Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 03, 1919, Page 15, Image 15

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    BIG QUESTIONS TO
BE DISCUSSED BY
EPISCOPALIANS
(Revision of the Canon on
Matrimony Expected to
Cause Long Debate
Detroit, Mich., Oct. 2. —Revision
iof the Book of Common Prayer of
: the Episcopal church, adoption of
i a new canon touching church unity,
and revision of the canon on matri
mony are three of the most Impor
tant matters to be brought to the
attention of the delegates at the tri
ennial convention of the church that
will open here October S. It is
(anticipated that upwards of 3,000
'delegates and many of the leading
churchmen of this and other coun
tries will attend the convention,
which will last two weeks or longer.
The proposed revision of the
canon on matrimony would make it
impossible for an Episcopal clergy
i man to remarry divorced persons,
even the innocent party to a divorce.
It has been anticipated that this
question will provoke much debate.
The proposed new canon on church
unity, it is stated, would make it
possible for a minister of anothor
communion to be ordained in the
! Episcopal church without first giv
ing up his original affiliation. The
revision and modernization of the
prayer books is expected to take
imuch of the time of the gathering.
Social Service Meetings
During the convention daily meet
rings on social service are to be held,
,nnd the Church League for Social
and Industrial Democracy will com
plete its organization with Bishop
Charles D. Williams, of Detroit, its
leader.
Representatives of capital and la
bor will be invited to give their
views in the open forum meetings
on social service, preliminary to the
launching of the new league. The
purpose of the league, it is stated, is
a country-wide educational propa
ganda for better co-operation of all
walks of human life "for t, state of
society in which man will get all he
earns and earn all he gets, where
no man will live on the fruits of
another man's labor and no man will
be denied the fruits of his own
labor."
Church leaders anticipate that
the question of open sessions of the
house of bishops will again come be
fore the convention as it has the
past score of years. The proposal
lost by one vote at a recent con
vention of the bishops.
| Middletown
Class Takes Auto
Trip to Carlisle
Seventy-five members of the Men's
Bible Class of the Methodist Sun
day School, met at the church last
evening from where they left at 6
o'clock for an automobile run to
Carlisle, where a chicken and waffle
supper was served at the Hotel Car
lisle.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shellenberger,
Who resided at Mt. Gretna for the
past two months, have taken apart
ments with the Misses Theo and
Lydia Laverty, in North Spring
street.
Mr. and Mrs. John Statler, of
North Union street, will leave in a
few days for Saginaw, Mich., where
they will visit their son, Frank Stat
ler, for ten days.
T. C. Smith, who is a member of
Brownstone Castle, No. 4 56, K. G. E.
and who was in the contest for new
members, was presented with a gold
watch and chain for securing the
most members.
Noel Kohr, who is a member of
the Artillary Corps and stationed at
Fort Bliss, Texas, and who had been
ill with typhoid fever, is on a
month's furlough, visiting his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. William Kohr,
South Union street.
Triune Lodge, No. 307, I. O. O. F.,
Will take in a largp class of new
members at the meeting to-morrow
evening.
The Boy Scouts Troop No. 1, will
hold a meeting in the hall this eve
ning at 7.30 o'clock.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Mayberry,
who spent the past two weeks visit- j
lng relatives at Richmond, Va., re
turned to town and will spend a few
davs here with the latter's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Brinser, North
Union street, before returning to
their home at Elyria, Ohio.
Mrs. James Myers and daughter,
who spent sometime in town and
Highsptre with relatites, had her
household goods shipped from town
to Camden, N. J., where Mr. Myers
is employed in the shipyards. Mr. |
Myers and daughter and her sister |
Mrs. Anna Ditlow, of Highspire left
yesterday for Camden, N. J.
J. M. Rutherford, of Royalton,
and who was employed at the Avia
tion Depot had a bug fly into his ear
and was taken to the Germantown
hospital at Philadelphia, where he |
was operated upon and had it re- |
moved.
John M. Hughes also spent some
time in town as the guest of his
mother, Mrs. H. M. Hughes, in I
Emnus street, returned to Birming-1
ham, Alabama.
The Rev. C. R. Beittel, pastor of
the Royalton United Brethren i
church, left for Reading where he is j
attending the United Brethren Con
ference, which meets in that city |
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Schaeffer, of I
Royalton, entertained a number of
friends at their home Penn street. ;
The Senior Christian Endeavor!
Society of the St. Peter Lutheran I
church, held a surprise social in the
Sunday School room to thirty-five. I
The Liberty Band who held a fare j
last week on the lawn adjoining
their hall on Swatara street, and
realized about SI,OOO for the purpose
of securing new uniforms. Need
several hundred dollars more and
will start out serenading at various
homes to raise the balance.
The funeral of the late Mrs. A. A. i
Kohr, was held from her late home
First Loch below Royalton, this
morning at 10 o'clock and further
services at the Geyser church. Hill
dale and was largely attended. Bur- |
lal was made in the cemetery ad
joining the church. .
Farmer Protests
Air Advertising!
Gwynedd, Pa., Oct. s.—Declaring
that advertising literature which was
dropped from airplanes lodged In
some of his farm machinery and
"jammed it up" Robert McPherson
of Gwynedd has pu.dtcly protested I
against aerial advertising.
Mr. McPherson is an adherent of
modernism, but says farmers have
been inconvenienced through a pro
miscuous distribution of advertising!
and-ether literature via airplane.
FRIDAY EVENING,
Great Food Pressure
Foreseen by Expert
Cambridge, Mass., Oct. 3.—That
the next generation will live under
a food pressure comparable to that
of central Europe, and that our
grandchildren will struggle under a
iiin WHlM—iw in i "niJMgiiMMnr
I "The Live Store" "Always Reliable" I
| —Open All Day Saturday— < I
We're Asking Business Men
1 Right now the stocks this "Live Store" bought 1
Fall are worth a lot more than we paid for them. Market conditions
j C g ° ne UP >" Should we take advantage of that and charge more? We think not, 1
A * nd are not going to raise our prices—we are selling at old figures— we give you the / I
\ benefit —It s good business for us anyway. 0 I
1 If W f tk ?a? ht Soing out of busi- You know there's so much inferior ' I
53!.. "A a Merenttong, f ™ arC merchandise manufactured that looks good, 1
km WW trying to build a permanent institution and we're on a ... . , . , , , 5 *
fkyj/s ver y successful road when we do everything that's a bene- oftentimes just because the merchant is able to buy it for
\V fit to our customers. It's a Bag advantage to trade with than the kind he knows to be good, that he's apt to
11 a safe store, where you can feel sure they will give you take a chance. Well, that kind of speculation has runied
• K | % every last penny you arcentitled to. —There are many many, and for us we prefer to stick to the standardized,
1 Hi lilt m temptations confronting merchants these days. known quality goods, such as we have been selling.
I /iBl'l Hsrt Schaffner & Marx, 1
I J||P Kuppenheimer & Society Brand Clothes
I ##llll We've built up a reputation with dependable mer
n\m f 'I fH chandise, square dealing and by giving greater values. Our overhead
UlUlll W\ f-l IB expenses are reduced very largely on account of our great volume of business, there
!\A\\| jtiliql I|| fore our business must have increased, because we are able to sell at smaller profits
\ \vL |y| 1 J tkan tke small merchant. Our values and service attracts many thousands of custo-
W IVvSfimlft mers year after year and this has been a phenomenal season—new customers have been
Hi a llHlfi here in greater numbers than ever before.
$ 35 - S 4O - $45
1 No st w rn W ,i H matcl ? f f he valu ? s w s have this We are on the last quarter of 1919, October' 1
season. We 11 sell you on sight if you come here. You'll not want November and December are the banner months of the vear
to look farther than Doutnchs when you see these good suits in single and We'll be particularly busy for the next ninety days in the clothing depart
double breasted; some with yokes and pleats, others in stylish and con- ment, for the men and young men who come here for clothes r, JSHto
servahve models All the good plain shades, mixtures and blends that are spread the good news about the extraordinary suits and ove-coats we a
worth while having, are here for you. selling.
| —Open All Day Saturday— 1
■ 1 ■' ■ .. - . . . _ , ~ . . - --- --- _ _ _ __ _. _
1 Boys' Suits and Overcoats I
/ P j|lr \ You've read a great deal about insured clothes for boys in the magazines
| IgC j and leading journals during the past few weeks. We just want to tell you of the splendid response we
YOjfipvlSSra®/ aVC ad r ° m national advertising. Mothers are bringing the boys to this "Live Store" for "Dubblebilt " "Wear
pledge" clothes that are so popular, because at Doutrichs we give a guarantee that really means something to the nar-
chaser. Everything you buy at Doutrichs must give complete satisfaction or you get your money back or other sroods
Our customers ask no further guarantee than our usual methods of square dealing. We go the limit to satisfy
pressure similar to that of China,
was the prediction made here by
Prof. William M. Wheeler, dean of
the Bussey Institntion for Research
in Applied Biology of Harvard Uni
versity.
Prof. Wheeler, who made this
statement in connection with a plea
for more funds with which to study
means of relieving the stringency of
EAJUUfiBURG 9666k TELEGRAPH
the country's food situation, declared
It Imperative that immediate atten
tion be given to greater development
in our agricultural resources to
meet the food pressure of the next
half century.
The Bussey Institution, he said, is
planning exhaustive research in this
direction, and is awaiting the results
of the drive now on to endow Har
vard with a permanent fund of $15,-
250,000. At present, he pointed out,
the biology department is so handi
capped that it can accommodate only
16 advanced students.
JAPANESE RAISE SHAFT
Vancouver, B. C., Oct. 3. The
Japanese of British Columbia, some
14,000 in number, are erecting a me
morial shaft in Stanley Park in
honor of the Japanese who lost
their lives in the great war. Hun
dreds enlisted with British Colum
bia battalions and llfty-four lost
their lives. One won a Victoria
Cross. The memorial shaft will be
of marble, will stand 34 feet high
and will cost $15,000.
OCTOBER 3, 1919.
rOSSESMCG REMARKABLE ItAUTimWQ tOB.
, hl' f ipfc® 3 ! \3M\ Tits YET ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. ALL SHADES. >
UStM iV.tfTN UL sixDCHES DETECTION. WHY HOT RETAIN YOU* YOUTWVt ,
' t'rwllV ATTEABANCtr ASK YOUR rAVOMTt DIALU TOR '
0 Usi iWJJ "EARLING" HOUvncMT ROUGE, 3Se A BOX I i
V.v\ WvSzM /&< / "ADOLPH KLAR ,
' SI I FOURTH AVENUE —— HEW YORK
15