2 TIMELY NEWS OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA AND CITY'S SUBURBS 10,000 EXPECTED AT BLAIN PICNIC jiteresting Program For the Perry County Homecoming at Sherman's Park Rlaln. Pa., Aug. 9.—Despite the war and many other diverting in fluences. large crowds are expected to be in attendance to-morrow at '.he sixty-fifth annual Perry county nome-oomins reunion and Blain pic nic. Ordinarily, a two-day event, this year's affair will be of but a single day duration. It will be held t Sherman's Park, near Blain. Ten .housand persons are expected to be an the grounds. Special trains will be run from Newport and New Ger-i tnantown bv tlie Newport and Sher-j nan's Valley Kailroad. Senator E. E. Beidleman, of Har-' risburg, Republican cartdidato for lieutenant-governor, will be the principal speaker. John S. Eby, of! Newport, Peiry county representa-i live in the state Legislature, during! the past two terms, and ex-Judge; James W. Sim 11. of New Bloonifleld,! will also he on the program. An in teresting program of entertainments! has been provided. Duncannon base- j ball team will play with Blain for; the county's baseball supremacy. | A REMARKABLE NEW PAIN KILLER ■Wonderful 20Ui Century Liniment 1 Stops Rheumatic and AU Other i Pains Surely and SpwiUly Those sharp, agonizing twinges, ore almost instantly relieved by the temarkable new pain killer and rheumatic remedy, 20th Century: Liniment. Just rub it on—that's oil. Acts like magic. Xo hot water bath needed. You simply apply it direct from the bottle. Its positive, quick action in all rases of Rheumatism, Lumbago. Neuralgia. Backache, etc., proves 20th Century Liniment to be the sworn enemy of all pain. It's the finest preparation in the world for j soothing sprains and bruises. Try it. i Just the thing for your* tired, aeh- i ing, burning feet. Takes out all : soreness and pain, leaving them' fresh, cool and comfortable. Take a bottle home to-night and enjoy genuine foot comfort. There's no need to nurse pain when vou can I get quick relief at the nearest drug j store. Your druggist can supply! you. Foch—Master Strategist Blasts German Hopes German strategy, like the Marne salient, presents a diminished front as the result of Foch's I July counter-offensive, brilliantly aided by General Haig, and our own Gentral Pershing with his fighting Americans. Even the Frankfurter Zeitung admits that "Foch's attack threatens the whole of Hindenburg's plans," and this admission is interpreted by the Philadelphia North American to mean "that the most ambitious of Germany's 1918 offensives has collapsed, and that the invaders, weakened in fighting strength, in morale and in prestige, must laboriously build uj the structure of a new campaign." And, as further foreshadowing Germany's doom, a'corre spondent of the Amsterdam Handelsblatt says, ''from America issues a force against which no European nation can stand. It is a gigantic force which is developing calmly and scientfically. The German people have not seen what I have seen." To gain a succinct and accurate knowledge of the great victory of the allies in the Marne salient, its initiative, its progress, and what it augurs for the future, you should read the leading article in THE LITERARY DIGEST for August 10th. It is accompanied by a full-page map which clearly visualizes the present battle line, and the towns, villages, rivers, woods, etc., through which the Allied forces have fought during the past thirty days. Other features f uncommon interest in this number of "The Digest" are: Fiddling While Russia Burns What We Do in Russia Must Be Done Quickly If We Would Save That Country and Defeat Germany, Is the Opinion of the American Press Pro-German Raincoats Can a League of Nations Work? I Germany Has "The Glooms" How They Robbed Roumania An American Gun That Stops German 1 anks Cocoanut Products a New American About Grapefruit Industry To Make Shoppers Stop Crowding shall We Be 01d at 2 o? Workers Off the Cars Qur Wa „ e of Sulfur Our Fighting Heart in Song A Sculptor Who Records History The French Children s Playground Roumania's Art Wealth Tobacco and Pugilism in the Army Pointing the Way to the Pulpit The Best of the Current Poetry Talks to Householders on Saving Fuel Personal Glimpses of Men and Events | News of Finance and Commerce Striking Illustrations, Including Maps and the Best Cartoons Get the Splendid Picture of General Pershing On the cover of this week's LITERARY mounting and framing. As there will doubt- DIGEST is a reproduction in colors of a recent .less be a very great demand for this number of and by far the best painting of General Perstf- the "Digest", and under present conditions mg that has yet been made. It is of a size few extra copies printed, it is advisable to and finish that make it especially suitable for buy your copy from the news-dealer today. August 10th Number on Sale Today—All News-dealers—lo Cents p FUNK& WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publiher of the Famoia NEW Standard Dictionary). NEW YORK FRIDAY EVENING, | Dr. J. T. Burnite Presides j at Medical Society Meeting ( ' Columbia, Pa., Aug. 9.—The Central 1 Pennsylvania Homeopathic Medical . Society held their quarterly session I In the room of the Merchants' and j Manufacturers' Association this after noon with Dr.*J. T. Burnite, of Har-' risburg. the president, in the chair, j I After the transaction the regular I 'j business, the members listened to an j address by Dr. William A. Pearson, \ 1 dean of the Hahnemann Medical Col- i ; lege, Philadelphia, who gave an in teresting insight of the work that is being done by' the Homeopathic phy sicians in the present war. He stated ! that fifteen hundred of their number j were in the service and that the num- | • ber included two brigadier general*, j 1 ! Dr. W. A. Streeter, of Harrisburg, j read an interesting paper on "Leu- ; j Kenia," and Dr. Ralph Bernstein, of , i Philadelphia, a native of Columbia, j i made a brief address. The reading i | of the paper of Dx. C. S. Snyder, of i ,i Lancaster, was deferred until the I (October meeting. Dr. J. H. Kreider, ! lof Harrisburg, presented a patient j ] before the society and gave somt in- ■ | teresting remarks. Dr. S. S. Mann, j !of Columbia, gave a talk on post ; | mortem examinations, and Dr. Rear- j 1 son closed with the statement of the I probable requirements for entry into j medical colleges, and urged the tak- ; j ing up of medical studies. | This organization comprises Lan- ; caster. Dauphin and York counties I and it was decided to hold* the next j quarterly meeting the second Thurs j day in October at Lancaster. Those in attendance at the meeting were: Dr. Pearson, Dr. Bernstein, Philadel | phia; Dr. W. A. Streeter, Dr. Burnite. j Dr. G. W. Hartman, Dr. J. Ross i j Swartz. Dr. Kreider. Harrisburg; Dr.; ! Ursprung, Dr. E. S. Snyder. Lancaster, Dr. H. H. Rhodes. Middletown; Dr. f . R. O. Diehl, Manheim: Dr. L H. Hen drixson. New Holland, and Drs. I. L ' I Moyer. S. S. Mann and G. P. Taylor. ! Columbia. ! : A Single Application Will Banish Objectionable Hairs (Aids to Beauty) Here Is a home treatment for re- j I moving hairs that is quick, painless and inexpensive: With some pow- I dered delatone and water make j | enough paste to thickly cover the j ! objectionable hairs, apply and after j ] two or three minutes rub off. wash , the skin and it will be left soft, i I c lear and hairless. This treatment; j will not mar the skin, but to avoid j 1 disappointment, be careful to getj real delatone. OLD CONSTABLE FREEDBY JURY | Verdict in Favor of Jacob : Sterner, Who Killed Man in Effort to Arrest Him Xew Bloonifleld, Pa.. Aug. 9. Tottering and feeble, Jacob Sterner, i the 78-year-old Duncannon con stable, charged with manslaughter, was acquitted by a Perry county jury late last evening after being on j trial throughout the entire day. Ster ! ner shot to death Russell McKelvey I last February. True bills on counts of voluntary [ I manslaughter and Involuntary man j slaughter were found against Sterner; on Monday morning by the Perryj I county grand jury and the oaso was! 1 scheduled for trial on Wednesday! : morning. Because of the intense! heat, however, it was postponed un- j til yesterday morning. The jury had been selected when the case was called for trial yester- i day morning. After an argument j lasting throughout the entire day, 1 Judge Keller delivered the charge J to the jury at 6 o'clock last eve- j ning. Tho verdict was returned ?f- j ter several hours' deliberation. Ex-, I Judge James W. Shull and James i iM. Barnett defended Sterner, Dis- i j trict Attorney James M. McKee tind j George 11. Barnett were in charge! of the prosecution. , The fatal shooting for which Ster- ! ner was tried occurred last February, I j when he endeavored to place Russell I ; McKelvey under arrest. McKelvey was wanted for a serious crime and! ; several times Sterner had endeavor- j | t'd to execute the warrant, but Mc- j Kelvcy Ignored him and walked off.; 1 The officer did not have the strength j | to make the arrest forcibly and when f McKelvey endeavored to pursue his' (Previous tactics on February 15,| i Sterner became angry and overly- i ! excited and drew his revolver. Mc-j Kelvev died within a short time after i being shot. ROB HOME OF BI'RGESS Hummclstown, Pa., Aug. 9. j Thieves gained entrance to the home! of Chief Burgess Fox, in | South Hanover street, last night and j stole two watches and a sum ofi money. Some of Mr. Fox's clothing l was found about a half square away I DRAFT MEN SENT HOME Now liloomfield, Pa., Aug. 9.—; Twenty-one of the seventy-three men i who left Nc-w 'Bloomfield several : weeks ago in the Perry county draft contingent to go to Camp Lee, Pe- j tersburg. Va.. have been sent home, disqualified for military service. I HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Demonstration of Farm Tractors at Grange Picnic Halifax, Pa.. Aug. 9.—Swelgarts' j Grove at Matamoras wllj be the scene j of a big: gathering to-morrow when j the ninth annual gathering of Hall fax Grange No. 1343. will be held. At 10 there will be demonstrations with farm tractors plowing ground and alno cultivating corn in a field near the grove. W. S. Schell, of Har risburg, will demonstrate the Moline i tractor and the Harrisburg Auto I Company, the Cleveland Caterpillar | i tractor. In the afternoon addresses will be made by Fred Brenckman. of | Harrisburg. chairman of the Grange I Legislative Committee, and by Mrs. | Susan Benn. of WUliamsport State j Agricultural Society. COMMUNITY SINGING Halifax. #n.. Aug. 9.—Community j I singing will be held to-morrow eve- I ! ring on the lawn at the homo ot I C. C. Baker in North Second street, j Familiar patriotic hymns will boj I sung. This is purely a community gathering and the people of the sur | rounding country are urged to take I part. SHOPS RESUME OPERATIONS Columbia, Pa.. Aug. 9.—The Colonial j Foundry and Machine shops, owned | by J. E. Baker and Company, which 1 had been idle for the past six weeks, ! will* resume operations. Monday, Au ' gust 12. Eugene Andes, of Lancaster, j will take charge as superintendent, ' succeeding James A. Constantine, who j has taken a position with a New York ! concern. The new superintendent has j been in charge of a foundry at Balti | more. ENROLL AS STI'DENT NURSES Columbia. Pa., Aug. 9. —Eleven i j young women enrolled, at a meeting j i held at the Nurses' Home, as stu- j | dents in a course of hygiene and the (home care of sick which has b*ei\ started in Columbia. Miss Blanche Dickinson, superintendent, delivered j lan address, outlining the work. j NINETEEN GO TO CAMP j New, Hloomtie'd, Pa.. Aug. 9. 1 Nineteen men made up the Perry I I county ilraft contingent that left New j i Bloomfielrt last evening, bound for j Camp Wadsworth, Spartanburg, S. j |C. The men reported here yesterday j | morning and in the late afternoon ' went by the way of Duncannon to j | Harrisburg. Each man was present-; ! cd with a comfort kit, a testament \ \ and a smlleage book. j TRACKMAN KILLED BY HEAT Columbia, Pa., Aug. 9. —John Dunn, j ■ a Pennsylvania railroad trackman. , was overcome by the heat while at I j work and taken to the Columbia Hos j pital, where he died a few hours [ later. He was 46 years old. Cumberland Valley BABY SAVING AT MECHANICSBURG Big Show in Charge of Child Welfare Committee Opens in High School Building MovhanicsKurg. Pa., Aug. 9.—An ■ interesting program is arranged for | the Baby Saving Show to be held this .afternoon and evening and to-mor- I row under the direction of the Child .Welfare Committee in the High I school building from 3 to 5 and 7.30 | o'clock. The following addresses will be given this evening: "Child Welfare Work," Dr. Harvey B. Bashore, county medical inspector, Pennsyl vania Department of Health: "Tuber culosis in Belation to Child Life," Dr. Karl Schafflc, chief of division of dispensaries. Pennsylvania Depart ment of Health. Saturday evening. August 10, "Clean Milk." Dr. William Hughes. Harrisburg. Department of Health: address. Dr. John M. Baunick. di rector of public health, city of Har risburg. A feature of the evening will be the music, which Includes a male quartet and the girls' orchestra, un der the direction of Mrs* Tolbert Beitzel. The state nurse. Miss Lucy Shellenherger. and Miss Lawsen will i measure and weigh the babies. Mrs. i R. W. Hurst and Mrs. S. E. Base hore. will have charge of the nursery. Mrs. J. V. Miller and Miss Harry Sny der will have charge of the depart ment of proper foods and medicines for babies < CORONER DECIDES MRS. MOON'S | DEATH WAS BY HER OWN HAND I Waynesboro, Pa., Aug. 9.—Relatives j of Mrs. Ellen S. Moon, who committed j suicide on Tuesday evening by shoot- I ing a_ bullet through her head, de | cided that they would like to have an inquest over ner death, so Coroner J. H. Kinter, of Chambersburg. came here and selected a jury for that pur j nose. The jury viewed' the body and I found' that instead of the bullet en | tering the woman's nose, as was first | reported, the ball had entered the j back of her head, making it look as | though the womafi had been foully dealt with. Upon investigating fur } ther and hearing the testimony of i several witnesses, however, it was I decided that she met death by her I own hand. SERGEANT IN HARD FIGHTING ■\Vayne*b®"o, Pa., Aug. 9.—Twenty eight days of hard fighting around Chateau Thierry and having his com mand of men reduced from 15 to 8 I was the experience of Sergeant George E. Parkell, a well-known ! young ma* of Waynesboro, who has j been In the battle since last June, j In a letter to friends here, Mr. Par | kell says: "It has been a long time | since I have written, but I assure i you It could not very well be helped. NEW HOUSE SOLD Mechanlcsburpr, Pa, Aug. 9.—The recently built frame house located at No. 5 East Mable street and own j ed by David S. Reeser was sold yes j terday to John L. Johnson, of Som erset, who will soon take possession. The sale was made through the agency of Happle & Swartz. J. D. ZIMMERMAN DIES j * Carlisle, Pa.. Aug. 9.—John D. ; Zimmerman, widely known as a | butcher, died at his home here yes terday, aged 67 years He has been |in business for over fifty years. His | wife and tl)ree children survive. RED CROSS SHIPMENTS Liverpool, Pa.. Aug. 9.—Liverpool j Red Cross branch shipped yesterday ( to the Harrisburg chapter ,120 cot-' ton pads, 125 compresses, and 90 j wipes 4x4. This month the members j expect to put on "full steam" and I turn out the allotment of 450 sur- ' | gical dressings and 25 hospital gar j ments beside mending army clothes j which are shipped here from the I i Harrisburg chapter in bundles of \ I ten each. BIRTH ANNOUNCEMENTS Dauphin, Pa.. Aug. 9. —Mr. and Mrs. j J. Monroe Procter, of El Paso. Texas, ! announce the birth of a daughter, i Tuesday, August 6. Mrs. Procter, be fore her marriage, 'was Miss Eliza- I beth Simmons, daughter of Mr. and j Mrs. Harvey Simmons, former resi- I dents of Dauphin. i Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee announce the birth oC a son, Woodrow, Monday, August 5, 1918. ENTERTAINS S. S. CLASS Liverpool, Pa., Aug. 9.—Mrs. Jennlft Coulter entertained her mother's Mrs. Sarah Rowe's Sunday school ! class at their home on Wednesday I evening from Bto 10. Mrs. Rowe has | been failing in health for some time j and this was a pleasant surprise on her sixty-sixth birthday. Covers were laid for twenty. Suburban Notes HUMMELSTOWN Howtrd Holsberg, who enlisted In the naval reserves some time ago, i left this morning for Wissahlckon I Barracks. Cape May, N. J. I Miss Leta Httz returned honJe yes j terday after spending several weeks at Trenton, N. J. ] Mrs. John Search and daughter, ot I Harrisburg, spent yesterday with Mis sEmma Cassel. Charles Smith, of Philadelphia, is spending some time with friends here. \ LIVERPOOL Ex-Judge Shull and J. M. Barnett, of New Bloomtleld, were recent cal lers at F. P. Dilley'a. M. J. Shure. of Northumberland," | visited here with his father, J. D. Shure. | Miss Caroline Mitchell Is a guest | at a houseparty given by hei* col ! lege chum. Miss Anna Staufler at Palmyra. Mrs. J. Park Holman visited the Rev. G. W. Rothermel and family at Elixabethvllle. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Berlin and baby daughter, of New Cumberland, were visitors at R. L Shumaker'a. Miss Ethel Bryan and a Miss Myrtle MacLeod, of Bellefonte* are spend- | ing the week here with Mr. and Mrs. i L J. Erlenmyer. Miss Alma Lutz has gone to Har risburg, where ahe has secured em ployment. Frank P. Potter and Harry Deck ard made a trip to Buffalo, N. Y. Mr. and Mrs. David Roush and daughter, Gertrude, Mrs. Fink, Mrs. J. 8. Turner and Miss Susie Shu- | maker, of Harrisburg, were visitors; at Jacob Gleat's. Mechanicsburg Officer With Rainbow Division Chief Surgeon of Corps LIEUT.-COL J. W. GRISSINGER MeelianlcMburK, Pa, Aug. 9.—Honor in the way of well-deserved promo tion in the United States Army has j come to Col. J. Weis Grissinger, in France, through being ranked Chief Surgeon of the First Army Corps. A letter last week to his wife, who with two sons, is spending some time in Mechanicsburg with her father. John M. Underwood, contained the in formation. Colonel Grissinger, who is a native born Mechanicsburger, has many friends here and in the vicinity, who rejoice with and congratulate him. He is the son of the late Theodore Grissinger, a graduate of the Me chanicsburg High School and the Uni versity of Pennsylvania. Philadel phia. Following the medical profes sion. he located at York* where he practiced two years prior to joining the United States Army as surgeon in 1902. He was located for about six ! months at Fort Totton, N. Y., and from there went to the Army Medi cal School at Washington, D. C. In the spring of 1903. the government sent him to the Philippine Islands. After two and one-half years, he was returned to the United States and lo cated at Fort Jay, Governor's Island, N. Y.. Fort War/en, Boston, Mass., and Fort Ethan Allen, Vt., respec tively. Another big move took him to Alaska for two years, then Fort Des Moines, lowa, and finally to the Soldiers' Home at Washington, D. C., where he. ranked as major. With the entrance of America into the world war. Dr. Grissinger sailed for France as chief surgeon of the Rainbow Division, with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. His work in France gained him the rank of colonel in less than one year and now comes the news of an added honor in his promotion to chief surgeon of the First Army Corps, an office bringing heavy responsibilities and requiring clear judgment in developing the highest efficiency in hospital and medical work. This will give Colonel Grissinger an opportunity to bring into play his splendid qualities for < organization, of which in all his army work in the past he has made marked success. "Bolshevik Rule Over," Says New Government , Knnduluska, Russian Lapland, Aug. 9.—The government of the "Courftry of the North," recently es tablished at Archangel after a revo lution against the Bolsheviki, has addressed a proclamation to the peo ple of the district, declaring the Bolshevik regime at an end and an nouncing that the new government has taken up the duty of governing the region. JUNIOR CLASS PICNIC Shlremaantown, Pa., Aug. 9.—Miss Emily Strong, teacher of Class No. 3, of the primary department of the United Brethren Sunday school, treat ed the youngster to a picnic at Orrs' bridge on Wednesday. Boating, canoeing and a basket luncheon were features of the outing enjoyed by: Miss Roberta Strong, Miss Elsie Strong. Miss Emily Strong. Pearl Zimmerman, Blanche Fisher, Kathryn Fisher, Lilly Blgler, Ronjaine Miller. Mae Pauline Miller and Charlotte Starr. THERMOMETER BURSTS Lemoyne, Pa„ Aug. 9.—The heat was so intense at the Cumberland Valley Railroad station here on Wed nesday that the thermometer regis tered its capacity and then broke. According employes at the office they looked at the heat register at 1 o'clock and about fifteen minutes later when they went to see how hot it was the mercury was running out of the top. The thermometer was placed in a position where the rays of the sun struck it directly. ST. JOHN'S CHURCH CLOSED Shlrcmaaatonn, Pa., Aug. 9. Usual Sunday morning service held at St. John's in the country will be omitted next Sunday and the fol ' lowing Sunday. During the month of August the evening service is omit ted. The morning service at St. John's will be resumed the last Sun day of August. The session of the Bible school will continue during the month. Lunch-time is Toastie time POSTTOASTIES Choicest Of Corn Foods 'AUGUST 9, M. W. Britcher, Well-Known Dillsburg Druggist, Dies Dillsbtirg, p a ., Aug. 9.—M. W. Britcher,druggist died at his home in South Baltimore street, Wednes day evening after a short illness. He was a member of the Presbyterian Church and of the F. A. U„ formerly the Heptunophs. He was a Mason of high standing, a mqjnber of Lodge No. 302, F. and A. M., at Mechanics burg. He was also a member of Harrisburg Consistory, thirty-second degree, and an A. A. O. N. M. S. of Zenibo Temple. Harrisburg He has been practically a life-long resident of Dillsburg lie entered the drug store here when a young man and afterward became its owner. He is survived by his wife, his parents, Mr. and Mrs, George L. Britcher. and three sisters, Mrs. C. Benjamin Segel ken. of Steelton: Mrs. H. E. En sminger and Miss Grace Britcher, of Dillsburg. Funeral services will be held to-morrow afternoon at 2 o clock. Burial In the Dillsburg Cemetery. Draft Men Given Sendoif When Leaving Carlisle Carlisle, Pa„ Aug. 9.—Residents were here from all parts of Cum berland, county to-day to take part in a demonstration in honor of the I fifty selected men from the two dis- Mcts jvho entrained for Camp Wadsworth. Spartanburg, South if r0 " nH ' '^' lcre was a meeting for u nion they were escorted to the depot by several platoons of Home Defense Guards. The meeting was held in tho courthouse with former Sheriff Al fred Greenwood of No. 2 board pre siding. Addresses were made by John D. Fa Her, of Meehanicsburg, explaining the war risk insurance, allotment planrf and Red Cross work, and Fillmore Maust, who made an inspiring patriotic address. Testa ments were presented by Dr. E. A Shulenbejger, of Carlisle. ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED < arlislc. Pa., Aug. 9.—Announce ment was made to-day of the en gagement of Lieutenant Carl F Gehring, of Carlisle, to Miss Sara Elsie Keepfer, of Greencastle. The. wedding will take place on the re turn of Lieutenant Gehring from France. Miss Klepfer is a daughter of the Rev. Dr. and Mrs. George M. Klepfer, the former being some years ago pastor of the Methodist Church here. Miss Klepfer is now probation officer of Franklin county. Lieutenant Gehring is a son of Mr. and Mrs. A. Gehring, of Carlisle, and is a Dickinson graduate. lyE" F7T." • __ i if jj Tell it to me— | Cf That's' what we're doing, and you'll be >'i mighty glad we have told it to you when you M see what excellent suits we are selling in our ffs $lO Suit Sale 1 || • 111 fl[ Sometimes a 'fellow reads an advertisement | and wonders if clothes can be sold at the • ffl prices in print. But then, again, there are || fellows who go to the store—SCHLEIS- 111 NER'S MEN'S SHOP—and GET the suits % that are advertised and thereby save some j|| good American money for themselves. II 11 ifll • || Q This is one of those advertisements of a suit p sale that simply has to be heeded at once, for l : l we have put into this sale a large group of our || | $12.50 and sls Kool Kloth Suits 1 || at this price—-$lO. J i|j *! Are you going to own one of these suits jjj || within the next twenty-four hours? |j j Schleisner's Mens Shop I | 28-30-32 North Third Street || SELEOTED FOR SERVICE Dlllsburg, Pa., Aug. 9.-r-Ray Klugh, son of S. H. Klugh, who had been passed by the draft examining board some time ago, has been ac cepted hh a clerk In the Medical Corps of the United States Army and has gone to Washington, D. C.. • where he will be located Indefinitely. HOMES STRUCK BY MOHTNINO Wnynuboro, Pa., Aug. 9.—During the rain and electrical si.orm that passed over Waynesboro on Wednes day night the homes of Harry Pelf fer, John Shockey and James Star liper, were struck by lightning. BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. Druggists refund money if it fails. 25c I Day And NIGHT SCHOOL! Open all Year GREGG OR PITMAN I SHORTHAND, TYPE- ■ WRITING, BOOKKEEP. ■ ING, CIVIL SERVICE ETC. -■ START or CONTINUE ■ y#ur course NOW. We save I you time and make you I more thorough. ' Beckley's OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL I Several prominent educa- I tors recently said, "It's the I only really modern Business I ■| School in Harrisburg." Charles R. Beckley, Principal 121 Market Street | Bell 91R Dial 4010 J f TMrin II >• m. i A*Jk C CORNS ■ V wJa II ■ BUNIONS CALLUSES • Immediate Relief —25 cents ; GORGAS DRUG STORES t i i n UNDERTAKER ITU Chas. H. Mauk Vcm? 1 " 1 PRIVATE AMBULANCE PHONES
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers