6 ALL THE NEWS OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA TOWNS OFFICE CffIISHED BY FREIGHT CMS Colonel J. R. K. Scott Lectures on "Our Military Policy" FRATERNAL TANGO PARTY President Granville Attends Meet ing of College Presidents at Philadelphia By Special Correspondence Gettysburg, Pa., Jan. 81.—The com bined musical clubs of the college will ■tart' on their annual ten days' tour through Ceneral and Western Penn sylvania on February 9. Herbert has accepted the position of manager of the men's department of the new A. M. Brenneman store in Lan caster. Colonel J. R. K. Scott de livered a lecture in Brua Chapel on "Our Military Policy." on Tuesday evening. A freight train shifting on the Western Maryland crashed Into the office of Kelly & Oyler, on Sunday morning, completely demolishing the building. The body of John Eber hart, who died at Mt. Hope Sanatorium, near Baltimore, was brought to his home here on Monday, and funeral held from St. Francis' Xnvler Church, Tuesday morning. The Alpha Tau Omega fraternity entertained at a Tango party, Saturday afternoon. President Granville, of college, attend ed the meeting of college presidents at Philadelphia, last week A young son of J J. Reynolds fell while skat ing and broke his collarbone.—"Eddie" Plank's team of bowlers defeated Chambersburg by the score of 2619- 2480.—Cyrus S. Grlest has resigned as a director of the Citizens' Trust Com pany, and C. Arthur Grlest has been elected, to fill the vacancy. joj «ina *nnn»,i *.11*3 «r»* •»s l '««is»aia n* Piog ■*o *°P»I0I *'OD V I3K3HD t '& •»I»inoanis3i joj pnag -taanXt eq} jo tujj -jn» snoonai pas poojq «qi nodn /jiojjjp «jj» P a * najs» t( »ano qjujßO •snqtid "KOSYaaO 'M. T 'l**B 3IRBT "a "V 'JsqmjDOfi JO tvp too tptJ ••onaMjd ® nj peqjjosqos pua era ejo;eq o» tuous *i3K3H3 t aSTHJ •#jn3 s,n»H J<* Wi #q» Xq pajnD •q iouubd jsqj qj«jß3 jo e «Ba ita» pus qo» jpj BHYTina aaaaMaH axo jo mm »q> I%d HIM in-nj P|»s 4oqj pns -pißssjoj* »}bi«| pns opaiox jo jL»i3 #qi ni iiin|imq iui -®P "°D V /«a»qo 't \1 jo aj.i(i eqj ;o Janutd JD|D3> s[ aq }nq» qiso sajjßin A'anaq.l •[ nu«-i j TW "Xjutioj «um 'op»ioj, jt> Xjij -oiqo jo «««U| Test Kelley's Coal Put Kelley's Coal to the test in any kind of weather. The quality is there to burn satisfactorily un der any conditions. Much of the comfort of Harris burg home owners in Winter time is due to Kelley's Coal. It is uni formly sized, it is all hard, all soft or thoroughly mixed according to the order, and is delivered as clean as it is possible to make it. Put Kelley's Hard Stove at $6.70, or Kelley's Hard Egg at $6.45 to the test in your furnace. E M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third St 10th and State Streets. Thousands More Civil Service Appointments The establishment of the Parcel Post has greatly Increased the work at the Postal Department. Thousands of additional Civil Service appolnt ments will be necesaaj-y. The opportunities for position In the Civil Service were never better. Civil Sen-tee positions are desirable because the hours for work are not too long, salaries are good and certain and promotions are frequent. The greater number of appoint ments will be made In the Postofllce Service, paying £rom S6OO to $1,700 and more per year; the R. F. D. Ser vice, paying $l,lOO per annum to standard routes; and the Railway Mall Service, paying from S9OO to SI,BOO per year. Any American over 18 years of age who passes the U. 8. Civil Service ex amination Is eligible to one of these positions. The I. C. S. Civil Service Course instructs you how in ' -Mrs. Ada McWilliams, . S V. ohn Lincoln, J. Newton Alice Hufnagle, Florence Uirv' V E " nl , ter - Myrtle Hursh, Mary Shively, Fred Shively. The i ."i s W ashington Camp, No. 746, Ldr W C .iS?' r S( V' s of America, with }SvL I m L Monday evening en s?innm- of ih and waffl e and oyster of thJir ~ . rount »7' residence of one w JI«L. memb « rs ' Mr. and Mrs. Owen 'nn T mlle we3t of Mifflinburg.—■ "Rehlcoo " y r e V enin § the ladles of th » Hebecca Independent Order of Odd Fellow, of Mifflinburg, held a "stock- M?s Daniel a p vi® r , eß ' denc e of Mr. and -Mrs. Daniel P. btapleton. Our noljrh- Pnl'l? town of New Rerlln i" complet 1-IJ kh nßemen sof making an auto- S He Passenger car to /be run on the Wh?chit.„ and Railroad, which Is a narrow gauge. If this im provement proves a success, w-hlch In all probability It will. It will be a great convenience. a Ladies of Home Study Club Entertain Their Husbands By Special Correspondence MJdd.eburg, Pa., Jan. 31.—0n Mon day the school board of Franklin township visited the schools.—Asso !> o Judges Hendricks and Keller, or Selinsgrove, were business caller® er r Klase - teach * urg grammar school. narent« ♦*a ® nd Sund aV With her I P ar ents at Snydertown.—Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Schoch attended the Stough e\ange!,stic meeting at Sunbury.—Dr. and Mrs. A. K. Snook were at Sun bury Tuesday.—Dr. J. G. Sallada. of Benton, are visiting friends here.— >J rS 'j s of Kreamer, spent Monday with friends in town.—The ladies of the Home Study club enter tained their husbands at the home of \ Potter on Monday even- Fr *? k «rimm, of Swissivale, is visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Grimm.—The Ladies' Aid Society of the Lutheran church have secured the services of Miss Mlna Decker, of Montgomery, who will put on a play in the courthouse some time in Fer ruary-The Rev. Carl Mumpford, of Mt. Lnlon, filled the pulpit of the Lu tneran church on Sunday evening.— Superintendent T. A. Stetler Is visit ing the schools in the eastern part of the county.—Mr. and Mrs. Wil- ! llam Schnure, of Selinsgrove, enjoyed the hospitality of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Wagenseller.—Dr. Man hart, of Susquehanna University, at tended a meeting of the Snyder Coun ty Historical Society.—Revival serv ices are being held in the United Evangelical church. The Rev. Mr. Benfer is assisting the pastor, the Rev. S. A. Snyder, in conducting the services.—Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Stetler spent several days with Dr. and Mrs. Pellman at Mifflinburg.—Miss Stella Barton who had been visiting her brother, Prof. R. M. Barton, returned to her home at Perulack on Monday. Radium Cure For Minister at Baltimore Hospital Millers burg. Pa., Jan. 31.—The fin est skating in this section in many years was enjoyed by hundreds of peo ple on the river in the fore part of the week.—Mrs. Charles Oberholtzer was the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Helen Fisher, at Palmyra, on Tuesday. —Miss Martha .Johnson has returned from a visit- at Reading and Harris burg.—Charles H. Deveny entertained his Sunday school class at a 6 o'clock dinner at his home on Friday even ing.—Henry Cordes visited the Rev. Mr. White at St. Agnes' Hospital, Baltimore, on Tuesday. The radium treatment is being tried in his case, but as to the outcome it Is yet too early to say, as he has received but one treatment thus far.—Jacob Len ker, a son of Nicholas Lenker, of Rife, employed by the Pennsylvania Rail road Company is ill with typhoid fever at Sunbury. FREE ADVICE TO SICK WOMEN Thousands Have Been Helped By Common Sense Suggestions. Women suffering from any form of female ills are invited to communicate promptly with the wo man's prvate 10/ correspondence de ll / \ f partment of the Ly- II TZ-* zJ I jl \TP JL II icine Co., Lynn, fo\ J/j) Mass. Your letter wl! \(L wi " k® °P ene d. read and answered by a woman and held in strict confidence. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to a woman ; thus has been established a confidential correspondence which has extended over many years and which has never been broken. Never have they published a testimonial or used a letter without tha written consent of the writer, and never has the Company allowed these confi dential letters to get out of their pos session, as the hundreds of thousands of them in their files will attest Out of the vast volume of experience which they have to draw from, itis more than possible that they possess the very knowledge needed in your case. Noth ing is asked In return except your good will, and their advice has helped thou sands. Surely any woman, rich or poor, should be glad to take advantage of this Eenerous offer of assistance. Address ydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., (con fidential) Lynn, Mass. Every woman ought to hare E. Pinkham's 80-page Text Book. It is not a book fop general distribution, as it is too expensive. It is free and only obtainable by mail. Write for It today. fftjgy TELEGRAPH DID SOCIETY GIVES BMIQIIET FOR MEN Church Women Have Entertain ment For Male Members to Promote Sociability GIVE "BRAGG'S EXPERIENCES" Play to Be Rendered by Mem bers of Tuscarora Dra matic Club By Special Correspondence • Mlffllntown, Pa., Jan. 31.—Druggist James Banks spent Tuesday in the Capital City.—The Ladies' Aid Society of the Presbyterian congregation held n banquet in the lecture room of the church for the gentlemen of the con gregation, the object being to pro- I mote sociability In the church.—Miss | Lou Jackson left on Sunday for Mey j erstown. Pa., after a visit with her sister, Mrs. Ben Junkin. William Banks has been suffering from a slight attack of gangrene caused by frosted ! feet.—Miss Sarah Parker Is on an ex pended visit among Philadelphia friends. Miss Alma Ernest, of Har rlsburg, spent a day with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Ernest. —Miss Elizabeth McDonald, of Cresson, spent a week at the Judge C. M. Hench home on "The Hill." —The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. James Hyde, of Mc- Cutchenvllle, Ohio, are spending a va cation visiting their parents, the I\ev. Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Hyde, of Aca demla, and Mr. and Mrs. James Hen ry, of McCoysvllle.—The members of the Tuscurora Dramatic Club will give a play in the Tuscarora Academy building Friday evening, February 6, entitled "Bragg's Experiences."—Mrs. J. M. Barton, of Perulack, is visiting her son, R. M. Barton, at Mlddleburg, Pa. Mrs. Chapman Grant visited Lieutenant Commander and Mrs. W. P. Cronon, at Newport, R. 1., the latter being a sister of Lieutenant Grant.— Mrs. S. A. Ellis and Mrs. Kurtz spent Monday with the former's daughter, Mrs. Cumbler, in Steelton, Mrs. Kurtz being on her way to her hoipe in Al lentown. Pleasant Birthday Party For Mrs. Mary Noecker By Special Correspondence I.lnurlrHt ear» the Old Reliabla, larg e*t«!ling borne and office oiL S# ■ . *' ,s enough to oil a watch; heavy enough to oil a awn mower. On a »oft cloth !t I ■ • rui 0f dothWtat and ti Illustrate* ,l » with Inlaid color panel; contalna m£! 1 1 ' T* Edition than 600 ma«nlflcent llluatrationa, Including beal l> tlful pagea reproduced from water dolor studi > in colorings that far aurpasa any work of a aim!- lar character. Call ana see thla beautiful book I Wwn, , that would aell for )4 under uaual conditions, but I Aaaeutsf 1 I , ' which la presented to our readera for ONE of the (ki aa i above Certificates, and «91,UU \ | Sent bjr Mail, Postage Paid, for *1.40 and 1 Certificate, MBS. BBEWH JOINS HUSBAND ULBI Goes to Reddhch, Vhere Mr. Brewer Is Located 4 Vice Consnl WILL CARRY MAIL B AUTO Pennsylvania Girl Tellsp pots t Card of Unusual Hailsttm in California Waynesboro, Pa., Jan. 81.— Wtson R. Davison, accompanied Mrs > TT Brewer to New York on WednMay from which plac# she sailed for Se? pool, to proceed thence to Rsdo-t, England, to join her husband ,wi u vice consul at that place.— Dr. fcJ erwolf will b« one of the numbeiof prominent men to Bpeak In tho Fw. erlck churches during the week B glnnlng February 9. One hundid and thirty-five girls were served wh lunch by the United Brethren Churi in the basement of tho Luther;. Church on Wednesday.—Mr. and Mr W. T. Omw&ke and daughter, Mi* Matilda Omwake, spent this week ii ■Philadelphia.—J. Nelson Wlnerman formerly of this place, now a progres sive citizen of Fannettsburg, has put into service twe large automobiles, to travel the entire length of Path Val ley and carry mail and passengers.— A post card fron\ Miss Beulah Bretz ler, daughter of Constable W. E Bretzler, who is in charge of a hos pital in Oakland, California, tens that on January 19, thtre was a hailstorm In Oakland and tiat everybody ran to the doors and windows to see the unusual sight, it bting the first hail many people there lnd seen.—Mrs. B F. Landos entertalnel tho sewing club at her homo in South Church street. Philip Nichelson, Dejver, Col., spent Sunday here as the gjest. of his cou sin, Mrs. Carl Steglact.—Mrs. Hobert. Hutton, Harrlsburg, in visiting the family of W. T. Stonei—Mrs. George B. Newbold and son, l'enneth, York are visiting the former* parents, tho Rev. and Mrs. J. Lower Grimm T B. Mutzabaugh, of puniannon, spent the past week with his son, R E Mutzabaugh.—A dellghtftl party was held at the home of Chari« Harbaugh The evening was spent in jancing ami playing cards. —Burgess 5. x. Kout son is able to bo out agan after be ing confined to his home for over a month.—Misses Nan Williims, Bcssia Hoffer, Nell Rice and Hofe Sterner students at ShippensWurt; Norrrval school, spent the week-end as guests of Misses Anna Garrett and lan Whit more.—Mr. and Mrs. Rober.Tate, of Virginia Beach, Va., are gue*® of Mr and Mrs. Clayton Philips.—M 3e Mary Foltz, Chambersburg, was emrtained this week by Miss Elsie Reding. Miss Dora Schaal, Chambersbug waa the guest of the Misses Reddig the past few days.—W. li. Eyler. PJiadel phla, was the guest this week f Mr* Thomas Kemp.