4 c . . BIG SATURDAY SPECIAL SALE AT . , r . | Special on f c . Special on Cigars Patent Medicines | M TI/ C I 11 T 1) f" A 1 M ■ ■ / B ■ ■ ■ B» U ■ m Sweet Girls 23S«ss.s \jldl 11 j LUI Rdlv 8 25c Sodium Phosphate, % 28c eoc Antlphlogtstine 42c 1 r>4- A t<4-l /*1 ap> PATENT MEDICINE STORES loiiet Articles 15c PalmoUve Soap 7C 2Sc Kolynog Tooth Paste 15c ■ 2 50c Armour's Extract Beef SBc iJVU ITldlliCl l * tO Limit Quantities UiUall SBc '. 48c soc°saTTi!r^»t^» ier .!!..].!!!!!!.!!" 2»c Are you dealing with us? Do you think our goods are not fresh and genuine because we sell cheaper 25c°t™u? 1 n !*.T°!7! er .WW'.' isc 25c Beot'hnii»'» Piiis tso than any other house? Let us convince you to the contrary-—a single purchase will do ■ I 35c Natural .Rouge, a vail box .... 19c I 25c t arter's Liver Pills 11c ' ■> J e» *" 88c La Blache Powder 33c l« DJer 38c 35c J Jmcstoiie Phosphate 20c m ~ m M ~~ ~" ~ 21c DJer Kiss Talc 19i: 50c California Syrup of FI W 200 Did YOU Get YOUI fonfly f)f{W A BetteV Gracit of JBc S^ansdown'iac-e Powder" WWW H)c $1.50 Fellows* Syr. Hypo Mo Vll'l'Cdl Vallliy V/lICI 34 c Canthrox 29c SI,OO Father •Tolui's Medicine 71c _ A f( 18c Frostllla 15c 50c liav's llair Health 20c ■ B ■ ■ . . 1». I>. tor Eczema 59c I WnßjjF' Vl *•" 1 " Dorin Rouge. No. 12-19. Brunette 39c H SI.OO Keller's. Catarrh Remedy 75c « Cakes PalmoUve Soap ...00c I V££X fk Sil f. . -. Mennen's Taicnm lie I SI.OO s. S. ( S. svyiifs Spe<-iilc 55c 1 80,,U Shampoo 50c times not SO good. I 50c Baume Anaigeshpie 36c d»t on You can buy your own pre- - ■ SI.OO Resinol Ointment «0c fpi.'Mf # J J f n 1 -- - I 25c Tonsiiine isc miums with what you save here. ' f|ri IJl'liprQ ■ 25c Foley's Honey anil Tnr 15c Qlir Price For AhovP -IT Ü B U <1 s(lc Diupepsin 29c | wul rrl< - e r °« rtDOve . J W ¥ | si.oo othine (double strength) .-,90 E M g ffl "M M Im. 2^c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia, 3-oz. I | 7/ /■ I II r /IIC LO. b °" le '•">« • j 25c Tiz 15c JL m I J m ff M S a 3a St 25c Sweet Spirits Nitre, 3 ozs. ... lotft I ar«sSf'ti!r.r , .frfr!rr.:::::: SS iWr *»■ v mmmJrn 25c Ess. Peppermint, 3 ozs 15* ■ SI.OO Pierce's Medicines 59c au 1 1 t-» tit ,i ~ 25c Lime Water, 1 pint 15lusterole 15c >laybelle Chocolates, assorted 33c f ; 'i C D. t( _ J. ZSC lr. Arnica, 3 OZS laf gj 75c .Tad's Kidney Salts 12c (We have the Coupons Here) Maybelle Chocolate Cherries 29c L.ITTIII O l OUnus ,5 c Rose Water and Glvcerine U ? 2& ■ $2.00 Kckmau Alterative sl.lO Cretonne Assorted Chocolates 33c „ rl , , . . i3C KOSe water ana Uiycerine, J-OZ. ■ SI.OO Peruiui 7»7c Plenty for everybody. This offer lasts Millionaire Chocolates 19c (This is our everyday price) bottle I TablC,S r ' only a short time, so be sure to get yours MarUniquc lVuits and Nu ts '.'.'.'.'.'.WW B3c —— 2sc Soap Liniment, 3 OZS 1.">0 ■ 50c Pandorine 30c Lady Uelen Cherries 33c Moth Balls, lb 18c c , A gb, ■ 7.> c Beef Wine and Iron 38c as soon as possible. (These are our everyday prices) Moth Flake, lb 18c ' 3C opirits o ozs EFFECT OF WAR ON WORK OF CHURCH Heveals Strength of Christian ity, According to Reports at Presbyterian Assembly Atlantic City. N. J.. May 19.—The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States in session on the Steel Pier until Friday, May 16, is one of the Important church gatherings of the year and the reports that have been pnepared by various committees for consideration during the week reflect some of the new phases of church problems and par ticularly some of the effects which the jreat war in Europe has had on church \\ ork. These reports, compiled in a book of 200 paces, which were placed in the hands of the delegates to the assembly here today, include some optimistic views as to the effects which the war i- having and will continue to have on religion. '1 lie executive commission of the Alliance of the Reformed Churches throughout the world re ports: "Instead of showing the failure of Christianity, this war has revealed the strength of Christianity, for Christian iiy has been the only bond that has not snapped because ol this war. Out of the present conditions in Europe three facta are emerging that bear on the religious situation. The first is that religion over there has become largely philanthropy. The people have pass ed from faith to works. All the coun tries are full of charitable efforts to relieve poverty and suffering. Opportunity for Evangelization "The second peculiarity is evangeli sation. The 24,000,000 men of the different armies afford a grand oppor tunity for the spread of the gospel. The 2.400.000 prisoners in Germany, most of whom are Russians, open a great field for the evangelization of Russia. In the camps, in the hos pitals, in the prison camps, is an open door of hope, tremendous and mighty that will affect every church in Eu rope. "The third feature is personalness, that is piety which more than ever has become a personal thing. The war is making Europe learn that religion is * personal matter rather than a for first sign Jv\MS ' When you brush your teeth, does it feel as '^_ * 1 LT though you were brushing: against the quick? l^e gums sometimes bleed? This is because f pyorrhea has caused the gums to pull away • St* your dentist Mu from your teeth, leaving the unenamelled sur- Vtt Sen/tea twin daily. f accs unprotected. Your dentist will tell you, if you teeth against the attack or further ask him, that you have gum rent- progress of pyorrhea. ,i.n; and that gum rece«ion u It cleanses b» pyorrhea. thc Mth de%htflllljl It them Unchecked, pyorrhea will warp a whiteness distinctive of Senreco and shrink and deform the gums, alone. Its flavor is entirely pleasing, It will break down the bony struc- and it leaves in the mouth a won ture into which the teeth are set derful sense of coolness and whole —and ytu will eventually Use them, somenesa. To save your teeth you will have. Start the Senreco treatm « m to begin to tight this dread disease before pyorrhea grip" you for at once. good. Details in folder with every tube. A two-ounce tube A specific for pyorrhea has been for 25c it sufficient for 6 weeks' . . discovered recently by dental sci- dj'ly treatment Get Senreco VM . ■ „ , , ... of your druggist today; or send Xf A ence, and is now ottered for daily 4c in stamps or coin for sample /V 4] treatment in Senreco Tooth Paste. tube and folder. Address The \ Senreco combats the germ of the »S£Z == disease. Its regular use insures your Cincinnati, Ohio. I > J j FRIDAY EVENING, HARRIPBURG tfjjflE TELEGRAPH MAY 19, 1916 . mal one. The lines between demoni- ! nations are largely broken down in armies- and camps. 'Faith is being purified, sham and unreality are burn ig out.' Men are thinking straight • [ and centering themselves on Jesus Christ. These characteristics are not going to pass entirely away for Europe has been too deeply stirred. She is never going back to what she was be fore the war." Call for Americana After the war, the report points out, ! there may be a great call for Ameri cans to take up the continuance of English church work on the continent 11 of Europe, particularly in Germany 1 and Austria, where prejudice may , militate against Britishers resuming . their activities. The divorce evil in America receives 1 considerable attention by the special i committee on Christian life and work , which points out that the estimated average of divorces has reached the alarming ratio of about one to every twelve marriages, "a showing that is worse than that of any other civiliza tion." "We must organize," the com mittee says, "as never before, a nation wide campaign of education in behalf ' |of the welfare of the family and the home concerning the sacredness of marriage and evils of divorce." The same committee discusses the use of the Bible in the public schools and the church is urged to work toward , creating a public sentiment that will tavor and even demand such a course. ; l>eporc Sabbath Desecration In discussing the observance of the Sabbath another committee submits a lengthy report covering many phases of the problem and deplores among other things that "in our national capi- J 1 t '1 there are social functions of every description on the Lord's day." Modern inventions as the automo ■. bile and motion pictures are cited as * adding a tremendous influence to the < j combination of powers already at work to destroy the old-fashioned Sab bath. Resolutions are proposed In protest against the operation of mov ing picture theaters on Sunday and 1 also against the use of public school j buildings on that day. The faculties of colleges and seminaries, it is pro posed. should also be urged to omit > recitations on Monday mornings so as ■ to leave the Sabbath free from the felt necessity of some of the students to . prepare their lessons on that day. An other resolution condemns the Sunday ' newspaper and points out that Canada, even in war time, has found that the i Sunday paper is not a necessity. In '; comment on the working of the Do ■ | minion Lord's Day Act, the report jadds that ninety per cent or more of , the Sunday newspapers published in ' the Vnlted States for distribution In * Canada on Sunday had been pushed ! i back over the line. The report notes - however, that the Sunday newspaper has made serious inroads lately among < the people of Scotland, which is the< stronghold of Presbyterians. ' Win Many Victories i The committee reports a number t of victories in the movement for observ- ' I ance of the Sabbath, among them the l Sunday closing ot the saloons in Chi- : rago for the tirst time in more than , i forty years. The committee is also 1 gratified at the stand many employers have taken in regard to Sunday work, ; and it notes that even in England the authorities have found it advisable toj| ban Sunday work, even in the muni- i tion factories. !i One of the most important of the re- j i ports is that by the committee on i Church Co-operation and Union which t among other things favor the continu- ji ance of the negotiations for the union < of all the churches of the Presbyterian ji household in the United States, and j also conferences with the Church of i the Disciples of Christ with a view to j Closer relations. In the matter of i evangelization, the is also raised whether the hour has not ar- \ rived for "the inauguration and pro- ;, motion of a country-wide movement , of evangelistic, endeavor of such a!, character as will meet with the appro- h val and appreciation of the united min-; istry of our land." The assembly s approval is also to be asked of the steps thus far taken in ;. the movement for the World's Con- ■ \ ference on Faith and Order proposed , by the Protestaijt Episcopal Church, j. HYPHENATED ARE AGAIN HIT BY T. R. [Continued From First Page.] popular strength In Nebraska and ;! Pennsylvania. The effect of this show- ! ing has been immediately visible upon many of the politicians within and ' without Congress." Refused to Prepare "We, through out representatives at' Washington," said Col. Roosevelt, I "have absolutely refused in the small- 1 est degree to prepare during these 22 months of world cataclysm. We have refused to learn the Smallest part of the lesson being written on the scroll of torment in Europe. We have fatu ously refused to take the smallest step, cither to do our duty to ourselves or to do our duty to others. We have en deavored to deceive ourselves by an nouncing that in this policy of supine inaction and of failure to perform duty, we are actuated by the loftiest motives. I doubt whether we have! 'really deceived ourselves, and most 1 certainly we have not deceived others. There is not a nation in the world | which believes that our course of con- ; , duct has-been dictated by anything: save timidity, unworthy shrinking from effort and responsibility, and cold and selfish love of money making j | and of soft ease. .Must Prepare Thoroughly j "In any serious crisis there are al | ways men who try to carry waiter on ! both shoulders. These men try to ' i escape the hard necessity of choice be- j tween two necessarily opposite alter natives, by trying to work up some | compromise. In actual practice, this compromise usually proves to combine j with exquisite nicety all the defects land none of the advantages of both courses. It Is true that in ordinary times it is essential. But there come tjreat crises when compromise is either impossible or fatal. This Is one of those crises. There is no use in sav- , ling that we will fit ourselves to defend jourselves a little, but not much. Such a position is equivalent to announcing that, If necessary, we shall hit, but that we shall only hit soft. The only right principle is to prepare thorough ly or not at all. The only right prin- | < iple is to avoid hitting if it is possible j to do so, but never under any clrcum- ■ stances to hit soft. To go to war a ! little, but not much, is the one abso- ' lutely certain way to ensure disaster. ;To prepare a little but not much, ; stands on a par with a city developing a fire department which,ffflfter a fire occurs, can put it out a lßtle, but .not j much." Administration Wastes Time j Col. Roosevelt declared that the Wil son administration "lias taken no step for preparedness, and has done noth ! ing efficient to sustain our national ! rights." Because, he said, the admin istration had at intervals, "ventured feebly to speak in contradiction of its , Comes from the fact that no real alter their followers have refused it any j whole-hearted support. They object. Col. Roosevelt added, "even to make | believe preparedness; they insist on (even morp tlrorough-going helpless ness than that which we had so amply : provided at Washington." ; "We must make this nation a* | strong as are its convictions in refer- ence to right and wrong," declared | Col.' Roosevelt. "It little matters what our ideals may be and what ! achievements we may hope for. if 1 these ideals and achievements cannot lie reduced to action. The events of the past, and the events of today, show that national Ideals amount to: nothing if the nation lacks the power to maintain them against opposition. "Therefore, if we are to win at home against those of our fellow citizens who believe In the policy of unpre paredness, that is, of national weak ness and Inefficiency, we must have [strong and- well seasoned convictions and express them with strength and sincerity. A considerable part of the strength of Mr. Ford in the primaries, and of the strength of the advocates of half-preparedness at Washington, conies from the fact thatno real alter native of policy Is offered with sln ( cerity and fearlessness." Urges Military Service In urging "universal military ser vice based on universal training, Col. i Roosevelt said he believed in it be cause it would oe not only of incal culable benefit to the nation in the : event of war, but of incalculable ben efit to the individuals undergoing it, ; und therefore to the nation, as regards ; the work of peace." He continued: "I believe that the dog-tent would ; prove a most effective agent for demo cratizing and nationalizing our life; quite as much so as the public school, jand far more than the American fac tory and the American city as they are ! today. Preparedness through univer sal service would turn out to be the best possible school of practical civics. In such a school all men who are Americans in spirit would get together and learn to work together, so as to insure co-operation among our people ;in social and industrial life. ' Such co operation will secure not merely lib erty and opportunity, but also the sense of obligation—which is just as important as the other two. Must Abolish Pork Barrel "We must abolish pork barrel meth ods in the army—as regards army posts, navy yards, as regards every thing else. Remember that after pre paredness has been accepted by the country and the necessary funds voted, ' the real work will have only begun. Kngland's navy represents over three centuries and Germany's army over two centuries of development along an unbroken line of tradition and progress j to the present stage of efficiency. The tirst and all important essential is to divorce the army and navy organiza tions absolutely from politics." Col. Roosevelt asserted that "the extreme naval party in Germany has j recently advocated war with the 'United States on the ground that in j the end. as the result of such a war, ; we would have to pay all the war ex penditures of the Germany: powers , and their allies." Stand Together "These enormous sums would be raised by taxation on all our citizens," ihe said, "those of Gorman descent i would pay as heavily as those bf any ! other descent ;and all would Share I I&3iripl\soap improves poor wW-M complexions T ** f*W 1 /(;z n « : / If you want a clear, fresh, glowing \ \ \%£ / complexion, use Resinol Soap at \ least once a day. Work a warm, w/I'/ \creamy lather of it well into the /J4'lt" lUU 51 /$8 pores, then rinse the face with plenty /fw*. of co!d water * **• •&} >'-> such regular care with Resinol Soap ' t0 s^ow an improvement, because Y the Resinol medication soothes and jjsffijr / f refreshes the skin, while the pure I / | soap, free of alkali, is cleansing it. spi / if If the skin is already in bad condition, aabort '.■ / j| treatment with Rqpinol Ointment may first be * >T * necessary to restort it# normal health. Resinol '■ / \ Soap and Ointment are sold by all druggist*, i >•• >' < >«.. _ For samples free, write to Dept. iB-R, Resinol, Balti- I iV<« Ih* way Rnxinol I inr t Ska-ting Stick Jt+fthts thf J /*<•/ #» «// firr; ents west mfttr fknr'iMjr ducomf»rtt % It i P& (equally the shame and dishonor. A| j foreign foe is the foe of all of us alike, j ' If in this land the citizens of one na- I 'tional origin successfully set the fash-| ion of influencing this nation to its own j detriment in the interest of the coun try from which they originally came, j : sooner or later it is absolutely certain i that the citizens oi some other nation al origin will repeat the experiment; i |and this country will be left degraded 'and helpless among the nations. if i jsuch an event befall us, the bitter i bread of humiliation will be eaten by all of those who dwell In this land, no > ' matter what their creed, no matter | j what their national origin. It will j be eaten by your children and grand children and great-grandchildren just | as much as by mine. I "Americanism is a matter of the j spirit, not of birthplace or descent. Among the best Americans I have ever known, among the men closest to me In social and political life, are, ! and have been, men born in, or men : whose fathers were born in, Germany, Ireland, the Scandinavian kingdoms, and other European countries. They [ stand on an exact level with the other !Americans, whose ancestors were here! |in Colonial times. We are all part j of the same people, j "We all stand together for our com mon flag and our common country. We must so prepare that this country will be a good place in which the chil dren's children of all of us shall live; and to do this we must so prepare that we can repel all foreign foes and pre serve the inestimable right of setting | for ourselves the fate of this mighty j democratic republic. But the es- ! sence of this policy of full prepared-| ness, which remember is not only mil- 1 ltary but that least as much indus-I trial and social, is that it is purely i defensive, and is the best possible as surance of peace. No nation will ever ! attack a unified and prepared Ameri , ca." Chambersburg Statistics Issued by Census Bureau i Washington, D. May 19.—A pre- j liminary statement of the general re- j suits of the census of manufactures | I for Chambersburg, Pa., has been issued j Iby Director Sam. L. Rogers, of the I ; Bureau of the Census, Department of | j Commerce. The population of Cham- ! bersburg at the census of 1910 was I i 11,800 and it is estimated that it was j 112,000 on July 1, 1914. The capital j I invested, as reported in 1914, was j I $3,740,000, a gain of $256,000. or 7.3 i per cent., over $3,484,000 in 1909. The i statistics represent establishments lo cated within the corporate limits of the city and show that the manufac tures have increased since 1909. The cost of materials used was \ $1,547,000 in 1 914, as against $1,170,000 in 1909, an increase of $377,000, or > 32.2 per cent., and the value of prod ' uctfi was $3,075,000 in 1914 and t $2,456,000 in 1909, the increase being $619,000, or 25.2 per cent. ? Salaries and wages amounted to $986,000 in 1914 and to $766,000 in 1909, the increase being $210,000, or 27.1 per cent. The number of salaried employes was 212 In 1914, as com pared with 211 in 1909, making ;Ai in crease of 1, or .5 per cent. Average number of wage-earners was 1,64 9 in 1914 and 1,364 in 1909, the increase being 285, or 20.9 per cent. KIVKR CARNIVAL AT COLUMBIA Special to the Telegraph Columbia, Pa., May 19.—A big river carnival has been planned for the Fourth of Jul>\and at a meeting held last night at the Colonial Club Charles Dynamite and Impure Blood A Building Full of Dynamite h || "ST* 1 " A Body/ Full of Impure Blood E »-■—« ■- Extremely Dangerous. gp You feel a keen sense of anxiety when aware of the nearness of a quantity of dynamite— fSS yet exhibit little concern when the body be- I i"s**" SPtoncca comes contaminated with impure blood, sub- ' ITTI'III MIMMI jecting you to some severe malady. Up j From the first danger, perhaps, you can move jfe; j|L CPTO-j —from the second danger you will only find safety in treating the blood with S. S. S. S. S. S. not only assists Nature in eliminating the poisons responsible for Rheumatism, Catarrh, Malaria or Scrofula, but has elements in its vegetable ingredients that materially increase the health-sustaining qualities of the blood corpuscles. Don't delay treatment with S. S. S. It can be had at any druggist* : - THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLANTA = =5 [ KING OSCAR || 5c CIGAR !: Has a character all its own, is mellow to i; : the last puff, and j! jj gives you that feeling j S of satisfaction that j should follow a good ;E i smoke. ;► ij Give yourself a real i; !; treat. s ;! ' John C. Herman & Co. i ; > Harrisburg, Pa. | * . _ -Cjn any form is only labor crystallized | - and condensed, and the money that -■?! V UsLti you save is all that you have in ma ll you cannot work the balance of your 224 MARKET ST. B. Westerman was elected president of the oganization, under whose aus pices it will be held. James A. Kmen heiser was named as secretary and D. C. Better, treasurer. There will l>e a fine display of fireworks in the evening. ADDRESS BY DR. TEITRICK Special to the Telf graph Columbia, Pa., Way 19.—Dr. P.eid B. Teitrick, Deputy State Superintend ent of Public Instruction, has been se lected to deliver the annual address to the graduates of the high school at the commencement exercises on Tuesday evening, June 6.