Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, April 26, 1918, Page 2, Image 2

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    2
CENTRAL PENNA. NEWS
Pcnbrook Seniors Publish
Book, "Echoes of '18"
IVnbrook, Pa., April 26.—The ee-!
nior class of the Penbrook High
school has sent to press its "Echoes
of '18." It is a fifty-page book, with
a garnet and gold cover. The book
will contain the pictures of the re-'
niors. with a short autobiography ofj
each, pictures of the faculty, junior)
and sophomore classes, also each i
i las-s history, etc. The book may
be ordered from any member of the
senior class. Candidates for diplo-!
mas are: Frances Booser, Ida E.
Crum, Elizabeth Ebersole, Ruth
Hoover, Ilettie Hain. Pauline Mc-
Garvey, Eunice McElheny, Hayes |
McClelland, Katherine Speas, Wil
liam Snyder and Viola Wirt.
ANNOUNCE BIRTH OF SON j
l*enbrook. Pa.. April 26.—A son.|
John William Carberry, was born|
April 24, 191 S. to Mr. and Mrs. Johni
Carberry, of Boas street, Penbrook. j
Camp Meade Soldiers
i. Qualify For Commissions
MiddKtowu, Pa., April 26.
Friends and parents of Robert L.
Engel have just reoeived advices;
telling that he has been qualified!
as a second lieutenant at Campi
Meade, Md., and is ready for his!
commission.
Owlish*. Pa.. April 26.—Luther F.j
Brame, of 35 East North street, has|
passed examinations at Camp Meade
and has qualified for a commission I
asi second lieutenant, advices from j
camp to-day announce.
Hanover, Pa., April 26.—David D.
Bixler. of Baltimora street, has;
qualified for commission as second
lieutenant and is awaiting a com-,
mission. Word was received herej
to-day by friends.
Ellzal>e;htowit. Pa., April 20.
Friends of Alex M. Fjikenstein have
been advised that he has passed ex
aminations at Camp Meade, Md., and
has been qualified as second lieuten
ant.
Millcrsburg. Pa.. April 26. —Harry
F. Longbach of this place, has quali- ,
fied as second lieutenant at Camp
Meade, letters to his friends here ad
vise. '
SOCIAL HELPERS ENTERTAINED
Blain. Pa.. April 2'">. —On Wednos- 1
day evening the Minister Social
Helpers Society of the Zion's Re
formed Church, were entertained at
the home of Mrs. Riley M. Smith, in ;
Main street. Games and music were i 1
played and refreshments served, ji
ROBERT C. lIENCH DIES
Blain. Pa.. April 26.—Robert C. .
Hencli aged died at his home at
Bixler's Mills yesterday. He was .
seized with a light paralytic stroke. J
followed by an attack of apoplsxy
which caused his death. He is sur
vived by his wife, who was Miss
Mary Machamer before marriage.
DR. U. R. SHAFFER DIES
Hummelstown. Pa.. April 26.—Dr. j
V. R. Shaffer died at his home in ;
Fast Main street yesterday after an
illness of several months. Although,
in very poor health he practiced j
until about three weeks ago. when
he was compelled to take his bed.
He is survived by his wife and the j
following children: Dr. Ralph Shaf-!
fer, of Tacoma, Washington; Mrs.
Edward Hanimers, of Minenrville. ;
and Edgar Shaffer at home. He is'
also survived by two sisters living
in I.rbanon. his former home. Fu-|
nera! services will be arranged later.!
Burial in Hummelstown Cemetery.
Superfluous Hair
De^Tliraefc
<ke artniMl laaitarf
liquid, operate* on mm entirely dif
ferent prladplr from any other
method. It rob* hair of Ita vital
ity by attacking It nnder the akin.
Only Kf-nnJne DrMlrncle hits a
money-hark Knarnntee In each
package. At toilet eountera In HOr,
' and #2 alaea, or by naafl from
u* In plain wrapper on receipt of
price.
FREE kaok with teatlmonlala of
hiKkeat aatborttiea ex
plains whnt causes hair on face,
I ueek and arm*, why It Inereaaea
I and how IleMlrnele devitalises It,
mailed in plain aealed envelope on
request. DeMlrarlr. Park Ave. aad
tJ*tk St Sew York.
CHARLES R. BECKLEY
Certificated Greer Teneher, Member
Eastern Commercial Teachers'
Association, Principal of
tuning
qFFIC ScAoof
HAKffISBURjSS'
fW
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Gregg Shorthand (or Pitman), j
Typewriting, Bookkeeping, Ac-1
:ountancy, English, Civil Service
Courses, etc., by
Individual Prorhotion
Wives Or Dependents
OF DRAFTED MEN
WILL FIND orn
SPECIAL COURSE
a time saver and more thorough.
JAY * MIGHT SCHOOL ALL YEAH.
Rater any time. Bell (M-R
FRIDAY EVENING,
Twenty-six Draft Men
Go From Perry District
'New llloonilicltl, Pa., April 26.—F01i
i lowing is a list of the twenty-six se
: lected men who were sent to camp
i by the local board:
To Camp Meade, Md., to-day—
: Roger X* Eppley, Marysvllle; Ed
jward G. Pressler, Duncannon; Rob
j ert' E. Reynolds, Duncannon; Orviile
i H. Wright, Duncannon.
, j Camp Lee, April 30.—Elmer E.
Wolfe. Marysvllle; Jesse H. Sommer,
Marysvllle; F. E. Mcßride, Marietta;
T. W. Rhinesmith, New German
; town; Clarence Kesler, New German-
Jtown; James C. Yohn, Anderson
burg; Elmer D. Henderson, New
port; Charles A. Basom, Newport;
I Irwin E. Xiohensheldt. Newport;
iClyde G. Jones, Newport: George R.
| Fry, Newport; Lloyd S. Durham.
I Duncannon; John I. Oretzinger, Dun
j cannon; Jomes R. Moyer, Dunean
:non; Clyde H. Gelbaugh. Duncan
non; Norman W. Kines, Duncannon;
James G. Hockenbury, Duncannon;
Frank E. Pomer, Loysville; Joseph
jJ. Reislnger, Ickesburg; Ralph
! Henry, New Germantown.
| Farewell For Class Teacher
Leaving For Camp Meade
1 I'Jorin, Pa,, April 26.—0n Wed
nesday evening a farewell party was
jiven to Clarence E. Musselman.
! who for several years has been the
] teacher of the Young Ladies' Bible
; class of the Florin United Brethren
• Church. Mr. Musselman will leave
; to-day for Camp Meade, Md. The af
fair was held at the parsonage and
the evening was enjoyably spent.
, Refreshments were served. The fol
i lowing were present: Misses Mary
; Dyer, Mary Bates,* Mary Rineer,
•Stella Wachstetter, Miriam Guhl,
' Florence Romig, Florence Espen -
) shade. Estella Haldeman, Gertie S.
Haldeman, Anna S. Haldeman, Mil
ler Hershey, of Elizabethtown;
Harry Herr, of Lancaster; Mr. and
Mrs. Grover Eichler and daughter,
Virgie; Clarence E. Musselman, the
i Rev. and Mrs. O. G. Romig.
LODGE TO ATTEND SERVICE
Halifax, Pa.. April 26.—Charity
| Lodge No. 82, I. O. O. F., will at
; tend services in the Methodist Epis
i copal Church to-morrow evening
1 when the anniversary sermon will be
preached by the pastor, the Rev. J.
George Smith.
EIGHT TO GRADUATE
Halifax, Pa., April 26.—Eight
i young people will complete their
i education in the Halifax High school
and receive diplomas at the com
mencement exercises to be held in
the high schol auditorium Fridaj
evening. May 21. The class is made
up o£ the following: Ira Hoffman.
John
; Wise. Mark Spaltr. Mary Lahrtis,
Russell Neft and Melvin Sponslcr.
The H. A. Club met Tuesday even
ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
R. A. Shumaker. in Market street.
Following a business meeting re
\ freshments were served.
Raymond Sellers, of Fisherville. is
J at a Philadelphia Hospital to,under
go treatment for rheumatism.
WITTY-MORRIS WEDDING
New Buffalo. Pa., April 26.—Miss
; Daly May Morris, daughter of Mr.
I and Mrs. William Morris , of Watts
; township, and Joseph James Wetty,
of Harrisburg, were married at the
' home of the bride's parents by the
Rev. J. C. Erb. The young couple
! will make their home at Harrisburg
l where the groom is employed at the
' Harrisburg Pipe Bending Works.
COMMENCEMENT DATE
Liverpool, April 26. —May 10 is the
| date set for the Liverpool High
! school commencement in the Meth
j odist Church. Baccalaureate serv
-1 ices will be held May 5. the Rev. C.
M. Shaeffer in charge. The class this
year includes: Marget Heinbucher,
I Myrtle Mengle, Margaret Stailey,
J Charles Kerstetter and Lee Shuler.
LIVERPOOL CnURCH OFFICERS
Liverpool, April 26.—Newlv-elect
ed officers of the Evangelical Church
1 are: Elders, Prof. E. F. Dougherty,
Jacob Long. Joseph Jury: class lead
er, George C. Hoffman; Aid Society,
president, Mrs. Joseph Jury; organ
ist. Sylvia Rupp; superintendent Sdn
; day school, the Rev. A. B. Coleman;
treasurer, Mrs. Joseph Jury; secre
tary. Mrs. A. B. Coleman.
TRAINING CLASS FORMED
Liverpool. April 26.—A teacher
training class has ben organized in
I the Lutheran Sunday school with the
following members: Mrs. George M.
Deckard, Edna Knisely, Mrs. O. C.
Knisely, Ruth Brown. Viola Coltman,
Claretta Deckard, Cecilia Barner!
Charles Kerstetter and Chester Deck
ard. The Rev. C. M. Shaeffer, the
pastor, will have charge of the class
and "Oliver's Teacher Training
Course" will be used as the text.
FOUR TO GRADUATE
Millerstown, Pa., April 26. —Com-
| mencement exercises of the Millers
i town High school will be held Frl
! day evening. May S, at 8.30 o'clock
!in the Presbyterian Church. The
I members of the graduating class are:
I Miss Helen Louise Rebok, Miss Mary
Zeila ' Cathcart. Miss Mary Lillian
' Ulsh and Ellis Banks Bailor. The
; baccalaureate sermon will be deliv
| ered Sunday evening in the Presby
! terian Church by the Rev. C. W.
i Waltman.
will help that
scalp irritation
That annoying calp trouble whkii
| keeps you scratching all the time is a
| source of disgust to others as well as a
i torment to you. No matter if you have
I used other treatments without success
try Resinol Ointment and ResinolSoap
and see if yotf won* t notice an improve
ment in a shoC •ime. This inexpensive
treatment will almost always stop dan
druff and scalp itching, arid keep the
hair thick, live and lustrous.
Ruinol Soap and Resinol Ointment are said by
all drufffiat*. Sample* tree. Dept. WS, Resinol,
Baltimore, Md.
WEST SHORE NEWS
MARYSVULE GETS
ITS HONOR FLAG
i
j I'lifurled in Diamond Square
to Show That Town Has
Oversubscribed Loan
MarysvlMc, Pa., April 26.—Without
I any pomp or ceremony, Jlarysville's
i Honor Flag for oversubscribing her
j quota in the Third Liberty Ix>an was
| unfurled last evening. The cere
• monies were performed by Postmas
j ter Klias B. Leiby and Ex-Postmaster
•J. W. Beers. The flag was flung to
i the breezes on Diamond Square be
: side the largo American flag floating
! there.
! Sixty-flve Marysvllle boys and
j girls are in the service from a town
;of approximately 2,000 inhabitants.
I Nineteen of these have aleeady
j crossed the Atlantic.
MARRIED AT HAGERSTOWX*
Marysvllle, Pa., April 26.—An
nouncements have been received here
! of the marriage of Miss Veda Mae
| Woods, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
! Adam Woods, and Elmer S. Wallace.
of Wheatfleld- township. The cere
. rnony took place at Hagerstown.
Program Prepared For
Camp Hill Commencement
! Camp Hill, Pa., April 26.—Arrange
; jnants for the annual High School
commencement, to be held in the au
ditorium on June 6, are under way.
Miss Pauline Davisson is valedictor
ian and Adam Nell salutatorlan.
I Miss Virginia Breen and Miss Elma
! Koser have been elected to give ora
i tions. Pr. Nathan C. Schaeffer will
: speak at the commencement exer
cises.
The Rev. Raymond Ketchledge,
pastor of the Presbyterian Church,
will deliver the baccalaureate ser
mon in the High School auditorium
on June 2. Members of the local
Presbyterian Church will have
j charge of the services,
j Class Day exercises will be held
j in the auditorium on June 5, it was
i announced to-day.
LITERARY SOCIETY OFFICERS
tamp Hill, Pa.. April 26. —At a
meeting of the Camp Hill High
School Literary Society the follow
ing officers were elected: President,
Margaret Rowland; vice-president,
Hugh Harrison; secretary. Mildred
Beck; treasurer, Margaret Musser.
BOYS TO PLANT TREES
Camp Hill, April 26.—Emery Nell
and Thomas Green, students at the
Camp Hill High School and mem
bers of the Camp Hill Troop of Boy
Scouts, were given leave of absence
to help plant trees in Marion coun
ty for the Forestry Department of
Pennsylvania. The boys will live in
camps and fte at work about six
weeks.
*HO FROM EN TERTAIX M ENT
Camp Hill. April 26.—More than
S6O was realized at an entertainment
given by the girls of the Catnp Hill
: High School for the benefit eft the
Junior Emergency Aid of this place.
' The money will be used to purchase
| materials.
SEXIOKS CHOOSE OFFICERS
Camp Hill. Pa., April 26. —At a re
cent meeting of the senior class of
i the High School the following offi
' cers were elected: President. Adam
Nell; vice-president, Rebecca Kil-
I born; secretary, Pauline Davisson; '
i treasurer, John Bashore.
SERMON" TO LODGE
Xew Cumberland, April 26.—The
Rev. C. H. Heiges will preach Sun
iday morning in the Church of God
I to the local lodge of the Independ
ent Order of Odd Fellows, No. 1147.
LITTLE GIRL ILL
Xew Cumberland, Pa., April 26.
Theta McCord, the little daughter of
Mr..and Mrs. Frank McCord, of Sev
enth street, is ill with lung trouble.
WORSHIP IX HIGH SCHOOL
Xew Cumberland, Pa., April 26.
On Sunday the congregation of St.
1 Paul's Lutheran Church will worship
!in the High School room. The Rev.
David S. Martin will preach at 10.30;
i subject, "The Home as It Is and It
Ought to Be." At 7 p. m. the sub
j ject wll be "Jerusalem's Four Sins." I
West Shore Personals
Mrs. J. C. Forncrook, of Pen- I
! brook, visited Mr. and Mrs. Park
1 Minter, of Third street. New Cum
; berland, this week.
Mrs. Charles Hockenberry, of New
| Cumberland, was brought home
from the Polyclinic Hospital at Har
risburg. where she had been the past
month. /
Miss Eckert, of Wormleysburg,
will deliver an address at a special
meeting under the auspices of the'
Christian Endeavor Society In Trin
ity United Brethren Church at New
I Cumberland on Sunday evening.
BIRTHDAY PARTY
Halifax, Pa., April 26. —A birth-I
dav party was held at the home of
Mrs. Margaret Dlmpsey, near town,
ion Wednesday evening, in honor of
.'her daughter. Miss Mae Dimnsey.
j Refreshments were served.
Suburban Notes
IIIM-M KLSTOWN
Morris Wagner is critically ill at
hia home in West High street. He
has been in t>oor health the past
year and on Wednesday was discov
ered lying unconscious In the stable
at the rear of his home. He has
not yet recovered consciousness.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hummel, of
Hummelstown, and Mr. and Mrs.
W. H. Klllinger, of Harrisburg, are
visiting in State College.
Mrs. Oscar liobbs. of Harrisburg,
spent Tuesday with her parents, Mr.
j <tnd Mrs. Elias Earnest.
Miss Nellie Brasefield visited \
! schools in Annville and Palmyra on '
Thursday and Miss Annie Cassel in
Harrisburg on Wednesday.
Mrs. Samuel Levan entertained
Mrs. Harry Wagner and children, of
Palmyra, on Wednesday.
PEN BROOK
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Bender and
Hons, Hatold, David and Joseph
Earl, were entertained over the
weekend in the bome of Mr. and
Mrs. Edward Walbora.
Mrs. S. G. Snoddy visited her
aunt, Mrs. Joseph Peers, of Har
risburg. who is 111.
Mrs. David Bender is visiting rela
tives at Steelton and Illglisplre.
Mrs. Smith and daughter. Ruth
Reidell, of Seventeenth street, vis
ited Mrs. A. L. Shope this week.
Mary and Herman Hartz, of Port
Royal spent the week with Mr and
Mrs. John A. Wilson.
* . V '•
HAIUUSBUHG (0131 TELEGRXPH
WAR FRONT NEWS
GATHERERS STIR
A. P. DIRECTORS
Escapes Have Been Count
less; Dangers Hold No
Fears For Writers
"By .-tssociatcd Press
j New York, April 26.—T*he report of
the board directors of the Aso
ciated Press this year is considerea
of such unusual interest as to war
rant publication. It refers, among
other things, to the experiences of
some Associated Press men in the
foreign* service, and in making this
part publln the board authorized the
j insertion in parentheses of the name
of \the man concerned.
The report follows in part:
"To the Members of the Associates
Press:
! "In earlier reports we have en
i deavored to summarize briefly the
; most important news events of the
year. We make no such attempt this
year. There have been months dur
ing which more epoch-making news
lias developed than during some pre
j vious entire years, and all newspa-
I permen must wonder whether we
! shall ever return to former stand
ards of news vllues. Nor do we en
large in this report upon the news
gathering achievements of the or
j ganization. With those achievements
j have come many inevitable disap
| pojntments. Overtaxed cables, mud
dled censorships and similar exi
gencies of war often have upset our
plans and frequently neutralized the
resourcefulness of our staff. Yet we
have incomparably the most compre
hensive machinery for collecting and
distributing news that the world has
ever known.
Correspondent* Are Fearless
"Of our men abroad, we gratefully
j acknowledge our appreciation. Tor
pedoes and mines at sea and shot
I and shell on land have held no fears
for them. Their escapes amid dan
| ger have oeen countless. One (Frank
! M. America) was knocked down by
j-a Zeppelin bomb in London, but
j worked all nigljt as usual—merely
j an incident of the day's work in an
! office building which has itself been
' hit by such shells; another (Robert
| T. Small) fell into the icy Somme,
I but rode thirty-live miles to cable
the story of the first American In
Peronne; another (Charles T.
Thompson) was on the highest ram
j part of the castle of Gorlzia when
a shell buried it and him under
! earth, but on that afternoon he wrote
a story which thrilled the press of
| Kurope as well as of the United
| States: another (Walter Whiffen)
was shot in the knee on a Russian
observation post; another (Charles
iS. Smith) after a bayonet and fist
! encounter at Harbin escaped with
painful lacerations; another (James
Hlckey) was blown through a glass
door by the Halifax explosion, but
i before dressing his wounds was re
j sourceful enough to find in a de.
! tnolished building the terminus of
the cable to the West Indies and
sent byway of Bermuda and Ha*
1 vana to New York the first direct
■ messages out of Halifax. Such inci
! dents are not unusual in the serv
ice of your organization.
Public Confidence Grows
| "Through the years the Associated
I Press has by maintaining its stand
i ards of accurate reporting preserved
i the best traditions of Journalism.
The good name of the Associated
Press has not been~ impaired. The
public confidence in our dispatches
steadily has grown until millions of
j readers now hesitate to give credence
to many published reports unassur
i ed that they were carried by our
! association. * The sensational Zim
merman note with its report of dip
i lomatic intrigue in Mexico was uni
versally accepted as genuine be
-1 cause the Associated Press said it
was. The bombardment of Paris at
long range was ridiculed by other
i press associations and by ordnance
. experts, but the Paris bureau of the
Associated Press, which for two
days alone reported this startling
development of the war to Amer
| ican readers, convinced the skeptical
quite as thoroughly as did the of
i ticial confirmation of its report.
When the Government's action in
i taking over the Dutch ships in
American harbors was reported In
Kurope several chancellories Inquired
in European capitals whether the
Associated Press announced this
fact This reputation for telling 1 the
I truth on the part of the Associated
Press is recognized now quite as
i generally throughout diplomatic and
journalistic circles abroad as it is in
the United States, and it is an asset
I of membership in this organization
that Is of the utmost value.
Efficiency Only Impel*
"While the growth in membership
was unusually large during the last
year the members should not mis
-1 take' the policy as to growth. Un
! like the privately-owned and proflt
! making news agencies, we do not
i traffic in news. We welcome only
I such additions to membership as
! strengthen the news-gathering fa
clUdes of this body. At the close
of the year there were 636 evening
newspapers. 391 morning newspapers
and sixty-one Sunday morning news
papers or a total of 1.088. receiving
the service. These newspapers, from
the smallest, which receives a 500-
word daily telegraph service, to the
largest, which receives upwards of
50,000 words daily, show a net In
' crease in membership in the year
I 1917 of 140, of which ninety-six are
j evening, thirty-four morning and
I nine Sunday • newspapers.
25c,35c and 50c
"THE ONE THAT WONT BIND"
CADDY 3rd ST. Near
rUnHY WALNUT
ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW
CARLISLE GOES
OVER $1,000,000
Parade and Meeting This
Evening on Campus of
Dickinson Collgee
Carlisle, Pa., April 26.—Coincident
with the beginning of the formal
celebration of Liberty Day fcere to
day, announcement was made by
Cumberland County Überty Loan
headquarters, that this county had
"gone over the top" in the campaign
for the Third Liberty Loan and that
the district is now slightly over the
$1,000,000 oppropriation.
Another feature of the observance,
beside the big parade and meeting
on Dickinson College campus sched
uled for this evening, was the lunch
eon of the Carlisle Chamber of Com
merce held at noon to-day and ad
dressed by Brigadier General E.
Ouiglielmotti, military attache of the
Koyal Italian Embassy, a veteran of
the Tripoli and present wars, who
came to this country with Price
Udine. He headed a division of Rer
sagiieri on the Carso front and spoke
interestingly of his experience.
Young Carlisle Soldier
Dies in Army Service
Carlisle, Pa., April 26.—The first
Carlisle man has made the supreme
sacrifice for his country. Late last
evening word was received here that
Corporal Kenneth Steck, of the 104 th
Division Engineers, had died yester
day at Camp McClellan, Anniton,
Ala., of pneumonia. He was 25 years
old and file eldest son of the Rev.
Dr. A. n. Steck, formerly of York,"
now pastor of the First Lutheran
Church here.
Young Steck was a graduate of
Conway Hall and York Collegiate In
stitute. He attended Dickinson Col
lege and was at work in New Jersey
when the war broke out, enlisting a
short time after. He was with the
headquarters company. His parents
and several brothers and sisters sur
vive. Efforts will be made to have
the body brought here for burial. A
silent tribute will be made to his
memory at the Liberty Day celebra
tion this evening.
.WEDDING AT MONTEREY
Waynesboro, Pa., April 26.—A
quiet wedding was solemnized at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bench
off at Monterey, when Mrs. Laura C.
Barlow became the bride of J. M.
Dutrow, of Blue Ridge Summit. The
ceremony was performed by the
Rev. Frederick A. Cook, rector of the
Protestant Episcopal Church, Blue
Ridge Summit. ,
'" : '
day afternoon at 4 o'clock. Mrs.
Harrje had been bedfast for five
months and had been a great suffer
er. She was 75 years old. She Is sur
vived by her daughter, Mrs. John F.
Adam, with whom she made her
, .""v
Be Sure to Buy Liberty Bonds
' ■' ' i '
■ :
28-30-32 North Third Street
ill - ' IP
tm ' '■■■ L*
Will Hold a Very Special Sale, Saturday
One Day tj|
250 Women's and Misses' Suits
Taken From Our R
§ at HALF PRICE
ipii. ' • • %
•;,;
Comprising The Fashionable Wool Materials
and Including Silk Suits
This sale is occasioned bv the fact that we have had a remarkable
"suit" season and there are broken size lines which we desire to dispose
m " of quickly. The fact that these garments are taken from our regular
lines and not specially purchased for a "sale" will appeal to those who
desire to wear Schleisner ready-to-ivear but have waited for an unusual
' #
opportunity such as this.
11l . • ■ * 16
if.':"
ON ACCOUNT OF THE EXTREMELY LOW PRICES NONE WILL
BE SENT C. O. D., CHARGED OR RESERVED AND NONE EX
•• • i CHANGED—AS WE WISH TO MAKE ALL TRANSACTIONS FINAL
• v. r~." >• '"ST ■, ■ t r ' v tc> ..
t • *■ " ~ v , , -n
M"\" I t ~. \- - ,v --i-msv .
APRIL 26, 1918.
home and two sons, Otto and Henry,
both of New York City. The- body
will be taken to-morrow to the home
of one of the sons In New York. City,
where services will be held Tuesday
afternoon by the Rev. Mr. Brehm, at
St. Lucas' Reformed Church. Burial
will he made In St. John's Lutheran
Cemetery, New Y'ork. No services
will he held at the Mechanicßburg
home, but the body can be viewed by
friends this evening.