ISpededSal^rfPaten^ie^cines^L^oSetArtidesatl J Kennedy's Cut-Rate Medicine Store—Saturday Only I I Patent Methanes | Extraordinary Candy News j Toilet Articles I Natlirnav linlv A. &SSs®s*>l& Ba \ To keep their big plant busy during the summer months the Larg- j! i -f < \MtAJ Will J est Manufacturers of Chocolate Specialties in the World have made a T*fl PHf »JYI |\JT 7ir TaH'c ran,,, <s a iK 43<ft Riff \ special package of Assorted Chocolates, which they will sell until Sept. j; VAAAY C 1 , . 00 * ii fe&sS lst at less than cost to manufacture. They have given this package!: Roger & Gallet Rice Powder 11/. 50c Pape's Diapepsm 290 |! f the befitting name of "Good-Will" Chocolates !i T 7 M 25c Carter's Liver Pills • 110 || and we have agreed to co-operate with them, in preventing deserving ;; oger Gallet Talcum Powder ...140 i 50c Make Man Tablets 230 I; workers from being thrown out of employment, by offering it to our j| Dußarr y Talcum Powder 890 I SI.OO Father John's Medicine 590 ;j customers at practical cost. . jj Hudnut Talcum Powder 190 50c Syrup Figs, Calif 290 ;! H The President of the Company has furnished us with a sworn af- || Talc °lette 160 I I SIOO Bromo Seltzer . 570 i! // that "Good-Will" Chocolates are actual 50c per pound quality !; Aubrey Sisters' Beautifier 160 B $175 Horlick'. Malted Milk . $2.83 j| ie. '- ' // *°' here is no doubt of the genuineness of this bargain. j! El Rado 89» 25c Beecham's Pills 150 «! '■ . ■ i< 11 "Good-Will" Chocolates are made of the purest chocolate with rich j; Jess Face Powder 180 I 25c Atwood's Bitters"******!"*********'"!!' 150 !| fillings of nuts, crushed fruits or cream flavored with pure fruit juices, jj Freeman's Face Powder !..;!180 SI.OO Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 630 !' Sk T7 OlllTT FULL Not More Than 3 Boxes Will ( Mary Garden Face Powder $1.59 I SI.OO Hood's Sarsaparilla 590 |°P eCiaA "100 OaLUrCiay Ullly Z± C POUND Be Sold to Any One Customer. j j Azurea Face Powder -...730 | 50 Doan's Kidney Pills *?'{o Floramaye Face Powder 730 I ioc Roach '.V. se A, $LSO Combination Syringe, 890 Special Combination eX™J' assor " d odors '?: f I Hnffv Malt anri Tmn 91* .js t ? a With the proper kind of use the manu- r /o\_ I uthymul Tooth Paste 140 W 30* facturers guarantee this Syringe for one y"~7 Three cakes Palmolive Soap. Djer Kiss Face Powder I 25c Hoff's Malt, plain 190 year. White rubber bag. Good heavy 50c Palmolive Shampoo. O A Djer Kiss Talcum 210 I 25c Leibig's Malt 130 fif | tubing, and three pipes. OA JF Both for JtC .v" Babcock's Corylopsis Talcum 110 I SI.OO Manola . 590 | J Our price Oi/ C '— Creme De Meridor . . .150 | I SI.OO Tyree's Antiseptic Powder 590 " 1 1 SI.OO Bath Spray, 68c Mennen's Talcum Powder 110 I SI.OO Mando 590 ' SL2S Fountain S y rin S e > During this hot gather there Riker ' s Violet Cerate ...390 50c Armour's Extract Beef 330 iWI XX \n This Syringe was made to retail for iff nothing as nice as a cool shower, with jJJJ Java Rice Powder jjg* H SI.OO D. D. D 590 //lIA W iffl sl-25. Red rubber bag, three pipes and ill ))j||l » e®od Bath Spray. We have the one La Blanche Powder I II v\\V IF l/fl -j n . . ■ t-> • llga> / L-Aa ft you want at a very reasonable CQ. S/ x-uwuer <540 MB 50c Caldwell Syrup Pepsin 290 rapid flow tubing. Everything guaran- prlce; Saturday only OOC Stillman Freckle Cream 29* I SI.OO Wyeth Sage and Sulphur 590 teed to be as represented. fiftp Sozodont Tooth Powder . 116 I 50c Hay's Hair Health 35* °" r """ DOC NOTICE Sanitol Face Cream .... "ii"^l":^^ SI.OO Eft. Phosphate Soda 67* 75c Oil Atomizer lit- NO MAII ORDERS Daggetts Ramsdells Cold Cream 34* SI.OO Hyomei Outfit ......TO* UU Atol ™ Zer ' NO MAIL ORDERS Hind , s H(mey r 50c Parisian Sage 290 At this time of year most everyone is bothered, more or less, with N0 " PHONE ORDERS." Kolyno's Tooth Paste K; ( . K 50c Scott's Emulsion 310 catarrh. Therefore we are making a special price on this Atomizer A A NO GOODS DELIVERED AT THESE °dor ONo 17* I 50c Resinol Ointment 310 for Saturday only. Our price '* C PRICES. Swandown Face Powder I REMEMBER THE NAME AND PLACE j Church Publicity Gets New Boost From Ad Men and S. S. Leaders The Great Chicago Convention Considers Movement From the Newspaper Side; Sunday School Work ers Study Press Plans AT the present moment there is in session in Lake Geneva. Wis consin, the International Sunday School Training School for Secretaries snd Field Workers. And the fact of most unusual significance about it is that it is devoting seven sessions to a careful study of modern Christian publicity. This Is the first time a national re ligious organization has undertaken to give its leaders export training In the practical applications of the relation of the church to the press. Coming, as this meeting does, Imme diately after the Chicago convention Hair Removed Hair on the face, neck, shoulders or nnder the arms can be removed In a minute with El-Kado, a sanitary, color less liquid, now being used by thous ands of women. A simple application nnd the hair vanishes, leaving the Blcln smooth and white as before. The hair will not return for a long time, when another simple application will remove It for a still longer period. Get a GOc or SI.OO bottle at a»y drug gist or toilet counter so you can apply It tonight. Money back if not pleased. We will gladly fill your order by mail direct, in plain wrapper, if you will write enclosing stamps or coin, for free booklet, full information and letters of prominent use*a. tend a postal. Pilgrim Mfg. Co., 47 East 28th ft.. New York City. (7SI Wild Cat Falls Inn MARIETTA, PA. Dancing, Monday, July 5, afternoon and evening. Music by the full Krodel orchestra. Special 50c dinner served, at 12.30. By special arrangements all trains on the Pennsylvania Rail road will stop at Wild Cat station, July 3, 4, 5. A. L. RESCH, Proprietor FRIDAY EVENING, HAKRISBTJRG TELEGRAPH JULY 2, 1915 of the Associated Advertising Clubs in America, where also special attention was given to church publicity, the oc casion symbolizes the growing impor tance of this new form of religious activity, from the respective angles of both religious and publicity experts. No more significant trend of reli gion has developed in our times than this one toward scientific publicity. It reveals a new solicitude on the part of the church for the big, unchurched world. It shows that she is taking thought for the people, and is willing to " compel them to come in." The church Is learning the democracy of direct appeal to all classes of people; for this new publicity movement, which has already established itself in the organized Christian activities of America, is carrying its invitation into the marketplace of everyday life, like the prophets of old. Church advertising campaigns are under way in more than a score of cities, and, despite the approach of summer, there have recently been! many signs of quickened interest on! the part of both church and press. Ministerial unions and church federa tions have taken up the subject. In one case, that of the small town of Narberth, a suburb of Philadelphia, the "Go-to-Church" display ads are signed jointly by the Roman Catholic priest, and by the three Protesant pastors. This is illuminating, as re vealing the essential solidarity of the message of all the churches. The claims of the advertising campaigns deal with the fundamentals of reli gion which lie deeper than all de nominational lines. A Sweeping Movement Publicity has not only found a place on the programs of great conventions, like those of the Ad Men, of the BUI Posters, of the Sunday School Train ing Institute, of the Men and Religion Congress and of Journalism Week at various colleges; but also within three years at least four notable books on the subject of church publicity hav.e anieared. . The most important of these is the first, which was a scientific study of the question, made under Men and Religion auspices by a body of experts, with a great mass of data gathered from both the church and the press by a series of questionaires. Articles by the hundreds upon church publicity have recently appeared In the religious press. Even in foreign lands the subject lias been taken up. It is now Irresistibly to the fore. The United Missionary Campaign Is sued a booklet of instructions on church publicity, for which a wide spread demand was shown. The new Commission of Federated Agencies is further to promote scientific publicity. Now the subject has reached the stage of proceeding along clearly defined lines. v The part that Is for the organ ized church to bear; v the part that Is for the Individual church member, and the part that is for the press, are all becoming clearly understood and differentiated. Owing to the aroused interest of both advertising men and churchmen, methods and consequences as yet unsurmised may be looked for. By-Products of Publicity More notable even than the direct effects of the church publicity move ment have Seen the by-products. "The Go-to-Church-Sunday' movement has literally swept the world. Practically every largo community in North America has had a "Go-to-Church- Sunday" campaign. These have been revelations of the ingenuity and re sourcefulness of the churches when they applied themselves to new meth ods. Most communities are making these campaigns annual affairs. But the logic of the situation is forcing them back to permanent publicity campaigns, through the secular press, for a "Go-to-Church-Every-Sunday" movement. Incidentally, the parochial and competitive spirit of some city churches have been revealed. Not all the facts that have come to the sur face under the light of publicity have been beautiful. Some churches have frankly avowed that they are less in terested in getting the whole com munity to go to church than in filling their own particular pews. One unexpected reaction has been the raising of the question, "Are the church's goods as advertised?" John Wanamaker put the comment of many advertising men into a nutshell when he said, in connection with church publicity, "I believe advertis ing is all wasted, unless the stock of goods fully bear out every statement. Any firm lacking the goods and the system of business not only wastes the money spent, but it does much more; It actually damages Its business by drawing attention to it." Neverthe less, Mr. Wanamaker urges church ad vertising through the press. Ad Men and Preachers Clnsh A tonic effect upon the churches has rosulted from the publicity propa ganda. Their efficiency has been chal lenged by men not slow to express their minds. In return the churches have been set to applying the acid test to the efficiency of advertising; for [if publicly fails the churches, the ef- I feet the whole business of ad ■ ♦ CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always beam . Signature of vcrtising will be great and perma nent. All this inheres in the breezy story that comes from San Francisco. This, the most interesting single episode in the past three years of church publicity experience, occurred when the Adver tising Association of San Francisco was asked by the Church Federation to suggest methods for increasing the attendance upon the churches. Tak ing seven churches as a laboratory, the Advertising Men made an elaborate study of the equipment and the cost of the churches and the proportion of attendance, ujst as they would any secular business. Their findings were valuable and stimulating, so fur as they confined themselves to known facts; but the Ad Men could not resist the tempta tion to preach at the preachers; to criticise their theology, and what they felt to be the revival methods of the churches. In this they went beyond their depth, and all readers of the Ad Men's report expected thundering re torts from the preachers—especially so since the ministers criticised were Beven men whose names and person alities were known to everybody. The Ad Men called them "mentally lazy," "many years behind the times," "not acquainted with their stock," "have failed to bring the message home to the people," "are not delivering the goods," etc. The ministers replied by a printed "critique" on the Ad Men's report. With elaborate suavity, and appre ciation and well-concealed irony, they analyzed the report, and in a more compact and business-like document than that of the Ad Men themselves, pointed out the failures of the adver tising "investigation." A phrase from the ministers' rejoinder is that the re port was "a disappointingly superficial investigation, surprising in a, body of businessmen, and which compelled the committee to base Its'conclusions upon Imagination rather than upon fact, and to conjure doctrines, revival methods and decadent conditions which prob ably do not occur in any church in San Francisco." Incidentally, the preachers reminded the Ad Men that they had not said anything tLbout the primary purpose of their investigation, which was how to Increase the attendance upon the churches! When in good spirit Church and press get to working together with such candor and vigor, the effect is bound to be pronounced upon both. THE RELIGIOUS RAMBLER. SHIRKMAXSTOWN WEDDING Special to The Telegraph Shlremanstown, Pa., July 2. —A pretty wedding took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Straining, at their country home near here, when their daughter. Miss Merle Straining, was united In marriage to Ellis Eichel berger, of Shlremanstown. The Rev. H. K. Lantz, pastor of the St. John's Lutheran Church, performed the cere mony, after which the couple left for a wedding trip. PICNIC DATE FIXED Special to The Telegraph DUlsburg, Pa., July 2.^—At a meet ing of the general committee on ar rangements for the Union Sunday School picnic, Thursday, July 29, was selected ns the date for the picnic to be held at William's Grove. These Sunday Schools will participate: St. Paul's Lutheran, Monn.ghan Presby terian, Calvary United Brethren, Methodist, Arnold's United Brethren. Chestnut Grove United Brethren and Franklin Union. PYTHIAJiS TAKE OVER TITLE TO IIIG BUILDING Title to Union Square Hall in Howard street near Fourteenth was taken yes terday by John Harris Lodge. No. 193, Knights of Pythias. Extensive internal alterations, costing s2,ooft will be made. A social room will be fixed up on the rear of the first floor. The lodge room will be established on the second floor. The building was purchased from the United Ice and Coal Company. COMPLETE PLANS FOR CORNERSTONE LAYING Arrangements have been completed for the ceremonies Incident to the lay ing of the cornerstone of the new John Y. Boyd memorial building on the plot at South and Myrtle streets this even at 7.15 o'clock. The Rev. Dr. L S. Mudge, pastor of Pine Street Presbyte rian Church will make the principal ad dress. JITNEY PENNANTS DISTRIBUTED Pennants bearing the seal and colors of the Harrisburg Jitney Club, were distributed to members, last evening at a meeting In the restaurant of W. J. Perrin, last evening The next meet ing will be held at Progressive party headquarters, 219 Market street, next Thursday night. EIRE IN CHIMNEY A small tire, caused by a defective flue was extinguished at 1617 Fulton street, last evening by the Relly Chem ical wagon. Stagnant Blood Given A Quick Impulse Wonderful Activity Im parted by a Famous Remedy. The appearance of pimples, bolls, Bkln eruptions and all evidence of Impure blood, calls for S. 8. 8., the famous blood purifier. Cathartics, purges, bowel movers and lax atives won't do. No amount of bile will destroy certain germs which cause blood and skin eruptions. They are away down deep In the tissues, perhaps in the very marrow of the bones. And such a condition calls for the searching Influence of S. S. S. It is Indeed a remark able remedy, since it la taken up by the blood stream and never loses its medicinal Influ ence. On and on It goes, through and through the entire system and always with the same definite action to dislodge germs, destroy their activity and stimulate the liver, lungs, kidneys, bowels and skin to throw them out completely. It stimulates stagnant blood, provides a rational exhilaration to the nerve centers and thereby the natural functions of the body are aroused to cast out intruders, no matter how Btrougly Intrenched they may be. It refutes the ancient theory that to within us the germs thst eat Into our vitals calls for drugs that destroy our very existence. Get a bottle ef 8. P. 8. today of any druggist and for special advice on severe blood disorders write at once to the Medical Adviser, The Swift Specific Co., 103 Swift Bid*., Atlanta, Ga. Do not accept a substitute. Insist HD°n what you ask for, ' MIRRORS RESILVERED WE ALSO MAKE NEW MIRRORS Reasonable prices; work guaranteed . W. D. MANAHAN & CO., 24 S. Dewberry St. 1 — / Before Going on Lgg|| Your Vacation . WIR look over our large stock of Bags, Suit Cases and P S Trunks of all kinds and all sizes. "**» handle nothing but the best at prices cheaper M than elsewhere. It would pay you to look over our B line. Everything that we sell, we guarantee to be as represented. We also sell the best, pure oak, Wj\_ '"JBB tanned sole leather and shoe findings. MB HARRISBURG HARNESS & Bill SUPPLY co -2d and Chestnut Sts. Bo,h ,pl ">nes 5c Smokers often wonder at the regularity of King Oscar quality—wonder how it is possible to pro duce a nickel smoke with unvarying goodness for 24 years. King Oscar 5c Cigars first of all owe their success to "know how"—that essential that is so often mistaken for an accident —but in the case of King Oscar quality accidents do not happen regularly for 24 years. t=Regularly Good For 24 Years==± Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ads 13
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers