Cleveland Man Gets Bride at Chambersburg Chambersburg, Pa.. Aug. I.—The ' marriage of Thomas Ryan. of I Cleveland. Ohio, and Miss Bertha E. Shatzley, of this place, was per formed in Corpus Christi Catholic J church here by the Rev. F. C. Noel. | The couple left on a wedding trip to Buffalo and the Great Lakes. The attendants at the wedding were Miss DUMFDRD I THE WHOLESOME II BAKINQ POWDER attwrae Look for the iMllJi big pound tin lajqhC —sixteen full gOWP<£ ounces. The powder with a food value. Go buy it today II ll'H llmini MM 11 THE GLOBE ''KEEP YOUR EYE ON THE CLOCK" THE GLOBE GLOBE'S 1 mSm ONE THOUSAND | Jpr SUIT CAMPAIGN | Is the Talk of Men Everywhere \fsjr "•*- Every man who needs clothes now or next fall ought to know exactly why there has been such a tremendous response to our One Thousand Suit Campaign. 4 \X) l\i (1) The high character and reputation of the merchandise of jT fered—Your money cannot buy any better. (2) THE GLOBE'S VALUES are always superior at their regular prices. . (3) The immense variety of styles and ALL sizes. (4) V e hold ONLY OXE sale each season and then reduce prices down to rock-bottom at once. (5) In addition to our greatly reduced prices, if we succeed in selling OXE THOUSAND Suits by August 30, every Suit purchaser will receive a bonus of 5 per cent. Figure this out for yourself. Men's Trousers 82 " 5 "'"514.50 8 S '""" $32.50 Reduced §25 Suit, at ijjlQ .SQ §45 Suits at ..ft 7 qfl SLOO Trousers $2.95 830 Suits at . . $24.50 s>o Suits at . . $4O 50 55.00 Trousers $3.95 . I $6.50 Trousers $4.95 SllltS at ' $28.50 Sl,lt * at ' $48.50 $8.50 Trousers $5.95 Hot leather Clothes Reduced V bite Duck Trousers. .$2.50 $l5 Palm Beach Suits $1? jjQ $l5 Breezweve Suits $ll Cjn Khaki Trousers $1.50 sj B Palm Beach Suits $l4 fjfl $2O Mohair Suits ... s|7 1-lannel Trousers .... $8.50 | $ 2O Flannel Suits ... $17.50 $25 Silk Pongee Suits $18.50 I Wise Men Stock Up on Shirts 4 Bargains in Our Boys' Underwear, Hosiery, Etc. Clothing Department When prices are as low as these tow. $6.50 Fiber Silk Shirts that are worth (Dp O W'A J ust t!lc your boy will want 54.00 and $5.00 at g; for dress, for play or "for school. gtt 'JaKTvs Xote the wonderful saving. They're the most wonderful Shirt values we've ever y offered —worth at least $4 each wholesale today. | Boys' Suits that 0 If\ [Tf\ $5.00 Silk Shirts.. $3.85 I $8.50 Silk Shirts. 56.65 . sold at $l5, now $6.50 Silk Shirts.. .$4.65 | $lO.OO Silk Shirts. $8.65 AU smart - sna PP)' styles that will please any boy. Economy wise Other Shirts at Big Reductions tr * parents will buy several of these Suits. All sizes. Poroskm't Union Suits, worth $2.00. at $1.25 Boys Wash Boys Wash a s r 5i.95 ir $3.95 $l.OO Nainsook Union $2.00 Ribbed Union Suits. Suits. Special at....59c Special at $1.65 Regularly sold at $2.50 — Regularly sold at $5.00 to , ~• . j .p • , S6.do—Khaki, Black and $1.50 Athletic Union Suits. $2.50 Peerless Union Suits. neat M'ddi, Oliver Twist Crash, White Duck Special at $l.OO Special at $1.95 •"'id Norfolk stxles. Sizes ant j natural linen. Sizes 8 51.75 B. V. D. Union Suits. $3.50 Peerless Union Suits. tG to Special at $1.50 Special at $2.65 All Other BOYS' SUITS Greatly Reduced Boys' $l.OO Waists 79c rWIWJTTjI W /ATI Boys ' 50c Neckwear 39c Boys' $1.50 s Waists.. .$1.19 I 1H ■ -mr I■ ■ rl Boys' $l.OO Caps 55c Boys' 35c Stockings 25c d M~mA—A Bovs' $2.50 Hats $1.79 FRIDAY EVENING, Cora Smith, of Harrisburg, cousin of 'he hriae, bridesmaid, and Harry Smith, of Harrisburg, also a cousin of the bride, best man. Mrs. Ryan graduated from the Chambersburg High School with the class of 1918 and had been employed in the local freight office of the Cumberland Val ley District of the Pennsylvania Railroad. Her husband is an em ploye of the Austin Construction Company in Cleveland. WILL HOLD CONFERENCE Chambersburg, Pa., Aug. I.—The young people's department of the Franklin County Sabbath School Association is arranging for an older boys* and girls' conference to be I held at Rhodes Grove, September' 8. The conference will be attended by delegates chosen from all the Sunday schools of the county, two 1 delegates, one boy and one girl be- ! tween the ages of 16 and 22 years, i being elected from each Sabbath : school. i MAY ENLARGE COLLEGE Chambersburg, Pa.. Aug. I.—Ad ditions to the dormitory of Wilson College are being considered in or der to accommodate the large num ber of students who have registered for attendance at the college this ' year. Indications are for a record breaking attendance at the institu-1 tion this fall. SHIPPINB BOARD f SELLS 100 SHIPS! i Hurley Announces Sale Justj i Before He Retires From Office i i Washington. Aug. 1. One hun- j J dred steamships built on the Great i Lakes during the war have been sold j by the Shipping Board to the Ander- ! sort Overseas Corporafion, of New York, for approximately $80,000,000. 1 This is probably the largest ship i | sale on record, the board said in an- I j nouncing the deal to-night, and the j i vessels will eventually pass into | j French and Italian ownership. j Delivery of the ships will com- ] ! mence August 10, and proceed at the ! | rate of six or more a week until ! I completed. Chairman Hurley said, i ; As the sale is made on a partial pay- i basis, the board will keep a j I measure of control to assure provis- j ; ion of insurance protection and free- ; j dont from liens. The ships range i 'from 3300 to 3600 deadweight tons; dra ft. i Mr. Hurley made the announce ment concerning the sale a few ' HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH i minutes before he left his office as | chairman of the Shipping Board for : the last time. To-day he returns to private life, leaving for his farm in Illinois. His successor as chairman has not been announced hut it is believed that John Barton Payne, whose j nomination as a member of the board was favorably reported to the , Senate to-day, will be appointed. United Cigar Stores Will Close Sundays New York. Aug 1. The hun- ! dreds of Cnited Cigar Stores j throughout the country will be I closed in future on Sundays, ac- I cording to an announcement made j at the general offices of the com- j pany here. The only exceptions j will be stores at Coney Island and i Atlantic City. WILL PLAY FOR HOSPITAL j Marietta, Aug. 1. —On Saturday ) afternoon at 3 o'clock a game of base , ball will be played on the Storage j Yards grounds between the Com munity Club of Columbia and Stor age Yards team. * The proceeds are for the benefit of the Columbia hos pital, More room for seating peo ple is being provided. There will be a return game at Columbia in Re servoir Park, the Saturday follow ing, for the same benefit. HOFFERT NAMED AS ASSISTANT iHarrisburg Man Appointed to | Important Place in State Health Department J Raymond engineer 1 at el y partment, Penn-j ll Central Construc- tion anrt VHri ° us assistant engineer !in the engineering division ot the I State Department of Health. He is a Cornell graduate and attended Hamilton Institute. He is well known to many Harrisburgers. Col. W. J. Crockston, the new as sociate Chief Medical Inspector, has assumed his duties. He is a grad : uate of Princeton and the Univer j sity of Pennsylvania, having served |in France as chief surgeon of the ! Twenty-eighth Division. I Charles L. Baucher, of Wilkes | Barre, has been named a district j inspector in the department's en gineering division. Other appolnt i ments announced are Dr. Julis H. Conoroe, York, chief of genito-uri nary dispensary, York; Chester G. Crist, Gettysburg, county medical in spector for Adams county; Dr. J. P. I Dalbey, Gettysburg, narcotic inspec ! tor of Cumberland, Franklin and j Adams counties; the Rev. George i Joseph, Lewistown, health officer for ! Perry, Decatur and Granville town | ships, Mifflin county; Jacob Fen ! Nell, Delmont, registrar for New I Salem, Franklin and Salem town i ships, Westmoreland county; Joseph ) Butler, Collegeville, registrar for Collegeville. Board to Meet—-Members of the ' State Armory Board have been called jto meet in Philadelphia on August | 6 to discuss plans for armory im ! provement in various parts of the j State. The board has an appropria ! tion of $llO,OOO foj construction i and there are a number of com -1 munities, notably Krie, which have | offered sites and money if the State I will erect buildings and match what they offer in the way of funds. In the case of Erie the offer is of a j plot of ground and $75,000 for a | building fund. j Special Device License —A system ! for issuance of the licenses for use of special devices by fishermen has been worked out by Commissioner j of Fisheries Nathan It. Buller, who is already listing applications. There I will be a dozen forms of licenses, one for each kind of the various de ! vices used by tishermen, including i nets and other appliances. State Bureau Here—Members of I the State Bureau of Medical Educa i tion and Licensure met here yester day to consider examination papers presented by students who took the | recent State examination. Gone to Maine—Howard H. Hoke, secretary to the Attorney General, has gone on his annual vacation to Maine. Preparing to Move —The State Department of Mines is preparing to move to the new quarters in ihe Trustee building. Powderly Dies—T. V. Powderly, Jr., of Scranton, steward at the State Farview institution, died after a brief illness. He was well known to many on Capitol Hill. Conference on Eggs—Secretary of Agriculture Rasmussen and food bureau officials were at Philadel phia yesterday to attend a confei ence on eggs and enforcement of the new law. Moore I<ooms V'p—Congressman J. Hampton Moore is looming up again for Mayor of Philadelphia, according to Philadelphia people who have been here to-day. No Increase Allowed—The Indi ana Public Service Commission has refused to allow telegraph compa nies to charge government rates now that the war emergency is over. General Denikine Captures Kamishin From Bolsheviki London, Aug. 1. General Deni kine, the Russian commander, has gained an important victory over the Bolsheviki and captured the town of Kamishin, on the Volga. Five thousand Bolsheviki, nine guns and large-' quantities of material were also taken. In making this announcement, the war office says that possession of Kamishin gives General Denikine a ti'rmer hold on the river and his main objective in the advance on Saratov threatening the Bolshevik communications with Astrakhan. Kamishin was entered by the I anti-Bolshevik troops on July 30. and the fleeing enemy was pur sued twelve miles beyond the town. Minister Takes Bride; Will Reside Over River ' Waynesboro. Pa., Aug. I.—ln the 1 presence of about forty friends, Miss I Anna K. Kipe. daughter of Mr. and I Mrs. D. Frank Kipe, near Waynes boro, and Rev. Asa W. Climenhaga. Stevensville, Ontario, Canada, were married at the home of the bride, at 7 o'clock, Wednesday evening, the ceremony being performed by the Rev. John A. Climenhaga, a brother of the groom, of Grantham, Cumber land county. Pa., assisted by the Rev. H. C. Shank, the bride's pastor. They will make their home at Grant- I ham, where the Rev. Climenhaga ' will teach in the Messiah Bible I Training School. Royal Assent Given to the Peace Treaty i London. Aug. 1. Royal assent was given to the German peace treaty and to the Anglo-French I treaty,, which thus became law. j ARRANGING WELCOME DAYS Marietta, Aug. 1. —There will not be a dull moment on the days set apart for the celebration and wel come home to Marietta boys who served in the war. The general committee has decided that a two day festival be held, combining pic nic and parade. The dates will be about the middle of September, in all probability. The affair is being arranged through the executive com mittee, of which Dr. E. Linwood Cornman is president. CONTRACTS DIPHTHERIA Ashland, Pa., Aug. I.—Dr. I. C. Newhardt, chief veterinarian for the Reading Coal and Iron Com pany, is dangerously ill with diph theria contracted from a mule i which he had treated for the dis ease. r Middletown Making Plans For Welcome Home Event Mrs. J. O. Covan and children are j spending a week at Luudersport. Charles Garrlty is spending a week ut Atlantic City. James O. Covan is spending the week at New York City in tha intei est of the local car plant. The Swatara Hill prayermeeting will be held at the home of F. L. Shope, near Iron Mine Run, on Sat urday evening at S o'clock. Charles Ki*umliouse, who spent the past week in town as the guest of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Levy, Pine street, returned to his home at New- York City. Simon Hartley and son, Robert Hartley, who spent the past week in town as the guests of the for mer's mother, Mrs. Catherine Hail ley. Susquehanna street, returned to their home at Tyrone, Pa. The Sunday school class of H. 10. Brandt, of the Lutheran Sunday school, will hold a meeting at the home of Mrs, A. C. Kohr, Soma Catherine street, this evening. James Cunningham, Jr., and sis ter, Miss Hester Cunningham, have gone to Reading, where they wdt spend some time as the guest of their grandmother, Mrs. H. J. Seed.-. Adam Shroy, who spent the past eighteen months overseas, was mus tered out of service at Port On tario, Oswego, X. Y. The L. O. Club, of town, held a picnic at Hershey Park Wednesday. Mrs. H. M. Hughes, of Emuus street, is spending a week at Atlan tic City. Mrs. H. E. Hoffman and childien, Etyria, Ohio, and who spent some time in town as the guests of the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. 11. F. Flshel, West Main street, have gone to Halifax where they will visit Mrs. Hoffman's si6ter, Mrs. 1:. C. Reichter, before returning to their home. The auto truck fund of the Res cue Hose Company will hold a bene fit show in the Realty theater Fri day evening, August S. Miss Grace Nissley is spending some time at Perdix as the guest of Mr. and Jlrs. W. H. Colton. The Ladies' Aid Society of the Church of God held a picnic in the! f Today Telephone Properties J are Returned i 7k FTER a year of Federal Control, the telephone property, / j \ which makes up the Bell Telephone System, is to-day re ± "tk turned to its owners by the United States Government. < M While the property has been properly maintained, it is not the same / property which the Government took over on August 1, 1918. It is not as adequate for its job or as well manned as it was; that it is not, j is in no way the fault of Federal Control, which was eminently fair. / It is due to causes for which neither the Government nor the compa- nies are to blame. / A year ago to-day we were at war. Labor and materials needed for both telephone operation and construction were turned to military J. uses. Some materials were so vital to the carrying on of the war that /' even the work of providing telephone facilities for the Government was retarded and no part of them could be spared for commercial J telephone purposes. J No less vital-were the Government needs for those skilled to create, f maintain and operate the vast intercommunication systems necessary t' in modern warfare and in the conduct of the vastly increased Gov- / ernment services. " k . ■ Thousands of telephone men were already at the battle front; thou- / sands more were under arms, and skilled telephone experts and skilled r " operators went into the service of the Government and contributory < industries by the tens of thousands. / The reserves of plant and equipment were drawn upon until they were <r entirely used up, and the experienced staff was greatly depleted. To find others to take the place of those who had gone was difficult, to / train them takes time. / During the year came victory and the armistice; and instantly the / business world sprang into intense activity. The demands for tele- * phone service passed all former records. To replace the exhausted reserves which had been carried for just i such purposes and to replace the sk'lled forces to meet this unprece- f dented emergency, there began a rush for construction, for readjust- ,• ment, for high pressure repairs, for feverish extensions. All these J must be continued with increasing effort. / The return of the property comes in the very midst of this race be tween an overpowering demand and an upbuilding of a system whose growth was held back and whose forces were scattered by the vital J needs of war. / . Much progress has been made in the upbuilding of this system, but / far more is still required to meet the swift growth of business; and g ' also to give "first aid" to every other business and every other service • struggling against an unprecedented demand. > t The prosperity which creates this emergency in service creates also a * scarcity of those desiring employment in the service. < Under such conditions, telephone service generally has not been, and could not be, up to the pre-war standard. It is beyond human power to immediately overcome the handicap which the situation imposes. There are no people in any public or private endeavor who are work ing more tirelessly or strenuously for the common good than those of the telephone companies. Service has always been given. More of it must be given and it must be improved. That improvement in some cases will take months. service must win the race with demand. t N The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania ' ■ I AUGUST 1, 19i9. | borough park yesterday and a large i number of the members were pres ent. The Welcome Home celebration I committee met in the Council chant ; ber. Catherine street, last evening. ! and a large number of persons were 1 present. From all reports every thing is on a fair way for the cele ] bration of tlie bovs who were in the | service of Uncle Sam. The event j will be held Monday, September 1. Can't "Roll" After 10.30, Says Justice Baltimore, Aug. I.—Out of sym pathy with "Holy Roller" services because the "rolling" disturbed the peace of the neighborhood, nbout twenty women testified yesterday against the Rev. T. W. Harmon, pastor of the Pentecostal Mission on Frederick road, near McCurley street, when he was summoned by Justice Tormollan. Neighbors testitled tbet the "roll ing" was accompanied by shrieks and groans that continued until late | hours, some times even past mid i night. Patrolmen Harden and Rotn | said they visited the services and | saw children rolling on the floor ■ and women kneeling around them, moaning and groaning. Justice Tormollan ordered that j the services close at 10.30. (OVEREATING I is the root of nearly all I digestive evils. If your j I digestion is weak or out I of kilter, better eat less I and use RIMOIDS 1 the new aid to better I digestion. Pleasant to ■ take —effective. Let Ki | moids help straighten out I your digestive troubles. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE Witman Bros- Distributors HARRISBURG, PA. ! "I Can Hardly ? Believe It— *, j 0 such good rrews! Why, I ? 0 spent $6O nt her Twice-a- / j ! j Twelvemonth last winter,. ; | •'0 0 and, my dear, I got overt ; • 3 0 $l5O worth of clothes. y( j i 0 Are you sure it's not justj j | ( a rumor?" j ® ® ! j "Well Sueanne said it f | 0 would begin August 4th ' j 0 and continue through that j 0 week. She heard one of /j j 0 Miss Sach's girls mention j j , •' ! : "Simply providential, I'd ? j : call it, with prices so high , ? ! •' nowadays." ? 0 0 I ° _ l j J}srik jiirdSheet af}s HO j iKr~/# 15
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers