2 CENTRAL PA. NEWS LAYMEN MEET IN CONVENTION Missionary Delegates of Re formed Church From Dozen States Gather at Hershey Special to the Telegraph Hershey, Pa., June 23. Yesterday afternoon the annual convention of the General Committee of the Lay men's Missionary Movement of the Reformed Church began with a meet ing in the auditorium of the Library Building. The delegates are from a dozen States and compose a represen tative gathering of college presidents, bankers, business and professional men. The Rev. Dr. William P. Lampe is general secretary and the other officers are: W. W. Anspach, chair man; L. P. Tell, treasurer; Dr. George L. Omwake, secretary. The executive committee is com posed of F. E. Ammerman, Shamokin; Horace Ankeney, Nenia, O.; Wm. W. Anspach. Milton; Dr. J. H. Apple. Frederick, Md.: F. M. Rerkemeyer, Allentown; William H. Dechant, of Reading; E. S. Fretz, Pottstown; Prof. E. M. Hartman, Lancaster: Paul A. Kunkel, Harrisburg; Dr. Geo. Leslie Omwake, Collegeville; Harry E. Paisley, Philadelphia; E A. Rice, York: L. P. Teel, Shippensburg; J. P. Truxal, Greensburg. ADAM M. Everich Dies Special to the Telegraph Duncannon. Pa., June 23. Adam M. Everich died at his home at New Buffalo, Monday. He was a veteran of the Civil War and a member of Lieu tenant William Allison G. A. R. Post. No. 196. He was a jury commissioner of Perry county. The funeral ser vice was held in the M. E. Church at New Buffalo this morning. RESINOL STOPS ITCHING AT ONCE It is a positive fact that the mo ment Resinol Ointment touches any itching skin, the itching usually stops and healing begins. Unless the trouble is due to some serious KraHP internal condition, it quickly clears away all trace of eczema, /f\r\ ringworm, pimples, or similar torment lng. unsightly ertip- ) J , Uon, leaving the ** \, If skin clear and healthy. And the best of it is you need nev er hesitate to use Resinol Soap and Resinol ointment. There is nothing in them to injure the tenderest sur face. Resinol is a doctor's prescrip tion which for over twenty years has been used by careful physicians in treating skin affections. They pre scribe Resinol freely, knowing that its soothing. healing action Is brought about by medication so bland and gentle as to be suited to the most delicate or irritated skin — even of a tiny baby. Every druggist sells Resinol Soap and Resinol Oint ment. Samples free, Dept. 29-R, Res inol, Baltimore, Aid. —Advt. BUY A .50 J ;I UNITED HAT Z* > $ For the Fourth Vn,uc J •I Every Style and Braid \ I; Genuine Panamas, ■! > $3.50 to $5.00 J , . ■ r t Factory to You—-Store« r ■J Everywhere r ■J See Our Fashion Show Windows. \ j: United Hat Store •• J Third and Market Streets j| Cool Food and Cooling Drinks are what nature says you must have in weather like this. Drink ice water, iced milk, lemonade, limeade or fruit juice beverages at intervals during the day's work. And be sure your re frigerator at home is kept well supplied with ALS PURE ICE that there is always enough in the ice chest, to take care of an unusual call. ALSPURE ICE is pure. It is made from fil tered water that has been boiled, reboiled, skimmed and again filtered —no germs can live through such treatment. A phone call will bring our wagon. United Ice & Coal Co. Forater A t'o«<lrn St«. Also Steelton, Pa. FRIDAY EVENING, Wife and Child Pry Log From Dead Man's Skull Elizabethville, June 19. —Convulsive sobbing of her 5-year-old son yester day attracted Mrs. Lawrence V. Deib ler, wife of a Mifflin township farmer, ;to a distant part of their clearing I where she discovered the youngster ! wearily trying to remove a great log j from his father's crushed head. The wife helped pry the log from the dead man's body. .Peibler slipped while trying to move a couple of big logs on the farm of John Keidt, and one of the great tree ! trunks rolled upon his head, crush ing in his face and skull. His small son was playing nearby at the time, j Coroner Jacob Eckinger investigated i the facts. Delbler was 35 years old and was [the father of five children, the toldest iof whom is 6. Funeral arrangements have not yet been completed, but it is ; understood that Camp 110, P. O. S. i of A., will have charge of the arrange ; ments. PERRY ALI'MNI BANQUET Special to the Telegraph Hershey, Pa., June 23. Last eve ning the annual banquet of the alumni association of the Derry Township High School was held at the Hershey Cafe. BURNED BY GASOLINE Special to the Telegraph Hallam. Pa., June 23. Mrs. Wil liam Smuck was badly burned Wed nesday night when a gasoline lamp ex ploded and the blazing oil ran over her body. . PLAYGROUNDS FOR HALIFAX Special to the Telegraph Halifax, Pa., June 23. Represen tatives from the Methodist Episcopal and Reformed Sunday schools, the P. Q. S. of A., and the Mothers' As sociation met at the I'nited Rrethren parsonage last evening and effected a permanent organization. These offi cers were elected: President, the Rev. H. R. Slider; vice-president, the Rev. C. E. Rettew; secretary, Dr. F. C. Smith; treasurer. Mrs. A. H. Neldig. P. C. Fox, the Rev. C. E. Rettew, W. C. Helsler, C. R. Shope and O. E. Sea grist, were appointed a committee to draw up bylaws and to make investi gation ns to suitable ground, and also to interview councils to secure their support and co-operation. S. P. C. A. Begin Campaign For Larger Membership •With the summer season on, and the introduction of many horses into war service, the Pennsylvania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Ani mals has instituted a campaign for membership. Carroll D. Kenny, 427 Hummel street, will represent the Harrisburg Society, and has been au thorized to secure members and col lect fees and contributions. A careful watch will be Kept at mobilization camps where horse deal ers sometimes have many horses on sale, and fail to give them proper at tention. Special attention will also be given in cities to prevent overload ing horses, and see that they are pro perly cared for during warm weather. HENRY JAMES' DICTATING EXPERIENCE (William Lyon Phelps in the July Yale Review.) I did not dream until the year 1898 that Henry James could draw a win some, lovable, charming little boy, who would walk straight into our hearts. This year was a notable year in our writer's career; because it saw the publication of "The Turn of the Screw," which I found then and find again to be the most powerful, the most nerve-shattering ghost story I have ever read. The connoting strength of its author's reticence was never diplayed to better advantage; had he spoken plainly, the book might have been barred from the mails; yet it is a great work of art, profoundly ethical, and making to all those who are interested in the moral welfare of boys and girls an appeal simply ter rific in its intensity. With none of the conventional machinery of the melo drama, with no background of horri ble or threatening scenery, with no hysterical language, this story made my blood chill, my spine curl, and i every individual hair to stand on end. : When I told the author exactly how | I felt while reading it, and thanked him for giving me sensations that I thought no author could give me at my age, he said that he was made' happy by my testimony. "For," said he. "I meant to scare the whole world with that story; and you had precisely; the emotion that I hoped to arouse in j everybody. When I wrote it, I was' too ill to hold the pen; 1 therefore die- | tated the whole thing to a Scot sten-' ographer. I was glad to try this ex periment, for T believed that I should be able to judge to its effect on the whole world by its effect on the man who should hear it first. Judge of my dismay when from first to last page this iron Scot betrayed not the slight est shade of feeling! I dictated to him sentences that I thought would make him leap from his chair; he short , handed them as though they had been geometry, and whenever I paused to see him collapse, he would enquire in a dry voice, 'What next?' " « . ■ » 1 ■ | cWfun^! Soothes; calms angry skin at ease, bring* Immediate comfort, ends all aggravation. Quickest to relieve, control and Jiesl Eczema and all eruptional disorder!. Absoutely safe to use, Potlam Soap - mtdieaUd. with Poalmm—th* tonte to op for the tkin. For FREE SAMPLE, write to Emergency ; Laboratories, 82 West 26th Street, New York, j Bold by all drnggi»te. . ( _ —-N Suits to Order 1111111 36 N. Third St 1 v 1 WEST SHORE NEWS Social and Personal News of Towns Along West Shore • Mrs. J. Henderson Stock of Shire manstown is spending some time with her former classmate, Mrs. Roy Snyder at Windsor. Miss Lilly Bealor of Dallastown, and Miss Mary Lutz, of Chambersburg, spent the week-end with Mrs. Eliza beth Emenheiser at Shiremanstown. Mrs. Oliver B. Baker, of Lemoyne. spent Tuesday with her mother at Shiremanstown. Miss Mabel Seitz has returned to her home at Enola, after being the guest of her cousin. Miss Frances Laverty at her country home near Shiremans town. Miles Bower, of Blaln, and Edward IJ. Mumper, of Carlisle, were recent guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Blain A. Bower at Shiremanstown. Mr. and Mrs. John D. Bltner, of Harrisburg. and Mrs. Barbara Daugh ertj of Mt. Gretna, were entertained Sunday at the home of Dr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Daugherty at Shiremans town. Mr. and Mrs. Walter S. Zimmer man of Shiremanstown, have returned from Shippensburg, where they visited the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. B. Russell. Miss Sara Barlup of Penbrook, is spending some time with her parents at Shiremanstown. Mrs. Plough, of Carlisle, is visiting her parents, the Rev. and Mrs. A. R. Ayres, at New Cumberland. Miss Mary Beam, of' Mt. Holly Springs, and Samuel Plank, of Car lisle, are guests of Mrs. John Bream, at New Cumberland. Lieutenant and Mrs. Chester Beck ley, of New London, Conn., are visiting the former's parents at New Cumber land. Mrs. J. R. Hutchinson, Sr., Mrs. J. R. Hutchinson, Jr., and son, Joseph, of New Cumberland, visited friends at Carlisle on Tuesday. Mrs. Robert Prowell, of Steelton, is visiting Mrs. Emma Prowell's family at New Cumberland. George Haverstock, a student of the f,ebanon Valley College, is spending the summer at New Cumberland. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Weaver of New Cumberland, announce the birth of a son, June 22. Mrs. Weaver was Miss Grace Switzer before her mar riage. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Piatt of New Cumberland, went to Milton yester day. Bride's Father Performs Siple-Searle Ceremony l-.emo.vne. Pa., June 23. Miss Mary Searle of Lemoyne, and R. S. Siple, of Wrightsville, were married a' (i o'clock last evening at the home of the bride in Herman avenue, by the Rev. H. T. Searle, father of the bride. SOLDIERS SEE MAJESTIC BILL Companies D and I Are Guests of House; Bill Good and Boys Enjoy Themselves To the tune of a patriotic air played by the orchestra while the audience stood and applauded loudly, compan ies D and I of the National Guard of Pennsylvania entered the Majestic the ater last night, for a farewell look at vaudeville. They were the guests of Mr. Hopkins and from the first few 1 rows which they occupied, came fre quently laughter and applause, the very best evidence of their apprecia tion of the manager's gratuity. Open ing the bill for the last half of the week are Dick Henry and Carrie Ade laide in a singing and dancing act. Mr. Henry carries off the honors with a clever stunt in the form of com pletely changing his dress while danc ing. Santley and Norton offer some good songs and some better jokes with a clever encore. "Mr. Inquisi tive" is the title of the next act, but the title doesn't have so much to do with the act as does-a new method of treating the profession of dentistry. Painless and entirely esthetic with a dash of the "futuristic" is the newest method, and, yes, a bevy of pretty girls to make the patient feel at his case. Some method. Pity is, that it can't be done. There is music to the act. with some exceptions. "Doc" O'Neil "kids" his audience into a good humor, but it's hard to tell who en- Joys it the more, "Doc" or the au dience. Pete and his Mule complete the roster with a laughable sketch in which Mr. Mule figures prominently with all feet and body. MAX ROBERTSON. WOMAN'S ARM BROKEN' New Cumberland. June 23. Mrs. Emma Metzgar, who lives with her daughter, Mrs. A. S. Williams, in Mar ket street, fell from the back porch yesterday and broke her arm. BIRTHDAY PARTY Summerdale, Pa., June 23. Miss Helen Taulbert celebrated her six teenth birthday at her home at Sum merdale last evening. Dancing and games afforded amusement for the guests, after which refreshments were served. The guests included: Misses Margaret Longenecker, Mar- I garet Zimmerman and Ida Eshelman of Harrisburg, Bessie Lightner, Esther Patterson and Helen Taulbert; Ralph Gates, William Bryan. Nelson Boyer, George Beam, Charles Vennniger, of Bethlehem, and Albert Long, of Arken, 0., Mr. and Mrs. Mellinger and daughter, Margaret, and Mr. and Mrs. Erb and Mrs. Taulbert. THIEVES STEAL FLOUR Special to the Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., June 22.—Thieves entered the flouring mill of E. F. Breining, at Five Forks, north of Waynesboro, and carried off six large sacks of flour. SHOULD HAVE SOLD HIM A TELESCOPE A commercial traveler went into a country store in a far backwoods dis trict. one pleasant spring day recently. After securing his order he remarked to the proprietor that they were hav ing a great time over In Europe. "That so?" said the man. "Why. yes; a great fight." exclaimed the commer cial man. "Well, they've got a good day fer it. ain't they?" was the reply. —The Christian Herald. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears y? | Signature of HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Schleisner's Men's Store 28, 30 and 32 N. Third St. Men's Unlined Flannel Shirts New, three-button, unlined model, soft front model of extra quality plain blue or gray summer flannel, without padding or haircloth. Special $15.00 Men's White Flannel Suits Pinch-back model, coat and trousers. Special $16.50 % Shantung Silk Suits Of genuine imported Shantung silk, new three and one-button belted back model; coat and trousers — worth 20.00. Special $15.00 Men's "Cool Cloth" Suits Of genuine washable cool cloth, in tan, olive or gray mixtures; sack or stitched belted back models; coat and trousers. Special $7.50 Men's Unlined Norfolk Coats of Blue Flannel New belted back model, single or double-breasted of blue flannel. Special $7.50 White Flannel Trousers Of white English tennis flannel and striped white English serge. Special $3.75 ALLIES COULD EXTEND BLOCKADE Possible to Neutralize Strategic Advantages of Kiel Canal Paris. June 23. (Correspondence of The Associated PressV The allies could extend their blockade to the Ger man coast in the Baltic and neutralize the strategic advantages of the Kiel Canal, according to Vice-Admiral De gouy, of the French navy. The first of the necessary operations to accomplish this, he points out, would be an attack upon the canal by an aerial force of 120 to 150 units divided into flotillas of twenty to thirty ma chines each. One of the flotillas would attack the bridge of Grunthal, one the' viaduct of Rendsburg, and another the bridge of I..evansau. while three other flotillas held in reserve would repeat the attack after an Interval of twenty four to forty hours. ->ne fli. flotilla would resume its attack after the time required for taking on fresh sup plies and the reserve flotillas would follow again as before. This continuity of attack from the air upon works known to be vulner able by reason of the instability of the soil in certain places and the insuf ficient reinforcement of certain bridge heads after the enlargement of tlie canal, would. Admiral Degouy declares, assure obstruction of sufficient dura tion; whatever defensive measures the Germans might take against these con certed attacks would not prevent fruit ful result?. While the base from which such air assaults might be made is only hinted at by Admiral Degouy. an operation speedily executed would, according to his theory, make possible a landing at isolated points on the German coast und its sufficient fortification so as fully t oprotect the establishment o an im mense aviation camp within sixty to eighty mile 3 of the canal terminus. Would Involve I.OKM The forcing of the straits and mine fields would involve considerable losses f«-om submarines and mines before the entente fleets would get into effective contact either with the German battle fleet or the defenses of the Elbe, the Admiral declares, but be did not think this should be considered as prohibi tive of the effort. Admiral Degouy discards the hypothesis that it would be possible to surprise the German fleet under present conditions: its mo bility would be such that it could meet an attack at either end of the canal, since it requires only twenty-four hours to pass through the Elbe and the canal to the Grand Belt. The entente allies could put into ac tion 110 vessels of the line, of which seventy-six are dreadnaughts and twenty-eight are protected cruisers, against forty-four German dread naughts and three or four battle cruis ers. according to the admiral's esti mate. The Russian fleet Is not included in these figures, but Admiral Degouy points out that even If the Russians could not join the British and French fleets they would detach a certain num ber of the ble German units so as to enable the allies to present at both ends of the canal simultaneously forces outnumbering the entire German fleet. This estimate takes no account of probable losses In approaching the po sitions. and hence the admiral holds that effective operations of the air fleet on the canal is an essential condition of a successful attack. The forcing of the Grand Relt and the Belt in sufficient strength to blockade the flord of Kiel and the forcing from west to east of the Fehrmann Belt. Admiral Degouy declares. Is, notwithstanding the mine field and submarines, far easier than the forcing of the Dardan elles, and entirely feasible with the co operation of an aerial fleet. THF BROKEN FTEI/T> (Sara Teasdale in the July Yale Re view.) My soul is a dark ploughed field In the cold rain; My soul is a broken field Ploughed by pain. Where windy grass and flowers Were growing. The field lies broken now For another sowing. Great Sower, when you tread My field again. Scatter the furrow's there With better grain. OVERCOME* THE EFFECT* OF HEAT Horsfnrd's Arid Phosphate Strengthens the body and nerves to resist the exhaustion caused by heat: Buy a bottle. —Advertisement. WHEN REDSKIN IS GIVEN SHEEPSKIN Popular Science Monthly Tells How Carlisle Students Graduate A gaily decorated platform on which are seated the graduates, fac ulty, speaker and other invited guests; a lengthy program of music, orations and addresses, probably all cut to order and sugar-coated for the occasion; an award of sheepskins and a benediction—this, in brief, consti tutes the stereotyped graduation cere mony of most colleges and schools. But there is one school which has a different commencement, says the Popular Science Monthly for July, it is the United Stales Indian industrial School at Carlisle. Pennsylvania. Its twelve hundred students are children of America's original people, and the institution is the largest industrial school in the country. Graduat'm day is a day of proof and snowing. A girl steps to the plat form. and curtains near the back of the stage are suddenly drawn. If she is a graduate in nursing, other nurses step out with two patients and illus trate her talk. If she tells how wash ing in the home should he done, oth er girls are there to help her Illus trate it. An Indian lad graduates in agricul-1 ture. He has his charts of farm lands! with plots to illustrate the methods of scientific farming. Another boy is a j plumber, and while he is explaining' trade helpers are putting together | bathroom fixtures and sections of! heating plants. Dairying from beginning to end is described by another hoy while pretty Indian milkmaids churn real butter and place it in molds for marketing. How to furnish a home is explained by another lad, while girls help him arrange various pieces of furniture in sectional rooms. Here is a splendid house model and here is a boy telling how it is erected. Helping him are other carpenters and the house shown is completed on the stage so far as the woodwork is concerned, even to placing lath for plastering and erect ing the inner staircases. Blacksmnhing is another trade taught at the Carlisle school and a blacksmith shop is placed on the plat form. Several pieces of curved iron and wood are bolted together and wheels fastened to the ends. Run ning-gears of a carriage are thus made. Another lad grasps the bel lows-lever of a forge and soon flames spurt upward. A smithy thrusts real irons into the Are and presently two boys are pounding out red-hot horse shoes on a real anvil. Sparks fly into the air and the ring of the anvil sounds throughout the building. An other lad finishes the shoes at a bench vise. Such is the way Indians grad uate. AMERICAN FRIENDSHIP FOR ENGLAND (George Burton-Adams in the July Yale Review.) We may And ourselves immediately concerned in the effect upon the world at large of the formation of the new British Imperial Federative government. Certain world prob lems have already forced themselves upon us and have demanded much of our thought, though we have thought of them almost exclusively as if they concerned us alone. In them, how ever, the British Dominions are con cerned with us, and they think with lis. Their view of Oriental immigra tion Is the same as that which our peo ple who have come into direct con tact with it have heen obliged to take; their view of the open door In China and of the Integrity of the Chi nese Empire is the- same; their sup- BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it. 25c at all druggists. JUNE 23, 1916. 28-30 and 32 Specials For Saturday In the Dress Section Tailored Dresses One lot of Summer Dresses, in a most wonderful variety of styles and colors for misses and women; suitable for all kinds of summer wear. Tailored and dressy models, values up to 8.95 Special, 5.00 Afternoon Dresses One lot of Afternoon Dresses, in Georgettes and taf fetas. A great many combinations of Georgette and taffeta, in white, pink, light blue and maize. Values up to 59.50 Special, 29.75 Miscellaneous Dresses A miscellaneous lot of Dresses, one of a kind; values up to 35.00 Special, 18.50 White Dresses One lot of White Dresses for girls and misses, values up to 18.50 Special, 10.90 French Linen Dresses French Linen Tailormade Dresses, in all the newest shades; buttoned down the front with a sport pocket on each side— Special, 10.90 Peter Thompson Dresses Nine Misses' Linen Peter Thompson Dresses, in natural and Copen; sizes 16, 18 and 36; value 13.50 Special, 5.00 Fibre Silk Sweaters Sash model of fibre silk (with mercerized back), in Copen, gold, purple and watermelon pink; also two-tone effects of black and white or black and gold— Special, 5.95 Sport Smock For Women and Misses In Copen, rose and all white; collar and cuffs of white gabardine— Special, 1.95 port of the Monroe Dostrine has been second only to our own; any dangers still dormant which may arise from the other edge of the Pacific will threaten us both alike; their view of the nature of the act when a na tion sets out to run amuck among the arrangements of the civilized world for selfish reasons of its own does not differ from ours. In these and other things we think alike and are likely to act alike, if the time comes when action can no longer be avoided. One conclusion at any rate seems ob vious. It. is surely not impossible to bring about the conviction that two great world-powers who stand sep arately for the same institutions and the same ideals ought to stand to gether for them. American Flyers With French Break Two Records Paris, June 23. (Correspondence of The Associated Press). Robert Rock well. of Philadelphia, and Paul Pavelka. of Madison, Conn., have broken two rec ords in their preparatory training at the Military Flying School at Buc, ac cording to Information given out at the headquarters of the Franco-American Flying Corps. Rockwell completed his trial flights 111 ! ' -^TMTCHELIN- FOUNDED-1832 ) ' , -jllll I !|| MICHEUNI j 12 to 15% Extra Weight^ I j When you buy your next tire make this simple I test. Let us weigh a Michelin Universal Tire in comparison with any other non-skid of the I | I I same size. VOL will find the Michelin 12 to 15% header than the average, !|jj | the exact percentage depending on the aire of the tire* tiled In the teit. This extra weight represents" extra rubber II I 11 and fabric, which means extra | I j | ENSMINGER MOTOR CO. DISTRIBUTORS |l Third and Cuniberalnd Streets |j Hnrrlsburg, Pa. Hell 8515 jlik=== ■ (ONE QUALITY ONLY-THE required before incorporation in the corps in twenty-five hours and was publicly congratulated by the officer commanding the school. Pavelka, who, previous to enlisting in the flying corps, served fourteen months in the trenches with the foreign legion, established a record in pistol shooting while in the air. He placed twelve bullets out of twelve shots in the head of a moving silhouette, representing the body of a man. at a distance of 100 yards. His work with the machine gun is said to be fully equal to his precision wtth a revolver. Pavelka now has his license for the most recent addition to French aviation, the new fast Nieuport biplanes, as well as atl the other machines in the service. Willis Havilland, of Chicago, and Frederick Prince, of Boston, have also finished their preliminary training at Buc, and havd gone to Pau to familiar ize themselves with the newest ma chines before going to the front. Pav elka Is completing his preparation at the Aerial Artillery School at Cazeau. Robert Soubrian, of New York, whose preparation was delayed by illness, will soon undertake his official trials and then Join the corps. CLASS WII-Xi HOIJD FESTIVAL Shiremanstown, Pa.. June 23. The Ladies' Organized Bible Class, No. 1, of the Bethel Church of God will hold a festival on the Are houso lawn to-morrow evening. Ice cream, cake and other refreshments will be on sale.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers