter from William V Yard, which was received yeserday by his parents, par-ents, Mr. and Mrs. William J. Yard, 50 North Eighth West street, where the young man was reared. William V. Yard enlisted in the navy when war was declared between the United States and Austria-Hungary. "He was sent from Salt Lake to Goat Island, where he remained for a month, being transferred to the training station at San Diego. About a month ago young Yard passed an examination which caused his transfer to the signal service department at Nor-, folk. Va from which place his latest letter was written. He always speaks well of the navy and the men in that service his parents say, and he appears to take great interest in his work ALTON R. MAYERS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Mayers of TIT Sixth i East st i eel, is one of the young men of i he national army who has made good ! use of his time at (amp Lewis. By dint o" application to bis military duties, lie became eligible for selection to attend i iie third officers' training camp which reie.htly closed. He has heeti made a provisional pro-visional second lieutenant and will be j corntttissloned and assigned when the v. ork of forming the new units of the B arnay begins. AMBITION to rise in the army service, inspired by his work and contact with officers at the local army recruiting station and at Fort Douglas, has been rewarded re-warded in the case of Paul C. Lienhart of 3SS North Main street. Mr. I Jen hart has been made a provisional second lieutenant lieuten-ant upon graduation from the third officers' of-ficers' training camp at Camp Lewis. He is assigned to duty at Camp Gordon, at Atlanta, Ga. rp H E important government work in connection with docks and naval yards lias appealed to Harold Walker, draughts- J man of Salt Eake, and son of J. S. Walk-er, Walk-er, of 149 Lowell avenue. This youny man has passed the civil service exaa nations for entry to this work successful' and Is now in Washington, D. C, w.iere he lias been assigned to duty. He has two brothers in the national defense WALTER W. BORN. 17 years old, is.j the third son ' of Dr. R. W. Born of j Sandy to, enter the service of the country coun-try since'the declaration of war. Walter Born has chosen the marine service and is now at Mare Island, Cal. He was a I student at Jordan high school. The brothers in the service are Ivan, IS years old, and Robert, 21, both In the medical department of the army. JjlRED M. BRIMLEY of Salt Lake is a " member of the Twenty-fourth engineer engi-neer corps, B company, at Camp Dix. N. J. Engineering work affords good opportunity op-portunity for a man to be effective at the front and this is what Mr. Brimlev said he wanted when he enlisted. |