—— —— v/v l v/ U, v'. 'Jlx ——C LARK'S— —1 Special Sale of Patent Medicines I and Toilet Articles | & \ 10c Alum Powder, lb 7f | ■ —■■> » 25c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia, 3 oz., 15* I— \ I— \ i & I FY& & f EXTRA SPECIAL A -.1 25c Camphorated Oil. 3oz 15* 5 0c bottle Palmolive *IC V. • ffCC . refb^g; wkh * Ollfit ArtlClCS 10c Epsom Salts, lb 7? Shampoo, with a purchase i / TSATTTVTT\ two rubber Oi\ * r. 25c Ess. Peppermint, 3oz 15, ° f , thr " ca *' s "IQ- /2-fUUiMJ) fittings C Azurea Face Powder 830 25c Merck's Susar MUk. >b ,7c 1 Pata °" V « , A . 1 <T>l 1 . T °° ,h »"♦ 25c Savmon Soap 18, ASSOrfofl ( hnm!afp« \ Carme " """ P ° W "" 39 « 25c Witch Hazel, best, pint 15, ( _ , 7 SODA TICKETS. Colgate s Dontal Cream 20, XC C!T lr round Value 25C Colgate's Shaving Stick 20* A. -_J.II- J* _• OCa oia * ICketS During th.s special sale we will e ive a full h.lf-nonnH l . Colgate's Tooth Powder 15* I irlfpni - box of SPECIAL ASSORTED CHOCOLATES with a Cuticura Soap 20* U IWU li' 1 vVII Vlli V*J 10 C stTe 5 ° C ° f in our Market strect C~ ~~ _ ~lngram Milkweed Cream 34* ! 25c Bellans 75c Bellans 50* —————fruits 3 crearr ' s covere d with the richest, purest choco- bination, rt* 1 Q CSS ak:um P° w der 17* SI.OO Bromo Seltzer 65* Ivory, Lifebuoy or Lava I —AT OUR— „ " ' J- & J- Shaving Cream 17* 50c California Syrup Figs 33* soap, 7 cakes 0[- I , , 0 , _ c SL5 ° Yankee Fountain Kolynos Tooth Paste 18* 50c Danderine . 33, I * Zsc J 4 Market Street Store Only ° q 74c JL. f«. P o„ d er »£ 50c Diapepsin .33* J _mJ Lyon's Tooth Powder 17* 50c Hays' Hair Health 33* Melba Face Powder 50* $3.75 Horlick's Malted Milk $2.8.1 HIGML,AND LINEN SPECIAL NOTICE Mercolized Wax 53^ 75c J ad Sahs 49 < a„d ssr&? a h ,rsrs Alw . Vft reillombor w WIIIWII , , lvthi f Packer * s Tar w w 50c Serine 34* b y „,cr a P po« ra , w . so ,-ou, Pebeco Tooth Paste 34* 50c Palmolive Shampoo 33* '* wIH -.ways ho the we.«,me - 17 * I, nn isp., letter, dainty in apitearance and correct in every detail. customer* ivn 11 a li ,° aocol,ll, lodate our e X 3 pur . _ !°° p r M " n : siws a^ loc *'"" an " m " ke • ss f- f_ fT 0 SI.OO Pierce G. M. Disc 65* L k prices. Sanitol Face Powder 17* Si.oo Pierce Fav. Pres 65* MM J Sanitol Tooth Powder 17* E£z:E: s Special Sale Saturday and Monday 2 l SI.OO S. S. S. for Blood 65* ""I ■ IV A ~iiy-y Mm M ilm II 50c Stuart's Dys. Tab 33* | TM hite Tooth Paste 17* 50c Swamp Root 33e UUU IvXAA;J[kjJ JL k3 JL ■■ '■J MJ I Stillman Freckle Cream 24* 50c Wyeth Sage and Sulphur 33<» . Swan Down Face Powder 12* _J ALSO 306 BROAD STREET | Woodbury Face Powder I I Money-Making Ministers Coming Under the Taboo jj | Case of Dr. Hillis Coincides With Action Against ij j Evangelists' Profits; Effect Upon "Billy" Sunday ij (By the Religions Rambler) "n***"*********************************iiwiv>vwMwmv>iatui^' An old and widespread sentiment against ministers making fortunes seems to be crystallizing at the pres ent time; and the Evangelistic Com mission of the Federal Council of •'hurches has taken action looking to ward what has become almost a scan da! in the case of professional evangelists. The case of Dr. Newell Dwight Hillis whose manly avowal of the mistake he made in turning aside to money-mak ing has interested the whole country, has given point to the discussion. The brilliant pastor of Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, who has failed to the ex tent of something like SIOO,OOO has become a powerful recruit to the side r>f a nonmercenary ministry. He made a fortune by his books and his lec tures and investments only to lose it =0! in the hard times. Now he avows hat all this has impaired his spiritual power and his Christian leadership. Dr. Hillis declared, in a dramatic statement to his congregation, that footed Ifoutotefl! AT FOUNTAINS. HOTELS, Oil ILSCWHIRI Got NORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. Delicious, invigorating and sustaining. Keep it on your sideboard at Don't travel without it ~~~~~ A quick lunch prepared in a Vnlosa you say "HORLIOITS m you may got a Substitute. r~ For N-a-s-t-y Bugs What a lot of trouble a little bug 1 ■ can cause. You will surely de- i stroy all the bugs and save your- ! self a lot of annoyance if you use j Forney's Knock Out Bed Bug Killer 25c Delivered FORNEY'S DRUG STORE' 426 Market St. Both Phones *■ J FRIDAY EVENING, HARRIBBURQ TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 8 101«? t. "there are home missionaries and for s,eign missionaries and social settlers - and neighborhood visitors whose very - shoe latchets I am not worthy to f stoop down and unloose." Hard Sliding for Money-Makers I Church papers and leading laymen, as well as the rank and file of pastors, ' are speaking out with unprecedented s plainness upon the peril of money ■ making, or "love of filthy lucre," as . the apostle called it, which is grow i j ing in some religious circles. Larger . fortunes are being made to-day than - j ever before by men solemnly set apart sifor the holy calling of preaching the i gospel. I have more than once of late »! heard quoted the declaration of a for • i mer professor in Princeton Theological L | Seminary that there are only two II ways in which a minister of the gos -11 pel may properly have wealth; he may I inherit It. or he may marry it. ' | "Billy" Sunday has been a factor in : | bringing this subject to the fore. The ( ! discussion that has raged about his j head has kept uppermost the subject 1 of his financial remuneration, which Is now supposed to be in the neighbor ; hood of 5200,000 a s ear. True, It Is ja free-will offering, and "Billy" works j harder than Caruso or any business ; man. Nobody can question his legal ; rights to as large an income a-s the grateful people will provide. Shepherds and Crooks j Not a few other lesser evangelists | receive JIOOO or more a month, bv the « "thank offering" plan. All profes sional evangelists, of any standing, ; make more money than pastors. The point of objection is that the | evangelist is not on the same basis as ! Caruso, and that money-making bv 1 ! preachers is contrary to the spirit of, !the Gospel. The common conviction: I of Christians that it is wrong for her- j jalds of the Cross to grow rich by their ministery is abundantly supported by i the New Testament. The standard of i judgment is not one of legal right, but j of Christian propriety, j When money and ministers jolntlvj j come under discussion the old! j apothegm is recalled that "In the I early church there were golden bishops i ! with woodeno croziers, and the shep- 1 I herds fed the sheep: but In a later! I day there were wooden bishops, with! | golden croziers. and the sheep fed the j shepherd." Certainly the highest use-! : fulness of the ministerial calling is i destroyed by the sin of avarice. It is I ; noteworthy that Moody and Whittle. 1 i two of the greatest evangelists of the I past generation, were not money- I makers, and Gipsy Smith has long worked for a stated salary under a CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years ; Always bean -/? - i Signature of I British Committee. Salaries For Evangelists There is real Importance In the statement that, on the eve of an organized, nation-wide evangelistic ; movement by all the denominations, | the Federal Council's Commission on ! Evangelism should openly attack the I present method of paying evangelists. I They flatly oppose the "thank offer | ing" system, whereby the visiting I evangelist, through a process which J has been called "a psychological liold ] up." receives huge sums for his brief campaign. The commission recom mends a flat salary basis for evangel ists. that the opprobrium may be re moved from this calling, and that the ; work itself may be kept as the one ■ objective. | Just what salary should be paid "Billy" Sunday, if he could ever be j brought to consent to "join the union." is a matter of speculation. Surpris- I ingly plain words have been spoken i on this subject by warm supporters of j Sunday, who fear a reaction against | him and his work on this account. I Nolan R. Beat, the editor of "The i Continent," in the course of a full- : | page editorial said: I "And now the only question worth j the anxiety of the church is the ques tion whether the 'deceitfulness of ! riches' which Jesus Christ dreaded so j | much may have corroded In some de-! i gree the mirror in which an evangel-j list's soul ought to reflect the image of i ' the Lord. The zeal with which Mr. I Sunday still maintains his financial i 'plans against all modification now that j jhe has discovered in them an El j j Dorado, and the subtile ways in which j I from the platform he encourages ex-j travagant gifts, suggests painfully that he is not to-day as indifferent to the I glitter of gold as when he started on j his work." Hymn Books and Stocks Another aspect of evangelism that troubles fastidious folk Is the sale of hymn books by choristers who either are personally identified with a pub lishing house or get commissions from the publisher. C'ne of these associates of a famous evangelist makes over $50,000 a year. The authors of the popular hymns get only a trifle fori their work, the amounts ranging rrotn I one to ten dollars a song, more often 1 the former than the latter. The strife of the hymn book sellers | is responsible for the deterioration of; taste in church music, which Presi-j : dent Wilson and other churchmen | have publicly lamented. ' Now that twenty-six denominations. | lin affiliation with the Federal Coun-! I ell's Commission, have evangelistic | committees of their own, it is believed , that some of these evils may be cor-J rected. Clergymen as Stock Peddlers As yet no way has been found for dealing with the minister who sells wildcat mining stock and uncertain real estate. The number of confiding persons a ghastly proportion of whom are widows who have lost their all through their trustfulness tn the preachers as investment guides is beyond certain knowledge. A prominent layman was recently approached hv a minister who has quit preaching and gone Into the mar keting of nut lands in the South. When the layman pointed out that, at the highest possible market rating, the offering was worth less than half what the minister asked for it, the latter guilelessly countered by the statement • that It must be a good thing, or a I certain widow with eight children i would not have put her all into it! i clearly, that man's customers had j been led to purchase by his ministerial' standing and by his personal probity.! rather than by his business acumen, j The only proposition that offers any. deliverance from these men who have I demitted the ministry to go into aecular business is to deprive them of I The only proposition that offers any deliverance from these men who have demitted the ministry to go into business is to deprive them of I .their clerical standing and the right to , use ministerial titles. ' If the expected revival of religion I is to come, all traffickers will have to E |be driven from the courts of the , .temple; and all attaches of the temple j I will have to be led to give up com * j mercial perquisites. Only an un " worldly ministry can lead the world ' into the church. And not the allure- I ments of gain, but the summons to | sacrifice, will lead worthy young men | into the Gospel ministry. '(| THE RELIGIOUS RAMBLER. Childhood Romance Leads to Wedding of Couple at Philadelphia on Monday ;! Sunbury. Pa.. Oct. 8. When Gil bert E. Gable, an official for the Bell ! Telephone company, of Philadelphia, !; is wedded to Hazel Detweiler, of 4029 I Baring street, Philadelphia, next Mon ; | day in the Holy Trinity church at that • j place, the first chapter of a romance 'I begun in childhood will have been ■ | completed. The ceremony will be performed by the Rev. Floyd W. II Tompkins, after which a company of | some 150 persons will be present at a ' i wedding breakfast in the Gold and >jßlue room of the Bellevue Stratford. Mr. Gable was born in Shamokln, i | where he passed his childhood. When jhe was 10 years old a little girl came j one summer and boarded with her j parents at a house nearby. The two J became acquainted, but when Autumn jcame the Detweilers took Hazel back I to the city. I Ten years later, when Mr. Gable had grown up and was working in Phila delphia, he received a post card from j Paxinos, reminding him of the sum j mer spent in Northumberland county, and inviting him to visit the Detweiler home. Since then the romance has gone from step to step until next Monday the two childhood friends will be wit married. The ceremony will be nessed by L. H. Kinnard, vice-presi dent of the Bell Telephone company, and other prominent business men of Philadelphia. In addition the Pathe . scope company will take moving pit— Itures of the ceremony and reception, which will be tiled away in the private "movie" collection which Mr. Gable I is collecting. ! WHAT IS URIC ACID? Does Uric Acid Cause Backache, Rhenmatism and Kidney Triable ? ; Dear Dr. Pierce: What is Uric (Acid? Does it cause kidney trouble? ; Not long ago I was examined for in ! surance and an analysis of the kidney j secretions showed an excess of Uric ! Acid. I suffer from backache, and rheu | matlsm in my limbs, but never before j suspected my kidneys. I recognize you : as an authority on these subjects, and j wish you would give me this infoi matlon. LEWIS R. | Lewis R.. My Dear Sir: Answering I your letter. Uric Acid indicates poison ' Ing of the system: It Is also associated 1 with several other poisons and forma of painful Irritants In the cells of the I Joints, nerves and muscles. Everyone i has Uric Acid In the system, but j naturally in small quantities. Exces sive amount Is caused by eating too I much meat and foods that ferment In stomach. The kidneys being the fllt | ers of the hlood are supposed to sep arate and throw the poisons out of the j system. Weak, tired and overworked | kidneys fall to do this, hence the pols . onous Uric Acid arid its associated I poisons contaminate the blood, causing backache, lumbago, rheumatism, I droopy and tired, wornout feeling. Good Record of Coxestown I Pupils For School Month » Special to "The Telegraph Lucknow, Pa., Oct. 8. Pupils ! neither tardy nor absent during the . first month of Coxestown grammar » school were as follows: D. M. Lebo. 1 teacher; Beatrice Norton, Florence i Turns, Sara Snyder, Harriet Norton,! Violet Matzinger, Edna Burd. Mar-1 garet Arndt, Sidney Arndt, Clyde Fet- J terhoff, John Snoop, Lawrence Gar- • man, Russel Fetterhoff, Allen Solada, j . Robert Strohm, James Sheesley, Ar-! thur Lingle, Charles Mehargue, Clem- i . ent Moyer. Stephen Gruber, Clarence j I Sponsler, Lawrence llassinger. Clar-! , ence Burd, Ralph Deckert, Harold, i Bollinger and Clement Pipping. Num-i . ber enrolled, 37; average attendance,! ; 35; percentage of attendance, 97. ! Pupils of Coxestown primary school.' , taught by Miss Anna Lupfer, neither j absent nor tardy during month, were; j Louisa Moyer, Mary Turns, Frances j - ' Corl, Florence Schell. Pauline Good. i - Lucille Norton, Mary Horn, Ethel j Bowman, Anna Matzinger, Eleanor i Greenawalt, Eva Fetterhoff. Helen ] Horn, Vivian Wilson, Edith Baehtel, Ethel Speese, Mary Fetterhoff, Marlon 1 Sunderland. Martha Deckert, Elwood I j Good, Earl Cassatt, Palmer Fetterhoff, , Carl Baehtel, Charles Arndt, Harry I j Kennedy, Walter Arndt, Luther Deck- I! ert, Linus Cassatt, Alfred Olwlne. John j' Norton, Curtis Straw, Harold Olwine,' 1 Russel Reddinger, Charles Landis and j! Robert Evans. Number enrolled, 58; , average attendance, 56; percentage of'< attendance. 97. 1 STUDENTS' SOCIAL : Special to The Telegraph New Bloomfield, Pa., Oct. 8. A students' social will be given in the | girls" dormitory of the Academy this evening at 7.30 o'clock. FLOUR MILL SOLD Special to The Telegraph New Bloomfield, Pa., Oct. B.—Lloyd D. ;-cambaugh of Wila, Pa., bought the Markelvllle flour and feed mills at Markelville from "W. A. Patton for $2,800. c i short breath and many other symp | toms. - ! To overcome the trouble Is only a y matter of toning up the kidneys, and c ! this Is best done by a treatment with j I "An-Uric" with proper diet and exer- < - else. This prescription has been thor b oughly tested and used by specialists at 1 my institution, In Buffalo, N. Y., with ; 1 satisfactory results, and astonishing - relief. It being 37 times more active | than llthla in dissolving uric acid. I recently put "An-Uric" before the j I American people and it may now be' . I obtained from almost any one of the 1 j leading druggists In town, simply by R asking for Doctor Pierce's "An-Urlc," B j In tablet form. 9 j If run-down, weak or emaciated, t ] need building up and wish to put on . | enough "stay there" flesh to round off , ! your figure, making It plump, robust i j and healthy looking, I would suggest! . | also a tonic for strengthening the .(stomach, giving life to the lungs and , i purity to the blood, such as does Dr. \ ■ Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, the . herbal system tonic. I Take good medical advice, and do > r not let deadly Bright'! Disease or Dla- ; , betes develop from neglected kidnevs. , (Signed.) V. M. PIERCE. M. D. I Take Iron, Says Doctor, If You Want Plenty of "Stay There 99 Strength Like an Athlete! j Ordinary Nnntrd Iron Will Make Dell | cnte. Xervous, Rundown People I 100 Per Cent. Stronger In Two | Week*' Time, In Many Citses , New York, Oct. B.—Most people fool ! Ishly seem to think they are going to set renewed health and strength from 'some stimulating medicine, secret nos | trum or narcotic drug, said Dr. Sauer, ; a specialist of this city, when, as a mat i ter of fact, real and true strength can only come from the food you eat. But ; people often fail to get the strength | out of their food because they haven't I enough iron in their blood to enable it Ito change food into living matter. ' From their weakened, nervous condi j tion they know something is wrong. I but they can't tell what, so they gener ally commence doctoring for stomach, liver or kidney trouble or symptoms of some other ailment caused by the lack of Iron In the blood. This thing may ?o on for years, while the patient suf ers untold agony. If you are not strong or well you owe it to yourself to make the following test. See how long you can work or how far you can walk without becoming tired. Next take two Ave grain tablets of ordinary nuxated Iron three times per day after meals for two weeks. Then test your strength again and see for yourself how much you have gained. I have seen dozens of nervous, rundown people who were ailing all the while, double, triple and even quadruple their strength and endurance and entirely get rid of all symptoms of dyspepsia, liver and other troubles in from ten to fourteen j days' time simply by taking Iron In the proper form. And this after they had I 10 CANVAS TREAD TIRE FACTS tjSSSIiIS '• 8000 miles guarantee* Ford Cara 6000 miles. .» I Non-skid —no >li«i«. k. S. No I'nnetures No Blow 4. No Stone Bruises. 0' CA . \ 1 o. No Loose Treads. xSKNA "• No Peeling, Splitting » t jSp Ol *** WttT« T Cracking; of Tread. #/ M wk \* r- Tire Mileage Doubled. ml Sm K y 5 8- Tire tost Cot la Hill. ;| Off v HB 5 v. 25 per cent. Gasolene and S I SAVE 50% 11 .0. J«^o e .t P PeT r M , s ,r^ d „ „ y Vjl ON YOUR TIRES W j % YOURHILEARF M HARRY P - MOT ™ MILEAGE jpy 1925 Derry Street Bell Phone StU. General agent for the Curaa " Tread Tire Co. of Ctlea, If. Y. re r. YOU CAN'T DO BUSINESS J M I j without a checking account in a good f— — - >• 1 jdfnf'% commercial bank. Every business- J&ff man men of salary have an ac- I j ' MM/ yfc" f j( count wherewith to facilitate paying " 1 bills and insuring safety in their I I transmittance. Have you one? If |H " 0t °^° n an account away in FIRST NATIONAL BANK WSr-tT 224 MARKET ST, In some cases been doctoring for months without obtaining any benefit. Hut don't take the old forms of re duced iron. Iron acetate or tfbeture of iron simply to save a few cents. Yon must take iron in a form that can be easily absorbed and assimilated like nuxated iron if you want it to do you any good, otherwise it may prove worse than useless. Many an athlete or prize tighter has won the day simply because he knew the secret of great strength and endurance and tilled his blood with '■' on before he went Into the affray, while many another has gone down to inglorious defeat simply for the lack of iron. NOTE Nuxated Iron recom mended above by Dr. Sauer, Is one of the newer organic iron compounds. Unlike the older inorganic iron prod ucts. it is easily assimilated, does not injure the teeth, make tbem black, nor upset the stomach; on the contrary, it is a most potent remedy, in nearly all forms of Indigestion, as well as for nervous, run-down conditions. Tho Manufacturers have such great confi dence in Nuxated Iron that they offer t ?./ O J - . felt ,! lo^- 00 t0 an y Charitable In stitution if they cannot take any man or woman under 60 who lacks iron and Increase their strength 400 per cent, or over In four weeks' time nrovided thev have no serious organic trouble. Thev also offer to refund your money if it does not at least double your strength and endurance in ten days' time. It Is dispensed in this city bv Croll Keller. F. J. Holthouse. J. N. Clark and other leading druggists.—Advertisement. 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers