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Show I UTAH MIS i DIE; 31 j HUD : Last Casualty Lists Include ' Name, of Men Well i Known. i ' ' : : - J Tha casualty lists today Include the ; nunri of five rtahns, two having sue- cumbtd to pneumonia, while nn duty j oremti, and three Buffering from i wound received In action. Stanford Hinckley, von of B. 8. j Hinckley, manager of the lwseret I gymnasium, died October II of pneu- ! monia following- an attack of Influ- enza. He wee a member of the One I Hundred Forty-fifth fieio artillery end j enlisted In the national guard shortly ' after war waa declared. He waa 34 years old and a graduate of the I.'nl- I verslty of ITtah,- He leaves a widow and one child, who resides at 470 V , street HERO IS DEAD. I Wagoner Norman J. Haekel, elan a ' memoir "fthe One. Hundred fort y - 1 " rlfth' fleldn.rtn.Vry, ui a vfc'Iim of' ' the same diiaM, having died October I II. according to a telegram revived 1 by hla mother. Mr. Ada Hnekrl, ' , 41ft Houth Ninth West street. Haekel distinguished himself, while In training at Camp Kearny, by reecit- 1 lrff from drowning,-st the rtwlc nf hla ownllfe, three of hla comrades; during a ttdarwgve: Ho was awarded , a congressional, medal for his hero- i lam. He was a member of the city j ft re department prior to his enlist- i ment i WOUNDED WELL TREATED. I Harry Hopkinsnn of the Three Hun- dred Sixty-second Infantry waa ; wounded In the hip by a machine gu ( bullet, on the sixth duy after he went ! to the front. j In a letter to hla mother. h relates re-lates that he Is well cared for In a baas hospital and that the Red Croas . has kept him supplied with candy, ! ' rlgaretles snd chewing gum, wmcn la ' doubly appreciated, as tne boys are ! "broke having had no pay for two J month a on account of failure on the pwrt of the paymaster's department to ; keep up with the fighting men. j Before he waa wounded, hla di-vision di-vision advanced eighteen mnea on a j twenty-four-mlle front. i CARL WELLER WOUNDED. j Private Carl Weller of the same regiment reg-iment la also In a base hospital, suf- I ferlng from wounds In the arm and leg, states a message received by his . mother, Mrs. I. Weller. 121 K street. Arthur Allworth. a former linotype operator of Halt Lake, has suffered the 1 amputation of hla left arm. In adril- I lion to seven other wounds, and la m a hospital awaiting convalescence so that he may return home. He was ' fighting with the French and was a member of the Three Hundred Hlxty- third Infantry. Hte wife la at Venice, Cat. She was ; , formerly Miss Joel Haddon of Halt ' lAks. I |