6 To Take Directory of Foreigners in Mexico Mexico City, Sept. 9. Consuls representing the United States, Great Britain and France in Mexico have received instructions from their gov ernments to complete as soon as possible a list of all of their respec tive nationals In the republic, to gether with the business in which they are engaged and the extent of these enterprises. SELF-MADE MUSIC "Do yo utliink our oratorical friend was sincere when he asked the crowd not to interrupt him by demonstrations of approval?" "Yes," replied Senator Sorgham, "there are men who would rather listen t otheir own voices than to applause."—Washington Star. z : Wedding Flowers Plant Decorations If It lias to do with ! | Flowers or anything that |> "grows," consult us— THE BERRYHJLL Locust Street at Second CARRIE HARVIE DWYER PIANO TEACHER and ACCOMPANIST I For Terms, Call or Write 801 l Phone 4D58. lis Caldcr it. The Harrisburg Academy HARRISBURG, PA. Founded in 1754 and chartered in 1809. The Harrisburg Academy has maintained an uninterrupted corpo rate existence. For several years the school has gtaduated twenty-five t > : thirty young men. all of whom hate' continued their studies in a score or more of universities and professional schools. The school reopens for its 136 th year of service with the strong- i est teaching staff and the largest en- I rollment of pupils, in its history. Additional class room facilities have been provided for the increased en rollment. There will be no military : uniforms used this year. Calisthenics and outdoor sports will be substituted in the place of military drill. Build ings are open for inspection and clas- ' sification of pupils. The prospectus for 1919-20 is sent upon request. September 22, 9 a. in., organization of lower school. September 23, 9 a. nr., lower school begins. September 23, 9 a. m., new boys register and classify. September 24. 9 a. m., Academy . opens. 1 ARE YOU GOING TO "BECKLEY'S" IN SEPTEMBER? "IT'S THE BEST SCHOOL" SEE AD PAGE TWO M—gf7*mWifMi B—— Miss Jeanne Pratt pupil of William H. Sherwood | will resume piano-forte teaching at i 219 W. State St. ■> ' September 15 Wonderful Sale of Dresses Wednesday and Thursday Only Regular Prices Up to apd $35 at $19.75 - We have too many satin and georgette dresses. We simply bought too many, und, as you well know, our space Is limited and we cannot afford to have too much of anything, and wo must reduce our stock of these Dresses, and do so ut orrce; so, for Wednesday and Thursday, we will give you a chance to buy some reully high-class drosses ut u price that will surprise you and make you want several of these dresses, us you will be able to buy two for what you will pay for one elsewhere. The colors are Navy and Black Satin and Navy Georgettes. These dresses are all worth up to *30.00 and sft.oo and are all new styles. Your choice of this wonderful lot at *19.75. ffIARRISBURG.PA, TUESDAY ±L V L-IM iiMG, INTERESTING PERSONAL AND SOCIAL Former Harrisburger Weds in Massachusetts Harrisburgers are interested in the marriage of Miss Mildred L. Clark and Raymond S. Michael, at Gardner, Mass., last week because the bridegroom is a former resident of the city and son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlpe M. Michael, 1613 BerryhiU street. The ceremony was performed at the bride's home, by the Rev. Ernest Lyman Mills, pastor of the Methodist Church of Gardner with a number of guests present. After her gradu ation from the Fitchburg Normal School the bride taught in the pub lic schools of Vernon, N. J. Mr. Michael is a graduate of Har risburg High School and also Dick inson College, Carlisle, where he was prominent in musical and ath letic circles. He was physical di rector of Kingsley School, Essex Falls, N. J.,, resigning to enter the service, where he had charge of ath letics. He is a member of Pi Chap ter, Theta Chi Fraternity. He is now a member of the faculty of the Wilkes-Barre Academy and will reside in that city with his bride. SHOWER FOR A BRIDE Miss Helen Fisher and Miss Eleanor Weaver gave a shower of household gifts to Mrs. H. 1). Greenawalt, formerly Miss Josephine Zug, of this city. The party included Miss Mary Loudenslnger. Miss firaoo Saul. Miss Irene Motter, Miss Ethel Aungst. Miss Esther Denney the guest of honor and hostesses. COFFEE . . 40c, 45c, 50c PEANUTS 25c lb. lIURRYITILL TURKISH BATH Formerly l'cnn-tlnrris 15 North Market Sq. HUMS II ill 111 log NOW OPEN—DAY AND NIGHT Expert Attendants From New York in Charge. I allies' Day —Monday and Thurs day from 9 a. m. until 9 p. m. This bath is the best you can find anywhere and is run on high class principles only. , INSPECTION INVITED MORNING BRIDAL IN THE RECTORY Miss Getlia High and Harry T. McFadden Quietly Married by Rev. Father Murphy MRS. HARRY T. McFADDEN The marriage of Miss Getha Lo raine High and Harry T. McFadden. j of this city, was quietly solemnized iat 9 o'clock, this morning, in the | rectory of St. Francis' Catholic ' I -Church with the Rev. Father • Murphy otiiciating. j The bride wore a charming frock j |Of dark blue eharmeuse and Geor- | I gette crepe with tunic embroidered I iln nut brown in panel effect and 1 ' girdled with a silken cord. Her ' j velvet turban of dark blue was em- ! \ broidered in blue and gold chenille ! i and her corsage bouquet was of or- j i chids. Mrs. Ralph Hesser, a recent bride, , was matron ftf honor, wearing a | striking costume of dark blue (ieor ! gette over red, with picture hat to ! harmonize and a corsage bouquet ot, i red rose buds. Charles McFadden i of East Orange, N. J., was best man i for his brother. j After the service a wedding break fast was served at the home of the ! bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wil | liam L. High, 910 Green street, to the wedding party and the imme diate families. A decorative color scheme of green and white was ef fectively carried out with asters and greenery. Just before noon the newlyweds I started for their wedding trip to Nia gara Falls, Thousand Islands and ; Montreal, the bride wearing for j traveling, a suit of navy blue trieo t!ne with oriental embroideries and velvet turban. A brown silvertone coat with raccoon collar completed the costume. On their return to the city, Mr. and Mrs. McFadden will reside in apartments at Sixteenth and Swa tara streets. The bride is a graduate of Central High School, class of 1917 and a ; member of the C. A. O. society of that year. She has been in the em | ploy of the City School Board at .j their offices and is known through : out the city as a singer of great J talent. Sir. SlcFadden a son of Mr. I and Mrs. Thomas I. McFadden. 1620 i Derry street, is an alumnus of Cen- I tral High School and the Wharton I Business School. He is connected ! with the State Capital Savings and Loan Association. ENTERTAINS CI.ASS The Gleaners' class of the Otterbein United Brethren Sunday School spent i an enjoyable evening at the homo of i Mrs. Shindle, of Enola. Vocal and j Victrola selections were given and j refreshments were served to these i members and guests: Miss Annie j Colcstoek, Mrs. Stroh, Mrs. Loedy, i Fischer, Mrs. Zarker, Mrs. Seiler, Mrs! Esther Peters, Mrs. Shindler,' Mrs. ' Ella Peters, Mrs. Sites, Mrs. Peffer, ; Mrs. Roeschel. SCOUT MEETING J Sunflower Troop, No. 1. Girl Scouts .of Market Square Presbyterian I Church will hold a Scout rally next Thursday evening, September 11, in i the Scout room. All Scouts wishing i to register for the following year are i to be present in full uniform and any girls desiring to Join the troop are I cordially invited to attend. I Miss Jane Martin has returned to her home, 719 North Second street, af ter undergoing treatment at the I Johns Hopkins Hospital. J Mrs. W. H. Balsley, of Altoona, who j spent several days here with her I brother who is confined to the Hnr- j lisburg Hospital, has returned home. J j Frank E. Commings, 1-1 North j Fourth street, was a recent visitor at J Lebanon. j Harry Bach, 314 Chestnut street, will leave in the near future to re sumo his studies at the Uulveraty of Pennsylvania. Mrs. Marie Albright and son, with Miss Margaret Albright, of New York j City, were guests at the Commings home, Nortii Fourth street; Mrs. A. D. Wlke, of Marietta, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Commings on her way home after a visit with her sister, Mrs. E. G. Herr, of South Bend, Ind., and with , relatives in Cincinnati, Ohio. C. D. Wright, 203 South Second street, Sttielton, left Tuesday for j Canton, Ohio, to join Mrs. Wright, who has been there several weeks owing to the illness of her mother, Mrs. Charles Whltsel. Mr. and Mrs. Harry L. Russell, I 203 South Second street, left Satur day to visit relatives and friends in western Pennsylvania and Ohio. id a -announcement under iam heading iuu.ii be accompanied by name to ajsv -■. curacy. J Mr. and Mrs. Joseph McGuigan Hursh, 216 Verbeke street, an ! nounce the birth of a daughter, Ruth j Poulton Hursh, Monday, September 8, 1919. Mrs. Hursh was formerly 'Miss Ruth Elizabeth Poulton. J Mr. and Aire. Charles Seitz, 2035 ! Penn street, announce the birth of' ' a son, Paul Joseph Seitz, Saturday, 'September 6, 1919. , Mr. and Mrs. Lewis B. Lindemuth, I of New York, announce the birth | of a daughter, Mary Elizabeth Linde- I muth, Sunday, Sept. 7, 1919. Mrs. I Lindemuth was formerly Miss Mary I Elizabeth Detweiler, of this city | Mr. and Mrs. George K. Reist. of 327 South Front street, announce the ! birth of a daughter this morning. Mr.' Reist is owner of the floating bout j houses at South street. f HwtßHiiußa (MM* TKLjflonacra Miss Dorothy Chubbuck Honor Guest at Shower Miss Dorothy Chubbuck. whose mar riage to Charles Wgikel, of Bethle hem will be an event of this month, was honor guest last evening at a linen shower given by Mrs. J. Donald Carpenter, 2245 North Fourth street. The house was effectively decorated with pink asters, and the hostess pre sented a linen tablecloth and a dozen napkins to Miss Chubbuck, which the guests hemmed during the course of the evening. \ Those present were Mrs. M .P. Chub buck, Mrs. Samuel Fackler, Miss Jean Allen, Miss Kathertne Phillips, Miss Ruth Baker, Miss Catherine Balsley, Mrs. L. H. Carpenter, Mrs. Snively Ry der, and Miss Katharine Silver. Mrs. Eugene Ilutter and daughter. Miss Emily ltulter of Now Cumber land. Pa., and Mrs. and Mrs. Grunt Nagle. Mrs. Frank Hat ter and her mother, Mrs. Eliza Hi p ner, of this city, have returned home after spending a week ip the moun tains at Mount Gretna. Mr. und Mrs. William Hoffman, of this city, with Miss Paul Walls and Robert Horton, of Huntingdon, are home after a week's camping trip at Summer Home Cottage, Cove. Miss Margaret Michael, of New York City, will arrive here to-morrow to be the guest of Miss Eleanor Etter. 209 I'lne Street. Miss Marion Reinoehl, of 2114 North Third street, is home after a visit among Lebanon relatives. Miss Marie, Desch, of Lancaster, is spending a week with Miss Carrie E. Lautz, 416 Maclay street. Miss Mary Sterrett, of Montour Falls, N. Y., returned home to-day after visiting her relatives, Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Stewart Blair, at 403 North Second street and Carlisle friends. Mr. and Mrs. Charles C. Linton and son. Topi Linton, have opened <eir house, at 1007 North Second street, aue. a loi might's stay in At lantic City. Miss Grace Wilson went home to Troy, N. Y., to-day after visiting her cousin. Miss Ellen Martin, of Green street for a week or two. Howard F. Anderson, who spent the past week among relatives here, went home to Baltimore to-day. Mr. and Mrs. S. G. and their son. Gall Landon. of the Belvedere, North Second street, are home after spending the summer at Bound Lake, X. Y„ making the return trip by auto mobile. Mr. and Mrs. Bennett Hartley went home to Pittsburgh, to-day after a week's stay among relatives in this vicinity. George S. Reinoehl. Jr., of North Third stboet. has resumed his studies at the Mercersburg Academy after the summer holidays. Mrs. David Trogler, of Denver, Col orado, is a guest of her aunt, Mrs. Lichtenbergcr, of 2149 North Fourth street. Before returning West she will visit in Philadelphia and New York City. Miss Mary Lichtenberger. of 2149 North Fourth street, is spending some time In Charleston, W. Va. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Walton went home to Jersey City to-day after a week's stay among old friends here. Dr. Harry M. Vastine, 109 Locust street, has returned after summering in the West. Mrs. Lesley McCreath and Lesley McCreath. Jr., left for New York to witness the Pershing parade to-mor row. Burton E. Cummings, 14 North Fourth street, returned Saturday af ter a ten days' visit In Baltimore. Miss May Hoover, of Washing ton, D. C., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank C. Sites, of Overview. Mrs. Joseph Saul, of Schuylklli Haven, is visiting Mrs. Emily E. Miller, 1929 North Second street. [Other Social News on Page 4.] ~~———————— DR. G. A. ZIMMERMAN, having returned from the Army, announces the reopen ing of his offices at 1409 Market St. Charming Fall Hats $7 Values for $4.95 All the mucli-dfNlred Rlinprn, trimmed and un trimmed, ao nnieh In vnjrue till* full nre *ho mii In thin. our Inltinl millinery offering;. Ju*t vlMit thin dnlnty new * hop nnd nee for your- , ■elf. I 1 ™***" TO Voss Electric Solves,the clothes wash ing* problem. Aside from high cost of laundry, your washing is done just as you want it. EASY PAYMENTS Neidig Bros., Ltd. 22 South Second St. Miss Martha Emma Yeager Is Bride of Robert Fulton Miss Martha Emma Y eager, daughter of Mrs. Ida Y'euger, 1905 North street, and Robert Hue Ful ton, were united in marriage Tues day morning, September 9, at the parsonage of the Stevens Memorial Methodist Episcopal Church, Thir teenth and Vernon streets, the Rev. Dr. Clayton Albert Smucker, of ficiating. The bride wore a traveling suit of blue broadcloth. After the ceremony a wedding dinner was served to rel atives and intimate friends at the ►inn-Harris. The young couple left in the afternoon for an extensive trip and will be at home, after Oc tober 15, at 1607 Swatara streets SAILING Foil FRANCE Mrs. Robert Dunlop and small son, Robert Dunlop, Jr., who have been visiting their relatives. Colonel and Mrs. James B. Kemper. 2109 North Third street, started this morning for New York City to sail from there for France, to join Major Dunlop, who is still in service abroad. Miss Evelyn Burg, 2502 North Sixth street, is some after a two weeks' stay at Boston and Provldone?. September is School Month If Your Child Needs Glasses Consult us. Don't delay. Many a child is backward at school because of eye trouble. Proper glasses will remedy the fault. CHjt (&ohl.l&inkcnbarh JcHmist OPTOMETRISTS AMO OPTICIAMS No 22 N. AT H.ST. jBARRIMBVRO. PAa "Where GlnN.se* Are Made ItlKht" I ■IUIMIIMM B | Just Starting ] | / The German | I f c| Defeat Story I | Written by | | General Ludendorff Himself 1 | • Whose Strategy Hastened Disaster | Today and every day for nearly ten weeks the Public | § Ledger will print generous installments of General Luden- | dorfif's own story of the war —PERSONALLY WRITTEN 'H from memory and from a tremendous mass of records smug- § E „ gled into Sweden by Ludendorff's assistants. 1 = The story is not a defense Ludendorflf's story is the or justification of the Ger- most amazing—most inter man crimes, plots and atro- esting feature article that = 1 cities. It is a frank confes- journalism has ever fallen = 1 sion in detail of the most co- he,r % *f. cl !" = - , . , , . . max to the Public Ledgers = 1 lossal fai ure ° f m ! gllt comprehensive war report against right in the history ing service Just starting | iof the world. —don't miss it. | Ladendorfif avOWS hIS Mail this coupon and you can ~*ill = hatred of America and qet Every In *t(diment | Americans —reveals the im- E£l! pany ' I I • * . , . Philadelphia, Pa., = | penahstic dreams of his inckd d„d 2.00 for t, , k s' imagination —explains un- ' 1 , blushingly that his great P L n^n^ nts ' all Bupplements ' = | personal "victory" in Ru- Name | = mania was really a crushing | | defeat. > AddreflS \ PUBLIC LEDGER \ HOME FROM CANADA Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Forry, 19 33 North Second street and Mr. and •Irs. Charles C. Hoffman, 2134 North Second street, have returned after a motor trip to Watkins Glen, Nia gara Falls and Toronto, which they reached by crossing Lake Ontario. They ulso visited Kingston, the Thousand Islands, Montreal, Quebec, and St. Ann De Beaupre, returning along Lake Champlain, through the Adirondaeks, to Lake George, and from there to Albany and New York city. Marshall House, of New Briton. Conn., spent the week -end hero ns the guest of Dr. H. M. Vastino n his way to Kirkvllle, Mo., where he studies osteopathy. WOMEN'S SILK STOCKINGS Specials for Wednesday Silk Hose in black, djl white, browrr; lisle top m> 1 •OU Silk Hose in black, CA brown, white, gray, tan, Pure Silk Stocking in black, white, gray, tan, champagne, grcer?, silver, cordovan, tffQ AA yellow P^.VU Lace Effects in fawn, OC blue, brown, white..., Fiber Silk Hose, lisle top *7t^ r and sole. Special • Fine Lisle Hose, white, black, brown, tan, gray. Special 75c 120 Envelope Chemise, 36, 40, 44 bust, regular $1.95 4fl CA value. Sale X .OU WOLFE CORSET SHOP 221 N. 2nd SEPTEMBER 9, 1919. WEI) AT PARSONAGE The marriage of Miss Agnes Flor ence Kramer, of Pittsburgh, and Earl M. Bushey, formerly of this city, now of that pluce, was solemn ized yesterday afternoon, at the par- | sonage of the Green Street Church of God, the Rev. H. S. Hershey, officlat ing. The ring ceremony Was used. Mrs. Charles Bushey and Mrs. Wil liam Lick, sister of the bridegroom, The Rose Millinery Shop formerly at 311 Wnlnut street, is now located at 810 N. 3rd St. Our new low-rent lo cation permits us to promote lower prices, always maintaining our jag' established individuality of style. We'll be pleas ed to greet old and new IHB friends in our new shop. BERNARD R. MAUSERT , New Organist Grace M. E. Church TJ! Pianoforte and Organ Instruction Excellent facilities provided for organ practice on the great ■ Austin organ when installed. Temporary Address—P. O. Box 1255, City NOTICeUT Our Store, at 1308 North Third, street, is now zl !jg prepared to serve you with a complete line of 111 Staple Groceries at GREATLY REDUCED I; PRICES. |jj Tto Great Atlantic &, Pacific Tea Co. witnessed the ceremony. Mr. and Mrs. Bushey will reside in PUU* burgh. Dinner Mondny Evening, Sept. 0 Stouffer's Restaurant 4 N. Court St. 5 to 7.30 s(ty Vegetable Soap Clilfkm FrifiiMNre Fried Oyntfri Urcnded Veal Cutlet Roait llecf Mantled Homr-frlrd Potatoes Itlmn Ilcnnn linked Beann—Entree lee C'renni Pie or Pudding Col Tee, Tea or Cocoa SPECIAL NOTICE Office will be closed only Sept. 13 to 21 DrJ.B.Lawrence Chiropodist 204 Market Street
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers