2 I Central Pa.News MARYSVILLEHAS CHOSEN DAYS TO GREET SOLDIERS Committee Decides to Cele brate Homecoming on 3eptember 27 and 28 Marysvtlle. Pa.. Aug. 28. The home coming celebration of Marys vllle and H>'e township in honor of their men and women who served during the recent war will be a two-day afTair. The general com mittee in charge of arrangements has selected Saturday and Sunday, September 27 and 28, as the dates for the staging of the celebration in honor of the 150 persons furnished by these two districts. Chairman W. 11. Hench is rapidly getting into shape his committees and has already announced a full list of committee leaders. These leaders will have the privilege of adding such other members to their committees as they see tit. His ap pointments are: Finance, F. W. Geib; musifi, Mrs. R. H. Cunningham and C. N. Lid dick; decoration, F. O. Hamilton, J. P. Lillev and W. K. Roberts; speak ers, Dr. G. H. Eppley and Simon Lick; invitation and program, J. G. Eppley and C. B. Smith; parade, J. D. Shull. Postmaster E. N. Leiby is presi dent of the general committee and J. P. Lilley, secretary. It has also been decided to include ministers composing the Marysville ministe rium to serve as a committee on Sunday worship. Tentative arrangements for the celebration provide for an extensive program on the first day. In addi tion. a big banquet is to be arranged for Saturday evening by the women of town in honor of the returned service men and women. A band concert and fireworks celebration is to be included. Decision has been made to erect a speakers' stand on the Maple avenue side of the Marys ville High School building. Marysville Has First Perry Post of Legion Marysville. Pa., Aug. 2S.—Honor ofV organizing the first post of the American Legion in Perry county, goes to Marysville. where the peti tion of fifteen returned soldiers has been granted and Post No. 176 au thorized. Active preparations will be made within the next several weeks to enroll all returned ser vice men. A second Perry county post has been organized at Newport, and chartered as Post No. 177. Work In Newport has been under the di rection of Frederick Dorwart. Preparations to extend the work througout Perry county are to be pushed within the next several weeks under the direction of Lieu tenant Alton W. Lick, of Marys ville. Perry county representative en the State committee. Plans are already well advanced in Duncan aion. "Teachers Are Elected For Schools of Lykens I.>kens. Aug. 28.—The following 16 teachers hat e been elected for the Lykens school, which opens Monday: Principal, H. Auman; assistant principal. J. H. Gaskins; assistant in high school. Mrs. Maud Bining; as sistant in high school, Mrs. Charles Fetterhoff; music and dancing. Miss Gretna Mayberry; eighth grade, H. C. Hendricks; seventh grade. Miss Anna F<Jri\ey; sixth grade. Miss Myrtle Fennell; fifth and sixth grade, Mrs. Velma Shure; fourth grades. Miss Alice Studeholem; fifth grade. Miss Ruth Powell; third grade. Miss Edith Grell second and third grades, Mrs. Cathryn Keen; second grade, Miss Alma Horn; first grade. Miss Cathryn Miller; first grade. Miss Mabel Good. Pennsy Conductor Dies at Home in Sunbury Sunbury, Aug. 28. William H. Neitz. a well known conductor on the Pennsylvania Railroad passed away at his home here yesterday morning of a complications of dis eases. He had been 111 for some time. He was aged 48 years, 7 months and 2 7 daj's. Mr. Neitz was well known throughout town and belonged to many organizations in Sunbury. He was an active member of the No. 1 Fire Company, Loyal Order of Moose. Fraternal Order of Eagles and Owls Clubs. He was also a , member of Lodge Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, No. 43. Orphans of Odd Fellows Are to Hold Reunion Sunbury. Aug. 28.—The annual meeting of the alumni association of the Odd Fellows' Orphanage, near this city, will be held next Monday at that institution. Many graduates are expected, Including many of the 24 boys who were in the National service during the war, and who will be guests of honor. The day will also he the annual visiting day at the Orphanage. The boys and girls of the alumni will be entertained at the expense of the corporation. A hand concert, hall games and music by the or chestra will be features of the day. Altoona Waits on Car of Sugar From Gotham Altoona, Aug. 2 B.—City officials and about 1,200 house-wives are anxiously awaiting the arrival of the carload of sugar ordered from the Army authorities, and which was shipped from New York one week ago to-day. Sugar is a scarce article at the stores of the city and with the canning and preserving season in full blast, and sugar obtainable only In two pound lots, if obtainable .at all. the house-wives are making many inquiries at City Hall regard ing the carload that should have been here before now. [Other State News on 5 and 10.] THURSDAY EVENING, Two Men Get Broken Limbs as Scaffold Falls Shipponsburg, Aug. 2 B.—When a scaffolding on which they were working hero broke.Arthur Hall, of this place, and John and William Nye, of Mongul, were injured. The three men were engaged In the con struction of a garage for William Hall, in West King street. The scaffolding was about ten feet high and when it broke all three men were precipitated to the ground. Hall received a sprained back and in the fall his tongue was caught I between his teeth, causing a severe ! laceration. William Nye sustained j a broken leg and John Nye, a frac tured arm. j|| Schleisner's as a Men's Store || ,|i An outline of the career, policy and principles upon which our ||l || ' men's clothing business has been established l|| ® Profitable Reading For Men and Women * j pfp ling!, i | I I ggal L=.T-~ , There was a time when men ing steadily and growth is a increased season after season And now we can see ahead wouldn t go into a women's good sign. and year after year, and all to one of the largest elothing jgFS| ' store to buy .clothing. clothing stores gradually in businesses in Harrisburg, cer- One tiling we did know and creased their prices, men be- - tainly one of the most inter- In those days we fully under- certainly realized the meaning gan to give the purchase of esting and unquestionably the stood why men hesitated to of, was that men came back sea- clothing more consideration. leader, all points being con-. buy in a store where women son after season, year after sidered. jjpw! I |9 shopped. year, to buy Schleisner clothes. When the men realized that K You know what that means. prices were one-third, one- eart * °pHnfiists. But times have changed, j t meang t j iat men g(Jt gerv i ce half, and now one hundred per Fj !|| an(l with the new era common from the clothing they bought cent, higher than they were Taking all signs from the |£| g||| sense has shown men that, af- here They knew were four years ago? they decided S rowth of our Men's Clothing f@l ter ** * 9 wisdom to buy buying right and so they con- make comparisons before - Business as a guide to its fu- |l|| * where they can buy to best ad- tinned to stick to the store that finally buying. ture status, we have prepared Wi M Vantage ' gave out satisfaction along with ' . for fall and winter with the gif S||| - the purchase. v This era of comparison was a '| ar S Se t stocks we have ever ©oL Wnm You know that ten vears , . , t 0 . . , been tempted to put into our Vsgl i * oil* , v* , ™ i great thing for hchleisner s r 1 Sty® 1 back Schleisner s Men s Cloth- 11 .1 „ c . Z r , „ store. M i , , In all these years from the Men's Clothing Store. Wi gy ing Store was a little depart- very first we addcd a 6mal , fjA ment of the business a n „i„ _,l , u We now believe there are H mighty little department. emphatically declare uTthe bon.ht'ha. hundreds of men just waiting H Sa ttipm ultn in* iti bought has f or tbe coo | weatber go tbat Pm| From the very 6rst we start- . . , ' S reatlv S rown out of date they will co ne to Schleisner's J ed to sell good clothing. That .. , a tailoring for among men who think, the for their fall elothing. yjf in itself was a sort of drawback a 'oring anc or fabric, necessity for comparison, or H to start with, because there ™ wTofhin- ri " her " * h ° UU Scores of these men will be M were so many stores selling they could t ' dom of ™n.parison, brought our regular year in and year |1 cheap clothes, and later when 6 ' hundreds of men to Schleis- > om customers and scores of the $lO and sls suits came The fact dothi ner \ tliem will be new customers g|j into vogue the good clothes we business was small for years who will want to tr > S " llleis - Bfl were selling did not appeal to * did not in the leagt dißCOur . The result 1S men who ner clothing. | the great crowd of clothing a<re f oundpr tb br • thought they would never buyers. negg> - come into Schleisner's for a And right here we will say m suit of clothes, have found that although prices have ad- ItfH I Understand us. The good On the contrary, th£ steady W^at l^ey wante( * ere vanced greatly and we along |v| clothing we sold did not in- growth, the one and two and have been thoroughly satisfied with all clothing stores have 3^ terest the great crowd, the big tbree new f aceg com i ng j nto with t^ie clothing they bought had to pay higher prices to the ggffll majority, but it did interest M en ' g Clothing Store daily ere an< * aVC s * nce 1 ® manufacturers, our old policy |Pg men, one by one, men who tbe development Q f HarriJ firm customers store - sma H profits will bring this j|l|i wanted good clothes and who l, urg . ,h e faith he had in Har- " fine clotllin g to J OO a su ch M appreciated good clothes, and, risburg and the ideal he set Story t^le S rowt^1 prices as will prove to he the therefore, kept those men com- f or a jyi en ' s Clothing Store our Men's Clothing business surest economy. ing to Schleisner's year after encouraged him to a great is interesting to yon as a wearer M T ear * degree to stick to the Men's of good clothin 6' fand you May we expect a visit from Igl Clothing business until every are a woman reader of aI " >' ou in ,he near fnture? wfk Along with those first ens- man Harrisburg, sooner or ,iclc ' il is iuteresting to you be- / Ifl tomers came others and the list later could say, regardless of cause you have a brother or Respectfully yours, H gradually grew larger. Even whether that man bought here husband.) . M after a number of years our or not , that Schleisner's carry elothing department, while it ,he best elothing in Harris- To-day our Men's Qothing ' AA/uVA S had grown, would have been burg. business is large. Indeed, we • considered small by some mer- consider it very large when L chants; yet, while we knew it When the big war started compared the little begin- / . - • - • . . \ . ■ • / FRATERNAL BODY TO JOIN REUNION Camps of Patriotic Sons of America Will Gather at Liverpool September 6 Liverpool. Aug. 2 B.—TU* four teenth annual county reunion of the ten camps of the Patriotic Orders, Sons of America to be held in Liverpool under the auspices of the local camp No. 217 on September 6 together with Liverpool's home cel ebration in honor of the 36 boys and two girls who took part in the HXRXUSBtTRG TELEGRXPH World War, promisek to surpass anything; in the demonstration line the town has ever had. f The P. O. S of A. business meet ing at 10 o'clock in Shulor hall will be conducted by mute officials. A large class is to be initiated. The street parade at 1.30 o'clock will contain numerous floats and Sun day schools, Red Cross Society and all secret organizations from town. Memorial services will be observed for Sergeant J. Wesley DeHaven, the one Liverpool boy who was kill ed overseas, followed by the de mobilizing of the big town service flag, followed by a full program of sports on the Square. Three bands will furnish music for the day and a baseball game between Harrisburg Electricians and the home team is scheduled. Bethany Orphans' Honte Celebrates Anniversary Womclsdorf. Aug. 28. —The 56th anniversary of Bethany Orphans' Home was held here to-day. Thou sands of people were on the ground*. The address of the day was delivered by Dr. Joseph H. Apple, president of Hood College. His topic was "The Forward Move ment" and was for the benefit of leaders in church work. The chil dren of the home took a large part in the program. Special permission of the State Highway Department has been se cured by Judge George W. Wagner, a trustee of the home, to have the detour from Robesonia to Womcls dorf opened, to nllow automobiles approach the home. The shorter State road was used instead of the longer detour. The Reformed churchos of Read ing had a large part in the ar rangements. Meals were served on the grounds by committees, from 10 of the churches in the county. At their own expense, the food was secured and prepared, the proceeds being devoted to the benefit of the home. LOYSVII-LE TO GET CANNON Loysvillc, Pa., Aug. 28. Loys ville is to receive a-captured Ger man cannon or field piece, in refog nition of the patriotic efforts of the town (luring the past war. unless present efforts of citizens miscarry. Congressman Focht has introduced a bill in Congress providing for the issuance of a suitable cannon or field piece with an appropriate number of shells to Loysville. AUGUST 36, 1919. Prof. George M. Brehm Weds State College Girl Sunbury, Aug. 28.—Prof George M. Brehm and Miss Ruth R. Shaw ley were united In nitffriage at the parsonage of the St. John's Metho dist Episcopal Church, yesterday at 11 o'clock, by the Rev. John H. Daugherty. The couple were un attended and the ring ceremony was used. The groom is the son of O. S- Brehm, of Steelton, Pa. He is cm ployed under the State Board of Education as an Instructor in the vocational schools, located at Lampeter, Lancaster county. The bride is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Shawley, of State College, Pa. After a wedding trip they will re side at Lampeter, Pa. WAYNICSBORO KKKDB SUGAR Waynesboro, Pa., Aug. 28.—Be (iiiuse of, numerous complaints, he has received from housewives in town, that they are unablo to can or preserve fruits and vegetables, owing to their inability to secure sufficient sugar, Burgess Myers has wired the United States Sugar Equalization Board at New York, asking for a carload of sugar to relieve the situation. TOT FALLS FROM BALCONY Orttysliurg. Pa., Aug. 28. —Fall- ing from the balcony to the ground, a distance of twenty feet, riv.a-i ~!< i icary, an eighteen month old boy, received only a few minor in juries. The little fellow had follow ed an aunt out onto the balcony. Before it was known that he was there, had climbed up on a bench along the railing, lost his balance tyid went over.
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