!"KENNEDfS~WAR | 1 On Patent i I at the i 1 CUT-RATE MEDICINE STORE I | 321 MARKET STREET J H ( Toilet Goods 1 \\7 A f f Patent Medicines"! :j XX Regular Price. Kennedy's Price. m/ m/ ' f £ e^,ar r. Pi ; ice - T ~ „ ' Kennedy's Price. g g 50c and 25c-Aubrey Sister's Beautifier 19? and 39? ▼ W / % I m $ .00-Father John s Med.c.ne 67? g H 25c—Freeman's Face Powder 19? ▼ • ▼ -A mm • $ ,W-Scot s Emulsion 67? ♦♦ H 50c—Carmen Powder 39? , Tr , , , ~r . f! Dkl ™ 8 Ve # Com P ound g ~ We are not responsible for the War in Europe—but si:oo_iw£ 8 g 75c—Djer Kiss Face Powder!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'.! 1111111 111 4»ff we are responsible for the War on Patent Me Jicine in ' l!^r 0 M tett n-' s «; Bitter V' V- 8 ♦♦ ja°va Z °Rice au & nd a' s vr^?e Cr De Parma*!!!!!!!!!!!! .7!!!!!!!! :XJ ever since we opened our store thirty years ago. It has . V.\ .V.\V!!!!!!!!: 6t| 5 S 2^Lichner? C Feft°?owde; SK certainly been some battle. At the same time we feel as Tabids V.V.V.*;: 7 777 77! !67? g § 25c— Egyptian Powder 7777777777777 lbj our fight has been successful. We have saved our army sl.(3 —Dewitt's Kidney Pills 67? I H °f customers thousands of dollars during this battle of cut |:^|i r torpici 0 rpicid t e ::::::~ H pn f es - We h °p® this «*-»*« war Wlll «° on forever,and |. jj soc—Eptoi so, as long as you allow us to be your commander-in-chief si'»lsa ( | o M"DatiS par ' " ?♦ | WE WILL DEFEAT OUR ENEMY, "HIGH PRICES." G tt 7 r. p-sinni C„ ar , ial r\ • I I if) 7sc—Mercohzed Wax 58? «« H 25c Peroxide Cream !.!. *. 77 77777777 13? wUr present army IS not quite large enough. We want 75c—Pompeian Massage Cream 49? jJ § 25^wi[°hlLz" y S" JSt thousands of new recruits to follow our flag of low prices. yfc&2ay'« Food !"bs< !! H s^Dtgptt&Ramsd.irt'c™™ '.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'ssj This is our call to arms. Join our avmv for lowpricesand 75c-RnTad?Lnac wlter'l'.i:".ll!l".'."l".i:SS| S H 25c—Jess Talcum help us defeat the enemy, "HIGH PRICES " I 75c—Saxolite ,15? I § _ S~£-, n ' s p a P ayans -A--; s?s !* XX TOILET WATERS, ETC. REMEMBER THE PLACE AND NUMBER: 50c-—Scott's Emulsion 37? I♦♦ $l.O0 —Hudnut's Toilet Water 69? 50c—Cuticufa Ointment 38? XX ♦♦ sl.oo—Piver's Le Trefle Toilet Water 89? W W T ▼ W w -w-m 50c—Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin 35? XX, XX sl.oo Florayme Toilet Water 89? 1 ** 1 I ® 50c—Listerine 34? ♦♦ ♦♦ SI.OO—R. &G. Violette Toilet Water - I I 50c—Danderine 34? .^ZX ♦♦ $l.O0 —Colgate's Toilet Water 75* Air" B a* 50c—Diapepsin, Pape's 34? 2+ ♦♦ HOT WATER BOTTLES SPECIAL Only Cut-rate Patent Medicine Store in Harrisburg soc—stuarfs Dyspepsia Tablets 34? JJ sl.2s—Regular 2-qt. White Rubber 88c c—^. er P 1 ': I , d * ••*••••••: •; 34 £ XX XX sl.so—Regular 2-qt. Red Rubber 18 J \ \/% O A Pinaud s Eau De Quinine 37? I 2- q ,. w.,.r Bo„i, i,; 48 Church That Is a Nation Now Drawn Into War The Armenians, Who Have No Corporate Identity Except Ecclesiastically, Go Into Action (By the Religious Rambler.) A few lines in the dispatches from the war in eastern Turkey to the ef fect. that the Americans have openly joined forces with the Russians in at tacking the Turks, brings into the war an ancient people, who have the unique distinction Of being a church but not a nation. The name Armenian is associated in the common mind with massacres, and these people have paid a bloody toll for their allegiance to Christian- Sty. In Turkish Armenia they are outnumbered more than four to one by their Moslem neighbors, and in ad dition to the big massacres of the Putnam's Extractor Rids Your Feet of Sore Corns No substitute has ever been devised that gives the qulcx. painless results you get from Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. Its success Is unequalled. It soothes, eases, heals and painlessly removes callouses, bunions, warts and corns in twenty four hours. Perfect satisfaction guar anteed with 25c. bottle of Putnam's Painless Corn and Wart Extractor. Refuse a substitute preparation. Put nam's is sold by druggists everywhere and by C. M. Forney.—Advertisement. O.OO" Round Trip New York Sunday, Nov. 22 Special Train Leaves Harrisburg 5.45 A. M. RETI RM\G, leave* Pcnnnyl vnnla Station, New York, o:s© I*. JM. Pennsylvania R. R. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 20,1914. past, there have been frequent loca murders during the past year on re ligious grounds. There are about three million Ar menians in the world, less than a mil lion of whom reside in Turkish Ar menia. Russian Armenia, across the border, lias nearly as many. And a lesser number are found in what may be called Persian Armenia. All three districts converge at Mount Ararat, upon which Noah's ark landed at the subsidence of the flood. This strange commingling of past history with present politics and war news, which has marked the dispat ches from the East, is especially strik ing in the case of Armenia, the re cords of which go back to the ancient cuneiform inscriptions a thousand years before the Christian era. The central mountains and fertile valleys of Armenia are situated almost equally distant from the Black Sea. the Medi erranean and the Persian Gulf. Thus, it has been in contact with the history of Persia, Greece, Rome, and all sub sequent world dominions. A Church Without a State The majority of Armenians are nei ther Roman nor Greek, Catholics, nor yet are they Protestants, although Ar menians are to be found in large num bers in all of these three bodies. The Armenian Church is the Gregorian Church. St. Gregory established Christanity as the religion of the Ar menian state before ever Constantine had erected the cross over the Roman Empire. By the translation of the Bible into the vernacular in 410, a new tie was created, which has done more to bind Armenians together than anything else. Their worship is In the native language. | The ecclesiastical identity of the Ar ■ menians is the only* one recognized, ! and they are represented at Constan tinople by the Patriarch, who. until a comparatively late date, held both civil and spiritual authority under the I over-lordship of the Sultan. Not since j the time of the crusades have they had their own national existence. I Most Armenians are members of the Ottoman Empire, but like so many I other of the racial groups of that i strange agglomeration of peoples, the i Armenians avowedly hate the Turks, I and, as the news columns are report- I ing. have openly taken up arms (against their historic oppressors. A ROMANTIC RACK A few sentences from Sir Charles William Wilson, an eminent British authority, give a good characterize tion of those romantic people, who have kept their identity since remote! pre-Christian times. He says: "The Armenians are essentially an Orien-1 tal people, possessing, like the jews,! whom they resemble in their exclu- | slveness and widespread dispersion, a remarkable tenacity of race and fa-! culty of adaptation to circumstances. | They are frugal, sober, industrious and i intelligent, and their 'sturdiness of | character has enabled them to pre serve their nationality and religious | under the sorest trials. They are strongly attached to old manners and customs, but have also a real desire for progress which is full of promise. On the other hand they are greedy of gain, quarrelsome in small matters, self-seeking and wanting in stability; and they are gifted with a tendency to exaggeration and a love of intrigue which has had an unfortunate influ ence on their history. They are deeply 1 separated by religious differences, and their mutual jealousies, their inordi-1 nate vanity, their versatility and their cosmopolitan character must always I be an obstacle to the realization of the dreams of the nationalists. The want of courage and self-reliance, the deficiency in truth and honesty some times noticed in connection with them, are doubtless due to long servitude under an unsympathetic government." A Long Lino of Martyrs Armenia has for ages been inha bited by the Armenians and the Kurds, the latter a virile, blood thirsty, mountain people, whom Xeno jphen knew as the Carduchi. The i Kurds being Moslems, have assumed th superior position, and no record has ever been kept of the times when they have expended their religious zeal by cutting the throats of Chris tian Armenians. l>espite genera tions of persecution, the Armenians— ignorant, poor and opposed though the villagers were—have kept the faith. Massacre after massacre has but served to Intensify their loyalty jto Christianity and to awaken their national aspirants. | By the way of these massacres ; America has come into association 'with the Armenians, and the Congre- Igationallst's work in Turkey is chiefly I among them. All the great mission schools in the Turkish Empire are attended chiefly .by Armenians. The missionaries have | sought their converts from the cor- I rupted Armenian Church, rather than ! from Islam. I Armenians in America Many of these Armenians have mi grated to America, and have for the ; most part gone into mercantile pur j suits. They are the rug sellers, and I Oriental merchants familiar to every- I body. They have a keen business | sense. I This commercial shrewdness of Ar j menians, which has made them the financial masters of the natives, has ' been a factor in the outbursts against • them. i Visitors to the Church of the Nati vity and the Church of the Holy Sepul chre in Bethlehem and Jerusalem, I know that the Armenian Church I maintains separate rights In these holy lplac.es, along with the Oreek and Ro man Catholic churches. No amount of opposition has been able to make I them abdicate their religious claims. I For the rights of the Patriarch at Con stantinople they have been quick to j riot. Now, apparently the Armenians ! see in the present strife the breaking jup of Turkey and the possibility of 1 , the realization of their dreams of an j Armenian Empire. VIVID WAR PICTURES OF PERMANENT INTEREST Superb Illustrations in the Book Which We Are Distributing One of the many valuable features of "The Story of Europe and the Nations at War," which we are distributing to our readers, is comprised in the mag nificent collection of historical pictures of current and permanent Interest which the book contains. In this col lection are photographs of the rulers, great statesmen and great military and naval leaders of all Europe, in cluding both those who have made their impress upon world events of the last century leading up to the I present conflict, and those who are | foremost in the public eye to-day. They show also the scenes of great battles of history described in the book, and trace the wonderful devel ; opments of modern instruments of I warfare from the comporatlvely crude 'implements witl#which the great Na ! poleon fought his battles and achieved (his victories. No similar collection of | vivid photographs has ever before : j been bnourht together In a single !i volume. These full-page half-tone I engravings are printed on specially , finished paper which brings out all the beauty of their execution and de \ tails. The illustrations also Include a , large map in colors. . Be sure to clip the coupon on an . other page and obtain your copy of this remarkable book containing the history of Europe and the causes and ; Issues of the present war. !; IIOGS DYING IN MIFFLIN COUNTY Special to The Telegraph ! Lewistown, Pa., Nov. 20.—Within a . I week past about a dozen hogs have '; died at McVeytown, this county, and a number in the big valley. Charles ; I Williams has lost two fine hogs and : three others are very 111. Reuben Gay _ I ton lost a fine breeding sow that cost ; him a fancy price. It Is not known , what killed the hogs in this place, but it is reported that hog cholera has '; been attacking some hogs In the 1 ' county. THROAT CUT IN FIGHT [ | Sellnsgrove. Pa., Nov. 20. Frank Steiff. aged 27, is dying in the Shamo j : kin Hospital and his assailant, Peter 1 I Porocupa, Is at large. The men fought 'I In the store of Dominlck Brest, In ' | Vine street. Shamokln, Wednesday ! night and Porocupa slashed Stelff's ; | throat from ear to ear. J; FRUIT GROWERS" EXHIBIT Newport, Pa., Nov. 20. —The annual ■ exhibit of the Perry County Fruit • Growers' Association will be held here . in the hall over the Smith Bros, garage ' from December 9 to 12, Inclusive. !. " Howard Jones, chairman of the com ■ inlttee of arrangements, has issued the : premium list of the exhibition. Pros > pectlve exhibitor* should send to Mr. . Jones for a copy of the list. USE TABERNACLE LUMBER TO BUILD TOBACCO SHED Special to The Telegraph Columbia, Pa., Nov. 20. The big tabernacle occupied by the Nleholson- Hemmlnger evangelistic party is being torn down and the lumber will be taken to East Donegal township by Jacob Strlcltler, where it will be used - © O- O O O, o-O - o 0 9 o a O O O 3 O Q O O <a O <3 0 o o ©j • • o © o 9 Care in the making means I quality in the candy. • » First in the selection of ° . every ingredient I ® —then in the blending of c a the selected ingredients ® 0 —then in the packing of • 1 the finished product I 0 —every step is watched I J and checked with care by • 1 FRESH (EjrERY HOUR I o ° 0 Every piece in every box is pure— ® <j fresh—-delicious! * o ° 9 Our Sales Agents in fJ. H. Boker W. P. Cunninghaai ° 0 Harrisburg are . t F. J. Althouse ° 9 ° » HUYLER'S COCOA, LIKE HUYLER'S CANDY, IS SUPREME ° o . e o 6 a o f>er»aoooo<?oo aoooeonnooooooOoO to build a tobacco shed. The lumber in the building was sold for less than SSOO. FLOUR FOR BELGIANS Columbia, Pa., Nov. 20.—Employes of the Watt & Shand department store and the silk mill workers have raised funds to send flour to the Belgian suf ferers. The employes of the silk mill ' raised a sum large enough to purchase eight barrels of flour. FOUNDER'S DAY AT UNIVERSITY Selinsgrove, Pa., Nov. 20. B'oun i der's Day at Susquehanna University will be observed with special exercises at 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon. Fea ture of this year's observance will b® the erection of a 55-fooit flagpole. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers