2 NEWS OF CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA AND CITY'S SUBURBS CUMBERLAND VALLEY IBE MS THEATER OUTFIT MOVES AT NIGHT Partner in Waynesboro Pie-1 ture Finn 'Beats Them to II j During Disagreement Waynesboro, Pa„ Dec. 10. —When | Mr. Watson, a member of the firm ot', Daley & Watson, properitors ot the : IJberty thovie picture theater, went I Into the building yesterday morning, I he found that themoving picture ma-| chines, with equipment, electric fans and the piano, had been moved out ■ some time between Saturday night at [ 12 o'clock and Monday morning at j S o'clock. Upon investigation it was I lcarncx! thut Mr. Daley had been re- 1 sponsible for the unusual Hitting. Mr. Daley said there had been an argu ment over the ownesliip of the prop erty and learning that Mr. Watson und. the owner of the theater were intending to "put him out" Monday! morning, he "beat them to it," and had the picture outfit moved over the , Mason-Dixon line into Maryland. I white the piano was placed elsewhere i in town. As a consequence of the j affair there was a dark house last; night, but it is said that Mr. Watson | will soon reopeh the picture house for business. 1. FRANK UtTTON DIES Netvvllle. Pa., Dec. I". B. Frank ! Hutton, of Newville. died at the lionil ! of his daughter, Mrs. John Handshaw, at Harrisburg, on Sunday morning, ; aged 75 years. Besides his wife he is survived by six children, Mrs. 11. M. Shulenberger and Mrs. Edward ; Shatter, of Newville; Mrs. John Felix, s Mrs. Harry Snyder, and Edward Hut ton, ot Carlisle, and Mrs, Handshaw, ] of Harrisburg. The body will be | brought to Newville, and short fu- ] neral services will be held at his homo in Big Spring avenue to-mor row afternoon at two o'clock. Bur- j lal will be made in Prospect Hill j cemetery. • MOKE CASUALTIES REPORTED Carlisle, Pa.. Deo. 10.—Additional 1 casualties among Cumberland county J men in the closing days of the wal continue to be reported. Mrs. Jacob j M. Richwine, of Hunters' Run has i been Informed that her son, Clair G. i Richwine. of Company G, One Hun- 1 died and Twelfth Regiment, died of influenza in France. He was 21 years old. Relatives here have also learned of , tiie death in action of John S. Thomp- , son. a member of Company A. Elev enth Infantry, on November 5. He 1 was 2a years old and was selected : about one year ago. He was formerly In the coal business here. I'OI NI) DEAD ALONG RAILROAD] W aynesboro, Pa., Dec. 10.—The | body of John Carney, of Edenville, • this county, was found yesterday j morning along the tracks of the, Western Maryland Railway Co., be- • iween Midvale and the Shockey sta-j tion. The man had probably been { dead several hours and had died' from heart trouble. The body was • brought to Waynesboro and will be ; Bent to the home of his daughter, \ Mrs. Joseph Deiberl, at Edenville. 1 J-Ie was 60 years old. MISS BERTHA GARVEIt DIES Waynesboro, l'a., Dec. 10. —Miss Ilertha Garver, aged 27 years, daugh- 1 ter of Mr. and Mrs. Amos Garver, j died yesterday of pneumonia. She ] had been employed for a number of I years on the clerical force of Friek 1 Company. She was a member of tile Methodist Episcopal Church and ] Su.'day school. She is survived by; her parents and sisiors. Mrs. Jesse: G. Beard and Miss Fannie Garver. i t TOXSILITIS AT DICKINSON Carlisle. Pa.. Dee. 10.—An epidemic j of tonsilitis has broken out in the I Dickinson Students Army Training Corps and efforts are being made to ! stop its spread. South College lias ] been litted up as an infirmary by or- i ders of Commandant Hitchler and the ' Red Cross ofllcials of the General! Hospital here are co-operating in tlie j care of the men. So far 30 cases, have been reported and are under ' treatment. BIG CLASS INITIATED Danville, Pu„ Dec. 10.—One liun- : dred and eighteen new members were initiated into Danville lodge. No. 10, Jr. O. U. A. M. It was tliT* lurgest single class in the history of the organization. 1 I .Ask for .... POST TOASTIES not just Wt). flakes, I if you care for a more 1 excellent flavor and thehappu satisfaction p II Ji i* oi a real meal . I TUESDAY EVENING, HARRMBttro CTPQg TELEGRAPH u DECEMBER 10, 1918. FIRST DEATH IN FAMILY OF 18 Mrs. Alice Dunkleberger, of j | Newville, Survived by Many j Brothers and Sisters Newville. Pa., Dee. 10.—Mrs. Alice j Dunkleberger died at her home in ' Parsonage street, on Monday morn j ing. Mrs. Dunkleberger was a mem | bet- of 7Aon Lutheran Church, and is survived by two sons, Samue Dunkle berger, in France, and John Dunlcle | berger, of Newville: also her father, i ! Samuel Snyder, of near Newville, and seventeen brothers and sisters. Mrs. | Dunkleberger's death was the first I out of a family of eighteen children, i Funeral services will be held on Thursday morning at 11 o'clock, and I burial will bo made in Prospect Hill cemetery. Col. Bobb's Estate to Be Divided Under Second Will I Ca-IUIe, Pa., Dec. 10.—Some inter ! esting cases marked the opening of j the session of Common Pleas Court : here. Heirs of the late Lieutenant ! Colonel John B. Bobb, Civil War vet eran and long time state employe, ; who died while teaching a Sunday ! school class, entered in an action to | determine which was the authentic i will. One will wns found after the I I other was probated, tho first giving! | a life interest to his widow and J 1 shares to his five children and the | second the estate went to his wife j i and daughters. The jury decided; | that the second was the one under I i which the estate should be adjusted, i Levi 1. Weast, a Shtppensburg deal- I j cr, won a verdict of $742.86 from the! I Adams Express Company for ship- | i ments of turkeys and chickens, nl- j j leged to have been held so long in ! , transit that they were unlit for use. j The case of Rolln B. Baker against, 'R. E. Swart z was also heard. The! I latter had agreed to sell his farm fori j SIB,OOO. SI,OOO hand money had been' i paid cud the Enle fell through. Suit j i was entered to have the amount given [ ' to bind the agreement returned. Labor in Penna. Is Yet Not Equal to the Demand Washington, Dee. 10.—Labor con-! ditions are everywhere good in Penn- ! ! sylvania. according to the first week- i ' ly report on the subject issued by the i : United States employment service.! Department of Labor. By "good" i - the report evidently means that there is a grave shortage of labor instead i of a surplus, for it specifies such j i shortages In Philadelphia, Harris- I burg. Pittsburgh and Scranton. The • report on Pennsylvania follows: j "Pennsylvania, which had many j war contracts of great magnitude, j : reports the situation good every- j | wit ere. Big industrial centers like; ! Philadelphia, Pittsburgh and Harris | burg, report heavy shortages in la- | ; bor. with the supply nowhere equal-] ■ ing the demand. i | YOUNG WOMAN HURT i I.cwlstown, Pa., Dec. 10.—Miss' Helen Herbster, of this place, as sistant instructor of music at Juniata College, Huntingdon, while taking 'part in sports in company with,a I ; number of girl friends, slipped and J j falling heavily upon a hardwood | i floor, injured her spine. Her parents, ; i Mr. and Mrs. W T . H. Herbster, receiv- | , od a message to come to the college i ] at once us her condition was serious, j • She is now at her home here. CHRIST4I AH CI.I II CHECKS i Halifax, Pa., Dec. 10.—Within the j | next few days members of the 19181 i Christmas Savings Club of the Hall- I i fax National bank will receive checks ' I for tiie amount paid in during the' 1 year, plus interest. Over $4,000 will I bo paid out. The bank will open its j j new club, December 23. ! AIRS. SI'SAN WILLI DIES I Liverpool, Dec. 10. —Mrs. Susan j Willi, of Perry Valley, sister of ] George C. Hoffman. . died Sunday' j night of dropsy from which she has j I been a sufferer for a long time. j PRAYER MEETING AT IIO&E ' j Dauphin, Pa., Dec. 10.—Union prayer meeting of tho Methodist and •Presbyterian churches will be held Wednesday evening at the home of I W. u. Garverich. i MOVE TO ENLARGE; : U.S. HOSPITAL L , „ ! j Carlisle Chamber of Com-, mcrcc Asks War Depart ment to Provide Beds i Carlisle, Pu., Dec. 10.—A movement ( i lias been launched by the Carlisle j Chamber of Commerce to have the j facilities of the General Hospital here. ' i formerly the famous Carlisle Indian | School, extended to care for all of the sick and wounded from this section |of Pennsylvania. At least 2,000 beds, in addition to the accommoda tions for 600 nearly completed, should be arranged for, It Is pointed out. Pennsylvania troops suffered heav ily and Carlisle has many advantages 'of location. The matter has been al ready presented to ,all Pennsylvania Congressmen and Senators and other influential representatives of the section at Washington and a number j have endorsed it. Congressman Kreider is giving his support. FORMER PROTHONOTARY DIES Carlisle, Pa., Dec. 10.—After a pro tracted illness, Lewis Masenheimer, former county prothonotary. a lead ing merchant here some years ago and B veteran of the Civil War, died at the home of his daughter hero, aged 78 years. He was born at Waynesboro but spent the greater part of his life in Cumberland county. ! He was In the grocery business here i for some years, for eight years deputy ' prothonotary and held the office of ' prothonotary for one term. He was a corporal in Company A, One Hun l dred and Thirtieth Regiment, in the j Civil War. He was teller of the old j Merchant's National bank and active I I in fraternal and religious eiholes. j AIRS. CHARI.ES COXEN DIES I Dillsbtirg, Pa., Charles Coxen elietl at her home j ! about a mile west of Dillsburg on I ) Saturday evening from heart disease. I | She was 4 8 years old und is survived !by her husband and tive children, j Noah Heiges. of Shlremanstown; Mrs. Niles Cook, of Carroll town- I ship; Mrs. Earl Beam, of Monroe ! township. Cumberland County; j Laura Ditmer, of Dillsburg. and j Grace Coxen, at also her ■ father, Michael Berklieimer, of | Franklin township, and three sisters land one brother, Robert, of Seattle, | ! Washington, Mrs. Frank Ware, of; Philadelphia; Mrs. Charles Hnmil- j • ton, of York Springs, and Jacob j ! King, of Franklin township. Ftt ' neral services will be held to-mor- I ; row afternoon at 2 o'clock. j SOLDIERS REPORTED W OUNDED i .Mount Wolf, Pa., Dec. 10. —The ! names of Private Roy S. Diehl, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Diehl, of Mount Wolf, and Private Roy E. j Fink, married, and son of Andrew ' 1 Fink, of Strinestown, Conewago j township, appear on the casualty list I to-day. Both young heroes were.of- j i ficially reported as being wounded, . i degree undetermined. LOWE-BOWMAN WEDDING Ilnlirnx, Pa., Dec. 10.—Miss Kath- I ! ryn Bowman, a daughter, of Mr. and ! I Mrs. Daniel W. Bowman, of Halifax I i township, and Cameron Lowe. of i Rockville, were married on Saturday ! evening by the Rev. Ira D. Lowery, at ' the parsonage of the Halifax United ] I Brethren Church. | ! I WAR VETERAN" DROPS DEAD Liverpool, Dee. 10.—While work j ing round the house yesterday Ab ! sulom Gougler, aged SO years, a life ] long resident of Liverpool township, , j and a veteran of the Civil War, ] dropped dead. Services were held ! j to-day aj tiie McKee's Half Fall ; Church, conducted by the Rev. Clyde 1 I W. Sltaeffer. Mr. Gougler is survived | by his wife and two sons, Theodore 'Gougler, of Harrisburg, and Prof. A. j j Gougler, of Middleburg, GIFT SHOP SALE Halifax, Pa., Dec. 10.—Camp Fire . Girls will conduct a gift shop in C. C. j I Baker's storeroom. Third and Mar- | ket streets, on Saturday, from 2 to I 5 p. m. Needlework of all kinds, i I cakes, candies, etc., will he on sale, j KILLED IN FRANCE Danville. Pa., Dec. 10.—A teie ' grant received here announced that Fred J. Mayan, Jr., of Danville, had been killed in France on November 1 9. No details were given. He was attached to the infantry and left i I here on May 29. Merle E. Kunkle, York Co. Miller, Dies of Pneumonia 1 Dillshurg, Pa., Dec. 10. —Merl E. j ] Kunkle, ilied on Saturday evening at '■ j his home at Kunklo's Mill, from i i pneumonia, following influenza. He ! was 35 years old and is survived by' j ids wife, his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ! Jacob 11. Kunkle, and two sisters. | Mrs. M. 1,. Laird, of Alpine, and Mrs. i Mary Firestone, of Kunkle's Mill. | Funeral services were held yesterday [ afternoon at the houso and burial was made in Holler's Church Cento- j | tery. j Mr. Kunkle was the former owner; i of the electric plant here and it was i through his efforts that the Dillsburg | Light. Heat and Power Corporation ; wus organized, which took over the holdings of the former light plant. 1 He was a miller and was operating | Kunkle's mill prior to his death. He was chairman of the Alpine district I of the Fourth Liberty Loan cam-1 I paign. CAR INSPECTOR KILLED I-owlstowii, Pa., Dec. 10.—Thomas lb Dupert was instantly killed a few days ago in the yards of the Ponn- . sylvania Kailroad at Conemaugh. He j was a car inspector and he and four j other inspectors were walking through the yards when a fast train j arrived. The other four men es caped and Mr. Dupert tried to get ! out of the way, but was struck. He j was a son of Mrs. Emma Dupert, j Lewistown, and is survived by his mother, five sisters and three broth ers. HARVEY I''ICR RICE JURIED Millerxburg, Pa,, Dec. 10.—Harvey Ferree, aged ot years, died at the Mary Packer Hospital at .Sunbury on Sunday, after a short illness of para- i lysis. He is survived by a brother Edward Ferree, of Harrisburg. The I funeral took place yesterday after- I noon from/the home of D. \V. Lenker. | with whom lin lived. The ltev. .1. H. ! Musselmun, of the Lutheran Church, j officiating. I.(HIKING FOR FACTORY SITE 1 | lliillfirx, Pa., Dee. 10.—Halifax peo- ( 1 pie are rejoicing in the news that a I ! new industry may be located here. ! j During the past week promoters of a | ! large overall factory visited town | ! and are willing to locate here. They ! j have their eye on the Abram Forten- | j baugh building, corner of Fourth and : Marke# streets, and it is said will j either lease or purchase it. Parti of the building would be used for a j factory and part for an automobile ! garage. Suburban Notes IJALIEX Mr. and Mrs. P. J. Etweiler and I I son were at Duncannon on Sunday ] : attending the funeral of a nephew. | Mr. and Mrs. Edward H. Chubb and daughters, of Miliersburg, were | Sunday guests at the home of Bur j gess and Mrs. 1. F. Chubb. Charles Westfali lias accepted a I position on the railroad at Marys ville. Mrs. John Dressier lias returned t home from a visit to relatives at 1 Miliersburg. j Miss Clara Ettien, of Marysville, I | visited over Sunday at the home I ! of Mr. and Mrs. Edward I.ebo, j j G. A. Still, of Philadelphia, spent Sunday here visiting his sister, Mrs. I |J. M. Howell. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Sheesley, of j J Harrisburg, visited at the home of I Mr. and Mrs. C, E. Knouff on Sun | day. j Mrs. H. B. Spahr, of Harrisburg, ' i wjis tlie guest of her father, John j fifratzer, on Sunday \' Mrs. Fred Essig, of Harrisburg, | i spent Sunday at the home of Mr. j | aifd Mrs. James Straw. Mr. and Mrs. John Sehriver, of; j Elizabethville, spent Sunday at the j home of Mr. and Mrs. George Schri- j , ver. .Albert Meader, of Miliersburg, j spent Sunday at the home of his , ! brother, John Meader. Milk has been advanced from 10 j |to 12 cents per quart by several ! j Halifax dealers, but others have I i refused to ask the increase. Mr. and Mrs. 1. 2. Wagner and ; daughter Helen, who were guests at j j the home of his sister, Mrs. 11. S. j I Potter, left Saturday for their home j lin Washington, D. C. i Mrs. C. K. Bressler, of Philadel- j I phia, is spending some time here | | with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. i j George T. Wert. Miss Grace Koppenheffer spent ! ! the weekend at the home of her j I brother. Clarence C. Koppenheffer, j j at Sunbury. UI'NI'.AN.NON | Mrs. Kate Jenkins, of Lock Haven, j ,is spending some time with her I daughter. Mrs. Thomas E. Winter. j Mrs. Kstella Maxwell, of Harris- . I burg, and Mrs. Charles H. Miller, of i I Enola, spent Sunday as the guests j I of Mrs. Charles Sieg. j The large semimonthly payday al ! I the Duncannon Iron on Saturday put j | considerable money into circulation j during tho'day. The Rev. Mr. Fox. pastor of the i Methodist Episcopal Church, occupied'] the pulpit of the First Presbyterian Church at York on Sunday. William Bothwell is making ex- j tensive to the property on High street, which he purchased recently of tlie Vanfosen estate. LIVERPOOL John Thompson and son, Truman, of Harrisburg. were Sunday visitors here with George Zellet'S and family. Mrs. Miller and two daughters, of Miliersburg, arc visiting at Jesse Wagner's. Mrs. Jean Coulter, a registered nurse, who contracted inliuenza while i nursing patients at the 'fressler's Orphan Home ut Loysvllle, is improv ing and expects to resume her duties at tlie home in a short time. Janet Ulsh, three-year-old • daugh ter of Chief of Police und Mrs. Thomas Uisli, is recovering from u serious spell of sickness. Mrs. Jacob Charles, of Harrisburg, is visiting her sister," Mrs. J. A. Barnes. Mrs. Edward Hoehenbrocht and son, Kercbner, of Harrisburg, is vis iting at G. 1. Zellers. Miss Mary Miller, of Miliersburg, Is visiting with friends in town. DILLSHI RG On Friday at noon the plastered ; celling of the primary fuom In the public school building fell. Fortun ately the pupils had gone home for thftlr noon meal and the room was vacant. Prof. D. B. Baker, the teacher, dismissed school for the rest of the day. John A. Grove and family, of tills place, are spending the week with j Jacob Grove and family at East Ber- ; lin. William Pearson is tlie new em ! ploye at the Weaver livery stable, i Frank, Fiohr is seriously ill at his! I home in Franklin township. Big Leak Cuts OH Water Supply at Hallam Dallam, Dec. 10. —The shortage of '•the water supply in this borough,! 1 which recently had threatened to be come serious, especially in ease of ' fire, lias been solved by the discov ery last week of a large leak In one of the mains. For a period of more than six weeks volumes of water were lost daily through the leak und/ its a result many homes were without a supply at all, while others had to ; use it sparingly. The water short | age had been attributed by officials of the Hallam Water Company to the low condition of the springs. Steps were taken by the company to insure a supply of water in the fu ture for all emergencies by sinking a well near its reservoir. The leak was only discovered after the well had been sunk to a depth of ninety l'eet. The work is still going on. MRS. CLAUDE DKITCII DIES Dauphin, Pu.. Dee. 10.—Word has i been received by friends of the death of Mrs. Elizabeth Deitch, aged 2S years, wife of Claude E. Deitch. at . the home of Iter parents at Williams \ port on Monday. She is survived, be ] sides her husband, by two children, Helen and Rulph. Mr. and Mrs. 1 Deitch moved from Dauphin to Sun j bury about one week ago. SERIOUSLY INJURED Mount Wolf, Pu., Dec. 10.—Albert Robinson, colored, employed at the plant of the Union Stone Company, near here, was seriously injured on Saturday afternoon and is now in the Tonk Hospital. A shovel Robinson had been using caught in a coke pit and suddenly was released, the handle striking hint with consider- I able force in the stomach, in luring j him internally. j ATTORNEY FOR COMMISSION I Solinsgrove. Pa., Dec. 10. —Charles i Bfl Ulrieh, of Sclinsgrove, has been j appointed attorney for the Eastern j State Hospital Commission which ■ will have charge of building a half million dollar state institution here. He will have much to do running j down the titles and attending to oth -1 er legal affairs of tiie big building operations here. 1 SMALL NUMBER OF DEATHS Sclinsgrove, Pu., Dec. 10.—Only ; seven deaths occurred from 176 cases j of influenza quraantined at Sellns- S grove, during the epideipic. , . IJKIA. imtl—gßso UMIKI) ■ ||\HHlSlirit(>. TUISSDAt. lIKtHMBUK 10, 10IS. _ _ l''t)f.M)i:i> IW7I 'Hff Sale of Serge and Poplin Skirts t Fancy models, with llic large pockets and] wide belts, Many in the more tailored models. Braid trimmed; also a few novelty plaids —Navy and black mostly. ) ) lm/ Special at $8.95 Good Warm Winter Coats In Wool Velours, Silvertones, Broadcloths and Plushes. 1 liesc have r \ i large, square shawl collars of Seal, Australian Opossum and Raccoon. All jr v new stock. I. , Special $39.50 and $49.50 BOWMAN'S —Third Floor. * f~ i Manufacturer's Sample Lot of /Ax / / r \ Framed Pictures - Special at Mostly one of a knd, in a choice of subjects and ' t - AAA T T n 1 • r a variety of different fmn.ee. 1 2000 Handkerchiefs BOWMAN'S—Fourth Floor. CONTINUES TOMORROW Universal Rollcall of the ' 69c DOZCII / American Red Cross Our quota from a large manufacturer s cleanup. - §lO December 16 to 23 Every yrar this store gets its share. 1 hey arc MSI known as "irregulars," but good, serviceable qual- VvV 'f .vou haven't the button and ... • , r . , • .. ...„i 1 „„ ,i; f' a that signify membership, ity in a variety ot beautitul patteins as well as tlic IMppßfia ; r w u C hru t ni e a S n Day eßon,c perß ° n plain. Sold in sets of six only. Two of the six, at 111 <|W Memberships for 1919 cost least, were made up for the 25c grades. So you Tz>|l*iS3 only $1 " will be sure to get excellent value, no matter which Thursday is Volunteer l)uy. Set VOU Select Enroll for yourself und every BOWMAN'S —Main Floor. ' member of your family! __ _/ * ' * • Let Your Quest For a Gift Include Consideration of Chinaware \\ hen gift-seeking becomes a serious business, as it lias now become to the most of us, one naturally chooses , the place where the widest selections and the greatest variety may be found. Such a place is the Chinaware Section,' where complete stocks of beautiful things' await you. - Dinner Sets $8.50 to $150.00 "--n. X \ Bric-a-Brac 25c to $15.00 , . / Xsr-\ Chocolate Sets $5.00 to SB.OO \' f r-aCuSSA Electric Lamps $2.75 to $22.50 j \ W hern Dishes $1.98 to $4.00 f if \V" \ v ' K X Salad Bowls 75c to $3.50 '! Umbrella Jars $3.50 to $6.50 \ \ -/ A ig v —y? Cut (ilass, in a large and varied assortment, from \ , df/ ~ v bon boil dishes at $1.25 to a water set at $28.50. ~~~~~ ' now MAN'S —Uanciueiu. I York County Woman Kills Herself With Shotgun' j Mount Woir, Dec. 10.—Mrs. Har-! I ris Matter, 32 years old, wife of a! ! blacksmith living at The Glades, near j | here, committed suicide on -Friday! I while in a lit of mental derangement j 1 due to a recent attack of influenza. ; . She shot herself ill the head with n ! y doublcbarreled bhT.gun. In what! . j manner she discharged the gun has \ ] not been ascertained, but the load ; , j entered above the left eye and blew ! , away the entire top of her head. ,i The body of the deud woman was I ! found lying In a pool of blood on' , the kitchen floor byThurlow, a sevn-e j . ' year-old son, who had just returned ■ home from school. The child ran to] tell the father, who was working at I ; his shop several blocks away. Cot;o- j • | ner Jones deemed an inquest un- [ ; necessary. Mrs. Hauer hud been in! ! poor health for some time and it Is I ! said on several occasions site placed i 1 u necktie about her neck in the pres , ] ence of friends with an intimation ] that she would take her life. She] is survived by her husband, a son, I ' | her parents and two sisters. MARIETTA BOYS WOUNDED Marietta, Pa., Dec. 10. —George I Rettew, Sr., has received official I | word from tho War Department that | j his son, Samuel Rettew, a member i | of Company M. Three Hundred and | ! Sixteenth Infantry, has been severe-] jly wounded in France. Private Ret- j j tew was among those who trained at - j Camp Meade during the summer of! • 1917. He was an employe of the Dery' j silk mill. j Mr. and Mrs.- Frank Thompson • have received word from the War I ] Department that their son. Sergeant i Frank Thompson, has been wounded lin action. Some time ago they re | eeived a letter in which the young | soldier said he was gassed' and j j wounded, and this time the messago , ; came officially. Sergeant Thompson i 1 was in the Three Hundred and Six | teenth Infantry, and trained at Camp I ' Meade. He rose rapidly from a pri | vate. SEWING CLASS SALE | Dnupliln, Pa., Dec. 10. —The sew- I ing class of the Presbyterian Church | taught by Miss Margaret Brooks will I hold a sale Saturday afternoon and • | evening of fancy articles, cakes, pies, j I canned fruit preserves, candy, home . j made bread and rolls at the home of I Miss Brooks in Erie street. i Burleson Breaks Law in Seizing Cables, Is Charge New Y'ork, Dec. 10.—The Commer , cial Pacific Cable Company, allied | with the Commercial Cable Coin ! pany, asked for an injunction in the | federal court restraining Postmaster - General Burleson, front further con ] trol of its 10,000 miles of cable be tween San Francisco to China, Japan . and tho Philippines. Violation of international law by j Burleson is charged in the complaint, i which asserts that tlie-United States i had not obtained consent to the seiz ure from the nations upon whoso ter ritory the cables land. It Is ullegcd ! such consent would be unconutitu- I tional without a treaty. aEECHAM'c ™pniir ,a How often has an attack of indigestion interfered | with your work or spoiled your pleasure? Good health is mostly a matter of sound digestion. Whenever you are troubled by dyspepsia, flatulence, sour eructations, sick headache, biliousness or constipation, take Beech am's Pills. They quickly and effectively correct digestiv e disturbances, stimulate the supply of gastric juice and Tone the Stomach Direction* c( Special Value to Women ere with Every Box. Sold by druggit* throughout the world. In boxes, 10c., 25c. Day and Night School I DIAL doio ENTER ANY TIME BKLL OOM Harrisburg's Greatest Commercial School BECKLEY'S BUSINESS COLLEGE g ' THE OFFICE TRAINING SCHOOL 121 MARKET STREET I Miss Minnie Beaver Is Bride of Edgar Deckard Millefstown, Pa., Dec. 10.—A wed ' ding of interest tc many Mlllerstown i people was that of Miss Minnie 1 Knthryn Beaver, of Mlllerstown, and j Edgar Deckard, of Bucks Valley, ! near Newport, on Saturday at tlio i liome of tlis. bride's sister, Mrs. Ilar j vey Ulsh, about three-miles from ! town. The ceremony was performed j by the Uev. William C. Ney. Lohen [ grin's Wedding March was played by 1 the bride's Leonard Ulsh, | and the ribbln bearers were Miss : Isubclle Deckayd and Miss Elizabeth 1 I Ulsh. The flower girl was Mfnnie | Katliryu Ulsh, a niece of the bride. | Mr. and Mrs. Deckard left for a short I wedding trip to eastern cities and on 1 their return will be at home in, Bucks I Valley.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers