WORLD WAR I
CASUALTIES OF AMERICAN ARMY OVERSEAS
REPORTED ON MAY 22, 1918
REPORT PUBLISHED MAY 22, 1918 ============================= KILLED IN ACTION. Lieut. Cyril M. Angell, Attelboro, Mass. Lieut. William K. B. Emerson, New York City. Private Leslie Allen, Saugatuck, Conn. DIED OF DISEASE. Privates. John Kelso, Emad, La. Rocco V. Maroone, Hartford, Conn. DIED OF WOUNDS RECEIVED IN ACTION. Wagoner Roland Bigelow, Asbury Park, N. J. DIED OF ACCIDENT. Lieutenant Harry C. Colburn, Indianapolis. Lieut. Alfred R. Metzger, Newark, N. J. Lieut. Philip Robertson, Hamilton, O. Cook Ralph H. Pollock, El Paso, Tex. Privates. Cornelius Benjamin Gurney, Boston, Mass. George C. Stimpson, Sommerville, Mass. Johnnie Wilson, Norfolk, Va. WOUNDED SEVERELY. Lieut. Frank A. Fritz, Butler, N. J. Sergeants. Walter W. Crisler, Ava, Ill. John H. Victor, Memphis, Tenn. Corporals. Sanford B. Fjelland, Huxley, Ia. Frank Hertes, Fountain City, Wis. Paul E. Sandel, Lewisburg, Pa. Bloomfield Weidner, Pottstown, Pa. Privates. Windsor F. Alexander, Milo, Me. Frederick A. Hall, Gardner, Mass. Adley C. Jordan, Centrahoma, Okla. Irvin E. McCormack, Donnybrook, N. D. --------------- CHICAGO MEN LISTED Four from Chicago and Vicinity on Day's Casualty List. CHICAGO zone men listed in the overseas casualty list yesterday were Vincent Nickel, 1943 North Hoyne avenue, wounded severely; Harry W. Lutz, 5047 North Robey street, wounded slightly; Morris Weinman, 1210 Artesian avenue, wounded slightly; H. W. Madden, Zion City, missing, believed killed. A picture published by the Canadian government disclosed that "Madden" ios in reality H. W. Perry, who was too young to go to war and ran away last year and joined the Canadian expeditionary force. He gave the name of Madden to conceal his identity from his father. A letter of condolence from King George has reached Zion City, where the parents live. "I have seven children, but I would give them all to beat Germany," was the comment of Mrs. Anna Nickel yesterday when informed that her boy had been wounded. He enlisted in the infantry last May. "We came to America to escape German oppression in Poland," she said. Lutz, a brother of Mrs. Ira Westberg of 1413 Carmen avenue, formerly worked as salesman for Frederick H. Bartlett & Co. He enlisted seven days after America entered the war and left for France with the Sixteenth infantry in May of 1917. Weinman is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Weinman of 1210 Artesian avenue. Dispatches from Americus, Ga., carried the news that Private Morris J. Peters of Chicago died yesterday of injuries received when he miscalculated in a dive into a swimming pool. His father, is Col. T. J. Peters, now commanding an engineer regiment in France. --------------- Adam V. Mixtacki, Pulaski, Wis. Vincent Nickel, 1943 North Hoyne avenue, Chicago, Ill. Frank B. Roth, Fort Wayne, Ind. Abraham Shellenbarger, Hingham, Mont. Charles Slavik, Omaha, Neb. Samuel T. Smith, Barton, Ark. Wesley B. Wentworth, Denver. WOUNDED SLIGHTLY. Mechanic Harry W. Lutz, 5047 North Robey st., Chicago. Privates. Elmer L. Dokken, Palermo, N. D. John T. Hynes, Whitaker, Pa. Lioneal N. Johnson, Minot, N. D. Lawrence Marcuzzi, Derwind, W. Va. Lennie W. Silver, Converse, S. C. William P. Werner, Allentown Pa. Morris Weinman, 1210 Artesian street, Chicago. MISSING IN ACTION. Capt. James N. Hall, Colfax, Ia. Lieut. Philip W. Hunter, Nork, S. C. |
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