fees A* Fair As A Summer's Day I Possible If Stuart's Calcium Are Used For a Short I Time After Each Meal. people have been heard to they used creams and lotions ■'earn without effect, yet after five days of Stuart's Calcium Bn their complexions were per clear. I ■ ■o< Hid of Blarkkrads Quickly Hili( !>tnart's Calcium Wafers." contain no poisonous drug of Hkind. are perfectly harmless and taken with absolute freedom, work almost like magic. Cal- H Sulphide, their principal ingredi ■is the greatest blood-cleanser to science. matter how bad your skin may ■ Stuart's Calcium Wafers will work wonders with it. It's to blackheads, pimples, acne, rash, eczema and a dirty "filled- Stuart's Calcium Wa ■ are sold by all druggists every- Price 50c a box. Send coupon for a trial package to-day. VKEE TRIAL COUPON B. A. Stuart Co.. 321 Stuart Bldg., Mich. Send me at once, ■ return mail, a free trial package Calcium Wafers. Htet |w TREATMENT FOR ASTHMA Relief in Every Rub I quickly ease the struggle for ■h, stop the wheezing and bring relief, ask your druggist for yellow box of true Mustar- costs about 25 cents. plentifully night and morning, ■ remember to rub up and down ■ over the entire chest from the to the stomach. True Mustarine Kde by the Begv Medicine Co., Ro ■er. N. T. It is also fine for Rheu- Km. Lumbago and Neuralgia. Get All druggists guarantee Hidve:Usement. B Jfc/iing Torture Stops J ■is unnecessary Cor you to suffer ■ eczema, ringworm, rashes and skin troubles. A little zemo i Hn at any drug store for 25c. or ■ for extra large bottle. and applied will usually give ln relief rrom Itching torture. It and soothes the skin and heals and effectively most skin dis- is a wonderful disappearing 11- does not smart the most deli ■ skin. It is not greasy, is easily and costs little. Get it to-day Bave all further distress. Zemo, Cleveland. leal Furnace Coal I When you force some fur- Bices the hot bed runs to- the glowing mass Hinkers and all kinds of ■ouble result without your Hitting any extra heat. ■ The best coal for the aver fte furnace is j Kelley's Hard Stove ■lt certainly gives good in extremely cold Beather when extra heat is I When used with a little Hire it never clinkers and the are soft and flaky, sift ■g easily through the grate. I M. Kelley & Co. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Streets ■Stock Transfer ;■ Ledger \ ■ The Pennsylvania Stock i Tax (act of June J I 1915) which is now in effect, J all corporations in the 5 no matter how large or J H>w small they may be, to keep 5 I Stock Transfer Ledger. We i prepared to supply these / promptly at a very S price. 5 ■The Telegraph i Printing Go. 5 —Binding—Designing ! Photo Engraving J ■arrisburg PA. | ■nberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect June 27. 1911. BNS leave Harrlsburg— Winchester and Martlnsbur* n ■•7:52 a. m.. *3:40 p. m. " 1 Hagerstown, Chambersburg Car ■ Mecnanicsburg and intermediate ■>ai at *5:03, *7:52, J H 6:37, *7:45, '11:00 p. m. m " Haitional trains for Carlisle and at 9:48 a. m.. 2:16. BU. ■ 9:35 a m. H- Dtllsburg at 6:03. *7:62 and a m.. 2:16. *3:40. 6:37 and 6:39 All other trains dally except ■hI'TOKOE. RII Q. > P E 'A, ■ly Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBTTRG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 28, 1916. ' Religious Leaders Now on Way to Great Congress at Panama More Than Fifty American Societies and Denomina tional Boards Represented By THE REUGIOrS RAMBLER There are now on the ooean or pre paring to sail wltbta the next five day» —for no ship hae room for them all— nearly three hundred of the foremost leaders In the religious life of North America, who are attending the much discussed Congress on Christian Work In I.a tin America, to be held at Panama, February 10-20. During the five years that It has been In preparation (for It was projected at Edinburgh in 1910) this conference has aroused more discus sion than any other event In the re ligious life of North America during the same period. A clash of opinion over thla conference led to the sen sational resignation of five members of the Protestant Episcopal Board of Missions, including three bishops. The "Catholic" party of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and many spokes men of the Roman Catholic Church, and some sensitive representatives of the South American republics, who objected to the implications of the earlier name, "Latin-American Mis sionary Conference," have antagonized the forthcoming congress, and this has led to the change of name and to the more careful statement of the objects of the meeting. More than fifty re ligious bodies, including all the largest denominations, and societies like the Young Men's Christian Association, the International Sunday School Associa tion, etc.. are officially participating in the congress. Famous Churchmen Sail There has never sailed from these shores a more distinguished body of religious leaders than are now bound for Panama, unless It be the delegates to the world's missionary conference at Edinburgh In 1910. John R. Mott will be the presiding officer, as he was at Edinburgh, and the list of speakers, while known privately, but not made public, is said by careful judges to be the most notable and statesmanlike array of talent ever brought together for a religious gathering in the West ern Hemisphere. The committee which has been offl- I cially designated by the various de nominations and societies to direct the conference is made up as follows: Robert E. Speer, chairman, Board of Foreign Missions, Presbyterians, United States of America; the Rev. W. F. Oldham. D. D., vice-chairman. Board of Foreign Missions. Methodist Epis copal Church: the Rev. L. C. Barnes. D. D., recording secretary. American Baptist Home Missionary Society; the Rev. S. G. Inman. executive secretary. Christian Woman's Board of Missions: the Rev. Enoch F. Bell. American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions: Frank L. Brown. World's Sunday School Association; Miss Carrie J. Carnalian, Women's Foreign Mis sionary Society, Methodist Episcopal Church: the Rev. S. H. Chester, D. D., Executive Committee, Foreign Mis sions. Presbyterian. United States: E. T. Colton, international committee, Young Men's Christian Association; the Rev. Ed. F. Cook. D. D., Board of Missions. Methodist Episcopal Church, South; the Rev. J. H. Franklin, D. D.. American Baptist Foreign Missionary Society: the Rev. W. I. Haven, D. D., American Bible Society; Miss Mabel Head, Woman's Missionary Council, Methodist Episcopal Church, South; the Rev. S. S. Hough. Foreign Mis sionary Society, United Brethren In ■MXMVmHKXMVMWKa | Rheumatism! | S As soon as an attack of * 2 Rheumatism begins, apply ■ Sloan's Liniment. Don't 5 M waste any time and suffer S ■ agony unnecessarily, a few ■ c drops of Sloan's Liniment S Son the painful ipot—don't rub— 5 S ia all yon need. Keep a bottle 5 jj in the bouac for emergencies. s Sloan's | \ Liniment ■ KILLS PAIN Price 25c. 50c. il.oo JJ ■kmnijuiiiKKinii mm r IF HI IS GRAY Grandma Used Sage Tea and Sulphur to Darken Her Hair and Nobody Knew The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its na tural color dates back to grandmoth er s time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and abundant. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance, this simple mix ture was applied with wonderful ef fect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a 50-cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com pound," you will get this famous old recipe which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff, dry, feverish. Itchy scalp and Jail ing hair. A well-known downtown druggist jays it darkens the hair so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through yo.ur hair, taking one strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after another application or two It be comes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and abundant. —Advertisement. Christ: the Rev. A. McLean, LL. D., Foreign Christian Missionary Society; the Rev. M. T. Morrill, Board of For eign Missions, Christian Church; the Rev. T. B. Neely, D. D., Board of Home Missions and Church Extension, Meth odist Episcopal Church; the Rev. T. B. Fay, D. D., Foreign Mission Board. Southern Baptist Convention; the Rev. C. J. Ryder, D. D., American Mission ary Association; the Rev. C. I. Sco fleld. IX D., Central American Mission; the Rev. Oeorge Smith, Evangelical Union of South America; Elder W. A. Splcer. General Conference, Seventh Day Adventlsta; Miss Clarissa H. Spen cer. National Board, Toung "Women's Christian Association: the Rev. C. E. Tebbetts, American Friends Board of Foreign Missions; the Rev. Charles L. Thompson, D. D., Board Home Mis sions. Presbyterian, United States; Mrs. K. S. Westfall, Woman's American Baptist Home Missionary Society; the Rev. J. D. Williams. D. D.. Christian j and Missionary Alliance. Sir Andrew Wingate, K. C. I. E„ is j chairman of the British corresponding I committee in charge of the congress, i Notable men from Latin America also i are co-operating. The Anglican arch- ! bishop of the West Indies Is at the ! head of the delegation from these islands. What It Is AU About Out of the storm of discussion and ! controversy that has raged about the holding of this congress there has emerged the following official defi nition of the spirit and purpose of the meeting: "Resolved. That this conference strongly recommends that those who ; are making arrangements for the j Panama congress, as well as all writ- I ers and speakers at the congress, bear | in mind that, if the best and most last ing results are to be obtained, while frankly facing moral and spiritual con ditions which call for missionary work in Latin America, and while present ing the Gospel which we hold as the only adequate solution of the problems j which those conditions present, it shall ! be the purpose of the Panama con- i gress to recognize all the elements of I truth and goodness in any form of re- i ligious faith. Our approach to the ! people shall be neither critical nor an tagonistic, but inspired by the teach- j ings and example of Christ and that charity which thinketh no evil and re- Joicetli not in iniquitj' but rejoiceth in ' the truth. "In the matter of Christian service ! we will welcome the co-operation of any who are willing to co-operate in any part of the Christian program. We should not demand union with us in all our work as the condition of accepting allies for any part of it." Interpreting Latin America So numerous are religious conven tions. and so ephemeral are most of them, that It has been rather difficult to make the average church member understand how different is the con gress at Panama. Not only is it inter national and interdenominational in its scope, and not only has it enlisted the activities of the missionary leaders of ( North America, but it also contem plates a complete survey of religious | and social conditions in Latin America. The statement is made by the Rev. I S. Guy Inman, the executive secretary, 1 that this conference will do more to j interpret the Americas to each other ■ than all the pan-American meetings I that have gone before. Eight commissions, numbering 215 I persons, most of them experts upon > the subject of Latin America, have 1 long been engaged in the preparation ' of eight reports, which will later be I bound in three volumes.. These books, | it is predicted by those who have seen | the commissions' reports, will be the ] most comprehensive documents, upon all phases of American life, ever published. Upward of a thousand per sons have contributed facts and I opinions to them, these documents all being digested by the commissions and [ written into the reports. The subjects of the eight commis- ' sions are "Survey and Occupation," I "Message and Method," "Education," "Literature." "Women's Work," "The Church in the Field," "The Home Base" and "Co-operation and the Pro- I motion of Unity." Stirring Two Continents Not content with the interest which j the congress itself will awaken—and ' South America is said to be keenly! alert to all its plans and purposes and j utterances—the leaders are going to : carry the messages of the meetings to' strategic points in South America and j the West Indies. A series of eight i "regional conferences," to be addressed | by delegates, have been arranged for! the following centers, after the Pan- i ama meetings adjourn: Lima, Santi- . ago. Buenos Aires. Rio de Janeiro. ! Havana, Cuba: Spn Juan, Porto Rico; Mexico City, Central America and Co- ; lombia. Beginning with March, most of the 1 important religious meetings of North i America will reflect this Panama con gress, and the religious press will re echo its messages. The effect upon i political, commercial, social and re- j ligious relations between the two i Americas will be great .and it is not I surprising that the President of Pan- j ama is assisting in the plans, and many ' diplomatists are showing keen interest. | Britain Is Told in Note by United States to Keep Hands Off Neutral Mails Special to the Telegraph Washington. D. C., Jan. 28. The 1 text of the American protest to Great Britain against interference with neu tral mails, made public last night re veals that diplomatic and consular ! pouches have been treated in a manner the United States considers "vexatious- : ly inquisitorial." The note describes the practices of British officials as ""unwarranted inter- I fertnees." and in urgently requesting a prompt reply points out that "a strong feeling is being aroused" in this country by the loss of valuable letters, while foreign banks are refusing to , cash American drafts because thev nave no assurances that drafts are secure ■ in the malls. The United States declares that parcel post articles are entitled to the exemp- I tions of neutral trade, and denies the right of Great Britain to take neutral mail ships into British jurisdiction for ! purposes of search and then submit, them to local censorship regulations. It also denies that the British Government has any authority over neutral sealed mails on ships which merely touch at British ports. With the text of the American note ! was made public Great Britain's ad in terim reply, saying that questions of principle raised by the United States have made It necessary for Great Brit ain to consult her allies before answer ing finally, and indicating that there < will be no unnecessary delay in the ne gotiations. CONVICT CAPTURED Man Who Eneapril From Wratmoreland County Jail In Retaken Special to the Telegraph Pittsburgh, Pa.. Jan. 28. Albert Pe- I troskl, who on Monday escaped from the Westmoreland county jail at Greens burg with Charles Douglas, a murderer, and Arthur Stevens, was captured yes terday at Natrona. He and his brother Paul are locked up in the Greensburg jail. The brother Is held for harboring an escaued convict. What the Stevens Bill Means I It means that certain manufacturers, dealers and malefactors of great wealth, finding that after the last Kg decision on the subject by the Supreme Court of the United States, based on the Sherman Law, which said it Kg was a crime to fix prices, got together and concocted the Stevens Bill, a bill now before Congress to fix, by law, M the price of everything bought, sold and imported for sale in the United States. This bill, my dear friends, has been before Congress for about three years and the promoters of this bill are spending millions of dollars in fake advertisements, write-ups and subsidized educators to educate the peo ple to the belief that the passage of this bill is solely in the interest of the common people, but they knotv fully well that they are trying to pass this obnoxious bill solely for their own interest, and should they be able to pass this fake socialistic-obnoxious price-fixing measure, they will be able to rob the people, not only oat of the mil- ■ lions they are spending to pass this bill, but millions more of the earnings of the people that they will put in their own pockets. H If any price-fixing bill like the Stevens Bill had been passed thirty years ago, we never could have saved the people in Harrisburg the millions of dollars that we have saved them by catting the price of Medicines as we have done for the past thirty years. In other words, they are trying to set aside with one blow the Sherman ■ Law, which says, that no man or set of men can fix the price of merchandise in the United States, and the Stevens Bill says they can. Are you going to let them do it? Or will you wake up and demand your RIGHTS by sending a one-cent postal card to your representative in Congress, telling him you want him to vote against the obnoxious Stevens Bill, which is detrimental to your interest. Delays are dangerous. DO IT NOW. Make it strong, as it will be too late to kick after the bill is passed. "Kennedy's "Kennedy's I Fighting the Always the Lowest | Stevens Bill" or Best'" 1 Compare "Kennedy's " Prices With the Prices You Would Be jf Forced to Pay If the Stevens Bill Were Passed 1 Patent Medicines § Saturday Only K ? r £/' "EES* 1 SI.OO Scott's Emulsion 590 50c Carmen's Powder 3H SI.OO Angier's Emulsion 640 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 31 H SI.OO Russell Emulsion 730 "c Woodbury's Facial Cream 170 || SI.OO Wampoie's Extract Cod Liver Oil 580 f* Talcum Powder | SI.OO Gude s Peptomangan 730 25c Azurea Talcum Powder 170 Kfl $1.50 Fellow's Syr. Hypophosphites .. 980 SI.OO Azurea Face Powder 710 Bj SI.OO Lydia Pinkham's Compound ...., 630 35c Roger & Gallet's Rice Powder 240 H 50c Canthrox , 290 *sc Mennen's Talcum ... 110 D SI.OO Eckman's Alterative * 590 P°wder «• • • 150 B SI.OO Resinol Ointment 690 SSSS Powder " l".1 25c Atwood's Bitters 100 2 5c Hokara Skin Food 170 H 50c Cuticura Ointment 380 10c Jergen's Violet Glycerine Soap * 60 || SI.OO Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 590 SI.OO Othine <550 35c Castoria 210 25c Pond's Vanishing Cream 140 B 50c Baume Analgesique 370 25c Woodbury Face Powder , 170 « __ T ~ , 6 , t, h , 25c Jess Talcum 140 125 c Lydia Pmkham s Pills 1,0 50c Lablache Face p owder _ 33* | 25c Carter's Liver Pills 120 2 5c Woodbury's Soap 1,(50 50c Doan's Kidney Pills 330 25c Cuticura Soap . 180 M 50c DeWitt's Pills 290 25c Rosaline ..... 140 3 25c Beecham's Pills 150 25c Sanitol Tooth Paste 150 50c Diapepsin 290 50c Java Rice Powder 280 25c Lydia Pinkham's Wash 170 10c Munyon's Witch Hazel Soap 60 H SI.OO Sargol 550 50c Milk Weed Cream 340 |§ 75c Hall's Catarrh Cure 450 50c Stillman's Freckle Cream 270 50c Phenol Sodique 250 25c Kalpheno Tooth Paste 150 50c Musterole 290 25c Sanitol Tooth Powder 150 SI.OO Father John's Medicine 630 25c Johnson's Baby Powder >..... 150 [lf 25c Cater's K. &B. Tea 150 15c Babcock's Corylopsis Talcum 110 I 50c Nulfey Tablets 290 25c Calox Tooth Powder ; 160 50c Lapactic Pills (S. & D.) . 270 25c Arnica Tooth Soap 140 h SI.OO Stuart's Tablets . 590 SI.OO Hay's Hair Health 550 H 75c Jad Salts 430 SI.OO Danderine 590 75c Bell's Papayan's 430 50c Herpicide 290 25c Tiz 140 25c Hind's Cold Cream 150 SI.OO Peruna 590 $1.50 Oriental Cream sl.lO Sugar of Milk (Merk's) 210 50c Djer Kiss Face Powder 410 35c Pluto Water, quart 210 50c Mary Garden Talcum Powder 410 SI.OO Mayr's Stomach Remedy 590 15c William's Talcum Powder 120 Swamp Root 590 75c Pinaud's Lilac Water 480 H 25c Mentholatum 130 25c Roger & Gallet's Talcum 140 35c Palmer's Skin Success 150 50c Pompeian Massage Cream 270 ■ 35c Husband's Magnesia 280 25c Mum 170 50c Philip's Milk of Magnesia 370 50c Lavoris 290 SI.OO S. S. S 570 50c Vernas Lotion 290 |i 50c Syrup of Figs 290 50c Dagget & Ramsdell Cold Cream 340 50c Omega Oil 290 25c Rubifoam 150 50c Sloan's Liniment 290 50c Zhongiva 340 50c Tonsiline 290 50c Hind's Honey and Almond Cream 310 35c Limestone Phosphate 210 10c Swandown Face Powder 80 KENNEDTS Cut-Rate Medicine Store, 321 Market St. | 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers