2 TIMELY NEWS OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA AND CITY'S SUBURBS IRVING COLLEGE COMMENCEMENT Large Class of Young Women Will Graduate From In stitute Next Month Mechanicsburg, Pa., May 3. Ex erviscs for the sixty-first annual com mencement of Irving College will be held June 2 to t">, with the Dramatic Club play on Saturday evening, June 2. as first event. The Kev. Dr. A. R. Steck, of Carlisle, will preach the baccalaureate sermon on Sunday morning, and the annual address to the Young Women's Christian Asso ciation of the college will be given by J. George Becht, Ph. D., of Harris burg, on Sunday evening, June 3. The Chorus Club concert will be given on Monday morning, June 4. at 10 o'clock; grand concert, music class, 1917, Monday evening, June 4, at 8 o'clock; alumnae exercises, Tues day morning, June 6, at 10 o'clock; annual meeting board of trustees, Tuesday afternoon, June 5, at 3 o'clock; president's reception, Tues day evening, Juno 5; sixty-first an nual commencement Wednesday morning, June ti, at 10 o'clock. The class for graduation includes the following young women: Can didates lor the degree A. 8., Mabel Olive Bottomly, Martha Hannah Buckwalter, Helen Dunlap, Madeline Dorothcr. Fetter, Virginia Ferguson, Lana G ove. Helen Etlilyn Rankin, Nancy Elizabeth Sheffer, Rachel Hil- j da Schlosser, Catherine Hall Speights; candidate for the degree B. S„ Aline Elizabeth l'assig; candi dates foi the degree Mus. 8., piano forte, Dorothy Henrietta Miller, Alma Weber Mower; candidate for the degree Mus. 15., pipe organ, Zerba Weber; candidate for the degree Mus. L!.. singing, Ruth Owen Brandt, Anna Livingood March; candidate for diploma in pianoforte, Catherine Anna All>hquse, Ethel Epley Culp, Anna Mvirigood March. Maymc Ruth Shallcnberger; candidates for! diploma in Domestic Science. Natalia Green, Josephine Anna Hull, Jessie Anna Kreider. Ellen Bruce Long,] Mary Elizabeth Mickey, Gertrude i Irene Pent/., Mary Esther Ryder.l Mildred Margaretta Stauffer, Eva i Sprenkle, Anna Elizabeth Xeidig; Candidate for diplomas in Art, Helen Marie Swart:".: candidate for certifi cate in Art, Josephine Anna Hull. FLOI R JUMPS IN PRICE lllain. Pa., May 3.—Flour has made two jumps in price within the past week, from sl.lO to $1.50 per hack, and it is now $1.55. /tea.mz&vus For (he Teeth and Mouth Of all oral antiseptics on the market, Sanitol has been found the most efficient by the highest authority. Neutralizes mouth secretions and puts the gums in a clean, healthy condition. Small half a glass of water. 7N at any Druggist's Highest Award Panamr-Pacific Exposition HI Mim", ..f Hunlltr 10 Special For Friday ".S pairs of Women's dull and patent Pumps, regular $5 value, Friday only :: r:; : : fcSl.9B CREGO 15 North Third Street Shoe* of Uunlltj 0 SHOES OF QUALITY H gp&rtsfales n FORBUSH OXFORDS Two new ones just received in dark mahogany at $7.00 and black calf at $6.00; better look these good oxfords over. . . CREGO 15 N. Third Street * > P| 7 SHOES OF QUALITY gjjjjj THURSDAY EVENING. Annual Meeting of Perry County S. S. Convention Newport, Pa., May 3. —Yesterday the forty-ninth annual convention of (ho Perry County Sunday School As sociation opened in the Reformed Church with more than 125 delegates in attendance. Meetings wero held in the morning, afternoon and even ing. One feature of yesterday's ses sions orothy P. Lenhart, president; Mar lan V. Helfieman, secretary; John P. Cohen, treasurer; Mary Switzer, Mar garet Diven, Delia L, Souders, Lillian Pattie, Laura E. Straub, Margaret Rudy. Ethel McGonnel. Ottille Con ley, Jeanette M. Sipe, Esther Taylor, John A. Partliemore, Bruce E. Mans berger, Donald N. Shuler, Frank W, Zelgler, Norman Sipe, Joseph A. Lan dis. , PATRIOTIC RALLY AT ENOLA Enola, Pa.. May 3.—A big patrio tic rallv and preparedness meeting will be held in the auditorium of the Summit street schoolbuilding on Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Many prominent speakers furnished by the State Committee of Public Safety will address the meeting about tho duty every citizen of the town over fourteen years should render the country in the present crisis. It is expected that several of the boys of the high school will be placed on farms in the vicinity of Enola for work during the summer. Patriotic songs will be sung by the Girl's Glee Club of the Enola High school. HALF-HOUR SUNDAY SERVICE Lemoyne, Pa.. May 3.—Superin tendent James Senseman of the Val ley Railway Company, announced to-day that half-hour service would be prevalent on tho Carlisle line Sunday afternoons in July and Au gust from 12.30 o'clock to 9 o'clock in the evening. Tho present schedule is every hour. | LECTURE OX GARDENING Camp Hill, Pa., May 3. R. W. | I Herman, of the state vocational de j partnient, will lecture to school stu dents of the borough school from the , fifth grade HP in the high school I room on Friday afternoon at 2.30 I o'clock. The subject of his address ! will be "Gardening." ALUMNI TO ELECT Enola, Pa., May 3.—An important meeting of the Alumni Association of the Enola High school will be held in the Summit street school building this evening. Officers for the year will be elected and other business discussed. RED CROSS AUXILIARY New Cumberland, Pa., May 3. | Yesterday afternoon a number of i women met at the home of Mias ! Marian at The Terraces and 1 organized an auxiliary to the Red I Cross Chapter of Harrtsburg. Twen , ty-three members were enrolled. BOX SOCIAL AT CHURCH New Cumberland, Pa., May 3. | A box social will be held in the rooms of Baughman Memorial Metli | odist Church to-morrow evening. SURPRISE: OX BIRTHDAY Lewlsberry, Pa., May 3. —A surprise ' party was held recently at the home 1 j of Mr. and Mrs. .lack Armstrong, in i celebration of Mr. Armstrong's birth day anniversary. Many presents were received by Mr. Armstrong. Refresh ments were served. Among those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Harvey j Erney, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Sutton, Mr. and Mrs. Sylvan Millard. Mr. and Mrs. .1. I". Sutton, Mr. arid Mrs. Har vey Zorger, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon. Westfall, Mr. and Mrs. John Ilar lacher, the Rev. and Mrs. 1,. Ebert Wilson, Mrs. John 11. Sliettel, Harry Fickle, Mrs. H. C. Hetrick. Stuart ' Wise, W. A. Parks, Mrs. Laura Kline ! and Laurabel Armstrong. / j PHILADELPHIA SOLDIER WEDS , I Marietta, Pa., May 3.—Miss Eliza . j betli T. Hendrlz, of Mount Joy, was I married yesterday TO Paul C. Brick . er, of Philadelphia, by the Rev. D. . E. Uong, pastor of the United Brethren Church. William G. Mc- Cain, Philadelphia, was best man, and Miss Edith M. Bentzel, of Mount . Joy. bridesmaid. The groom is a I member of Company L, First Regl . I ment, N. G. P., anc is at present do i ing guard duty at Eddystone. CLASS TRIP TO WASHINGTON Mechanicsburg, Pa., May 3.—This ' morning the Senior class of the Me , chanicsburg High School left here for a three days' trip to Washing -1 ton, D. C. They were accompanied by Prof. Ralph Jacoby, supervising principal of the school, and Mrs. Jacoby. They were joined here by the Shippensburg Senior class and at Harrisburg by the Mifflin and Xew Cumberland classes. They will re turn home Saturday evening. Falsely Accused His j Teeth fer Troubles j Mt. Holl.v Man Laid His Stomncli p Trouble to Poor Mastication TANLAC RELIEVED HIM . 1 "l'had been troubled for quite a while with indigestion and I laid it to the fact that my teeth were in , bad shape so that I didn't chew my food enough," says Charles Storey, ' a farmer of Mt. Holly, near Harris ) burg, Pa. "My food never used to digest properly for after meals I would be I made miserably by the great quanti ties of gas that would form and bloat me up. It affected my heart too, for • the gas would press up making my • heart pound and flutter in a most ' alarming manner. J "Well, I was talking to a neighbor J of mine one day and ho told me 1 1 ought to take Tanlac and get rid of " my trouble. I didn't believe It would do it but decided to try it anyhow. And now I am glad to say that, thanks to Tanlac, my stomach Is as . good as new. No more Indigestion I no more gas, no more distress. 1 I eat whatever I please and never feel ; I a bit of trouble." ; ! Tanlac, the famous reconstructive s tonic, is now being introduced here ) at Gorgas' Drug Store, where the I Tanlac man is meeting the people i and explaining the merits of this master medicine.—Adv, 1 Nineteen Tribes of Red Men Will Parade at Duncannon Duncannon, Pa., May 3. Plans are under way foe the first semi-an nual convention of the nineteen tribes of the Improved Order of Red Men to be held here. May 12. A largo parado in which the nineteen tribes will appear will be a feature of the day, the members appearing in war dress costumes. The tribes that will participate comprise tho recently organized Tri- County Association. W. Walter Branyan and 11. C. Hemperly aro in charge of the local arrangements. MAXV MARRIAGE LICENSES Sunbury, Pa., May 3.—According to the records in the office of John I. Carr, clerk of the marriage li cense bureau for Northumberland county, the number of permits to wed during April of this year ex ceeded those of the previous similar month by nearly 100 per cent. Six ty-two were issued last April and 117 during the month just passed. Whether or not the rush to wed because of the war is the cause of it, the clerks in the office were not pre pared to say to-day, although the large majority are young folks. Marriage licenses Issued to-dav follow: Howard C. Beck and Ellen Horn, both of Shamokin; Charles Andrescovich and Ruth Smith, both of Shamokin; Lewis Sosnoskle and Catherine Miller, of Mt. Carmel. WOODMAN'S FOOT CUT Blain, Pa., May 3.—George Lyons, of Madison township, while working at the Adair Brothers' saw mill on the Van Milligan tract, cut a long gash across tho instep of his right foot. He made a inlscut In chopping off a limb. The cut required seven stitches. 28-30-32 N i Will Place on Sale Tomorrow— One 250 Women's and Misses' Suits Taken From Our Values up to $37.50 ' sls and $18.50 Comprising Dressy and Tailored Models Including Wool Jersey Sport Suits sS Skid I , H It seems to me that some tire manufacturers \ \ fflamwpp I just cut out the raised tread pattern on their VV ' JBSJ / tires with a jig-saw at random; while others f figure out the tread formation as common UlWHp^r The Diamond "Squeegee Tread" is surely a I "reason why" tread. Look at the cross bars. Geo - ir - M y eT!t When the weight of the car rests on them, they just naturally get a TOE HOLD on t( R n ffe>r nut D the pavement and stop forward slide. Sa H Then look at the longitudinal bars. They are all around 99 continually m contact with the pavement _ K and not only stop side skid ALL THE TIME I but roll along as smoothly as a plain tread vi ce> if ever a Diamond ■ Sot 1. 1 tJ <• Ml it * n * adjustment will bo ■| So if you want a real non-skid tire, we 11 sell prompuy made. ■ you a Diamond at its' 'Fair-List" Price. Cameron and Mulberry Streets Harrisburg, Pennsylvania R^yyßß^ "MAYS, 1917. ' Fifteen Acres in Columbia I Given For Garden Plots Columbia, Pa.. May 3.—Garden ing in this place will bo carried on to a greater extent than ever In the history of the town. About fifteen acres of ground have been turned over to tho Civic Committee of the Woman's Club by a few citizens and have In turn boon turned over to the secretary of the Merchants and Manufacturers' Association for allot ment. tip to this tiitfe twenty-four largo plots have been assigned to local gardeners for cultivation, all within the borough limits. Among the number who have taken lots aro several women and in nearly all cases the ground will be used to grow potatoes. Onions, beans will follow in the order named. MRS. DETWII.ER BURIED Newville, Pa., May 3.—Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret .J. Det wiler, of McCrea, were held yester day at the Doubling Gap Church of God and burial was made in tho cemetery adjoining. Mrs. Detwller was about 09 years old and was a member of the Church of God at that place. She is survived .by the following children: Mrs. James Woods, of Upper Mifflin township; Mrs. Winfield Salisbury and Frank Detwiler at home; also two sisters, Mrs. John Gayman and Mrs. Nannie Graham, of Newville, and one brother, Finley Davidson, of Upper Mifflin township, who Is critically ill at this time. Mrs. Detwiler had rela tives at Harrisburg. LUTHERAN REUNION PLANS Marietta, Pa.. May 3.—Great prep arations aro being made for the an nual reunion of the Lutherans of several counties to be held at Her sliey Park, on Juno 28. The Loys vllle band will furnish the music and a fine program is being prepared. Planning to Give Pupils in County High Schools Opportunity For Farming I'\ 15. Shambaugh, county school superintendent, and Assistant W. It. Zimmerman are completing plans to give students In the high schools throughout tlie county, particularly in the smaller boroughs and toHvns, an opportunity to work on farms. The system which is being ar ranged will be in co-operation with the County Committee on Public Safety and will be similar to th© one which was approved on Monday by the city school board. Every effort will be made to complete the ar rangements in a few davs so that boys in county high schools can be plac ed as soon as possible. CMP. ENDORSES LEGISLATION Carlisle, Pa., May 3. Voting to secure a community physician and to continue playground work in spite ol the war, with volunteer super vision as an aid in cutting the cost, was decided upon by the Carlisle Civic Club in a meeting here. Tins was I lie c losing meeting for the year, gatherings being postponed until tall. The club endorsed the anti death penalty bill, that providing for an appropriation for the home for feeble-minded women, and the woman's rural bureau bill. USE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE, The antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes unci eprinkled in the foot-bath. If yon want rest nd comfort for tired, aching, swol len, sweating feet, use Allen's Foot—hasc. It prevents blisters, sore and callous spots. Just the tiling for Dancing Parties, and for Breaking in New Shoes. Used by Allied and German troops at the front. Sold everywhere, 25c. Don't acrrpt. any tubafitute. Trial package FlS. Olmsted, Le Boy, N. Y.