THE STORE THAT \F L\T I\] LTV C THE HOME 1 MAKES THEM J[ J[ JTJ If I il OF REAL ALL ADVERTISE CUT PRICES pnce Medicines s»>„™a y House Cleaning Helps Big Saturday special on Pn " Y Medicines s»?urd« y 35c Doan's Kidney Pills 33c 34c Musttrole 29c 67c Kilmer's Swamp-Root 59c 10c Dutch Cleanser 2 cans 13c Jj 17c Carter's K. and B. Tea ISc r y ' s "r y T " £ io l doz,n":::::::::::::::::::::::: £ bandies »« «•««.> ** 17c Olive Tablets loc 5Qc pj att - s Chlorides 34c ——————____ 17c Pinkham's Sanative Wash 14c 25c Limestone Phosphate 20c SI.OO Pearson's Creolin 59c iq. |\4:il* A ®7c Hood's Sarsaparilla 59c 149 c Bell-ans 42c 10c Insect Powder Guns sc, ™ C Millionaire Assorted 36c Angiei , s Emulsion 31c 33c Mi-o-na Tablets 29c 25c Insect Powder 19c Chocolates, 71c Angier's Emulsion '.6lc 41c Antiphlogestine 35c L'keeper'.Trien" .iW« polish 'iiiiiiiiiii iiiiii i i i ! 5c A„_ IS- SI.OO Fellows' Hypophosphite, 93c ' 15c Alexanders Lung Healer 1-c 25c Liquid Veneer 15c wlir ML riCO lOC 67c Pinkham's Veg. Comp 63c 34c Booth s Hyomei Liq 29c j lb 20-mule Borax 9c _________ 17c Musterole ..! •. 15c 34c Solvax 29c Ilb Moth Balls : 17c gQ lb Rickenbauffh & Tav 37c R «inol Ointment 34c 34c Pape's Diapepsin 29c lib Moth Flake 17c » - Nul T ; «• V< e size r.::::::::::::: :::::::::::::: t lor 8 M,xed Chocolat ~ ** **> ; »« I 17c Tiz Large line of Sponges /Aj ¥M *^ C fillips Milk Magnesia :.... 35c 67c Peruna 57c Large line of Chamois Skin at Cut Prices JL rMtC KJ 17c Sloan's Liniment 15c 34c Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 28c 25c Sugar of Milk 20c 57c Jad's Kidney Salts 42c f 33c Cal. Syrup of Figs . 29c 69c Father John's 61c .. Beecharn '. pill . ~ «cl^^lS«« c . :::::::::::::::::::::::::::. SPECIAL PALMOLIVE OFFER | 17c Tonsiline 15 C 34c Williams' Pink Pills 30c 15c pALMOLIVE SOAP . _ f c " ux, . t ? d Iro " , Tablets 5 " 17c Atwood s Bitters 14c 4D "I r\A "¥ 7" 1 All 71c Enos Fruit Salts 59c 78c Gude's Peptomangan 73c 1 Jar 50c PALMOLIVE CREAM V/ \ SlUOa * Ol* £3 c Whelps' Rheumatic Elixir 59c 15c Schenck's Pills 12c 1 Bottle 50c PALMOLIVE SHAMPOO J 59c Bliss' Native Herb Tablets 49c 34 c Usterine S 29c PLEASE NOTE—This is the regular full sized 15c cake of Palmolive soap, which we have always sold for Goafs' Cough Syrup ' " 15c 67c D. D. D 63c 8c a cake. J7 C gegy Musterine 15c 67c Wampole's Cod Liver Oil 55c v J 67C Margo Tablets 59c «c Toilet Articles E 7 yday Toilet Articles , Sp f 14c Carter's Liver Pills 12c Pnce 1 vILCIr A 1 UtlCO Saturday . Price X UIIC t ill lltlCO Saturday 67c King's New Discovery 59 c 38c Bengue Balm 36c g7 c Hudnut's Toilet Water 59c 34c La Blache Face Powder 32c 67c Hood's Sarsaparilla 59c 17c Vick's Vap-O-Rub 15c c Djer Kiss Talcum Powder 19c 53c Pinaud's Lilac Water 47c Tonsiline 29c ,67c Pierce's Medicines 59c _ . _ n j -> D , 7 _ j r™,m ic 75c Resinol Ointment 69c 0 . I. i> /™\*i 9Q 41c Djer Kiss Face Powder 38c 1/c rond s Vanishing Lream 15c q« tt i• i . i.j 34c Usoline Oil 29c J tt• j' u A -« tl j p r .. m 01 JpZ.yo riorlick s Malted Milk $2.75 I 28c Steero Cubes 21c 34c Daggett and Ramsdell s Cream 30c IWto !::!!! "X : \ol "c Mellin's Food ,8c , > 12c Mennens Talcum Powder 11c 33c p ebeto Tooth p aste 30c N •«»r W A All A 1 A. • 1 Othine, Double 59c 12c Swansdown Powder 10c . ,.LL We Meet All Advertised 17c Kalpheno Tooth Paste 15c 16c Grave's Tooth Paste 14c I\Uljlj€sr UIOV6S Pricesol Our Competitors 00,h Powd ":::::::::::::::::::::::: litg: Ss^t^ Powd " se " for Jsc pair -1Q r . 53c Mercolized Wax 48c 12c Pear's Unscented Soap 10c _ **/ V» KENNEDY'S 321 Market Street BIG ADVENTURES OF MISSIONARIES Paul and Barnabas Acclaimed as Gods From the Heavens, Then Stoned by Mob The International Sunday School I wesson for May 21 Is "The Cripple of tiystra."—Acts Cli. 14. (By William T. Ellis.} If you can meet with triumph and disaster And treat those two importers just the same. If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you. If a!! men count with you. but none too much. -Kipling. When one adventures greatly in life he learns to be superior to circum stance*. Buffetings and bouquets both come to be part of the day's work of masterful men. The cup which life presses to the lips of the great holds alternate drafts of bitter and of sweet. They A-ho attain the highest plane of spirit are as little perturbed by cries of "Crucify Him! > rucifv Him:" as by the rabble's shouts of "Hosanna! Hosanna: - ' Palm branches and scourges, garlands and stones, are equally unable to /swerve from its purpose a triumphant life. li the great story which is today's Sunday School we find Paul and Barnabas acclaimed as gods come down from heavens, and then they are ' by the same crowd mobbed and stoned ;>nd left for dead. The adventures of these first, missionaries make our commonplace and conventional and . Bringing Up Father # # <ij> # $ TOO you NNOW - -J= IDO YOU WANT TO [ WE'LL HAVE R v Jfw/p . II CERTAIMLV -I I I TAKE A WALK " VALK UP THAT - . .T ■ N TO rvft Vrti i f MORNIN- . MOUNTAIN OVER f , nnMI J 1 OVER HERE' F 0 " J 7 1 DONT I \ \ ITb "STRONQ ON IT XE V .—/ / I J-_r_^s Bimi inn . ,|jini JI —-^^nTiT'T'iirTT^TrTr ,^^*^T^^^"*w *'" I. I. '' .1 _■!M_ ißT»iT^ai>^ FTC TP AY EVENING, HABRISBURQ TELEGRAPH MAY 19, 1916. comfortable Christianity seem hum drum. A Hallway and Some Refugees It took a riot to move Paul and Barnabas from Pisidlan Antioch to their next preaching place, which was the ancient city of Iconium —a city that disputes with Damascus the claim to being the oldest in the world. The few Americans and Europeans who have traveled In Asia Minor know Iconium, or Konla as It is called to day, as a central railway point, and as the place where is to be found the ; largest and best hotel in Turkey, out ' side of Constantinople. When I reg istered at this hotel, a few lines above my signature was that of Sir William Ramsey, the famous archaeologist and authority upon the life and travels of St. Paul, who makes Konia his head quarters when in Asia Minor. Here, too. is Dr. Dodd's nonie American Hos pital, which is just now vainly trying to save the lives of more than a score of thousands of Armenian refugees, who are encamped outside the city. To-day. as in the time of Paul, Konia is a place where men suffer for their faith in Christ. All of the marks of a successful mission attach to the apostle's work in Iconium. First of all they made con verts, and then they made enemies. Paul would have thought that the devil was having everything his own way If his preaching had been viewed with indifference or complacency. If Paul and Barnabas had not made more of a commotion In a godless community than some modern churches, they would have spent the night in confession and contrition and prayer. When opposition arose t hey were not discouraged, but spoke free ly and worked tirelessly, being given many signs and marvels to attest their ministry. Christianity became the issue above all other issues in the great heathen tity of Iconium. The success of these missionaries from Antioch was so great that both Gentiles and Jews and the Roman politicians combined for an attack upon the Christian lead lers. Hatred, like politics, makes ' -Grange bedfellows. The Gentiles and | the Jews ceased from opposition to each other to make common cause against Paul and Barnabas. The arguments they used were those of force, stoning the men out of the city. These doughty missionaries accepted their expulsion from the city of leon , ium as a "call" to Lystra, where they continued to tell the Good News. Scared By Success The sort of preaching that does i things always attracts attention. Among Paul's hearers one day was a man who had been a cripple from birth, a well-known town character, a beggar on one of the principal high ways. Him Paul healed with a word. The restored cripple, leading and shouting, told his tale to the city. The crowd, always eager for some novelty, were caught by this wonder and they began to shout, "The gods have assumed human form and they : have come down to us." Here was a sensation indeed—something to stim ulate the jaded interests of these city dwellers. Calling Barnabas "Zeus" or 1 "Jupiter," and Paul "Hermes" or 1 "Mercury," they swiftly organized a religious demonstration. The priest if Zeus, eager to get all the credit possible for his temple, brought bul locks and garlands to the gate to offer sacrifice to these men whom they ac claimed as gods. Not many can resist adulation. The '.xtremest compliments are accepted by : | most of us as our due. It is diffi • cult for a public speaker to think that ' (he flattering words with which he ■ is introduced do not represent the ju dicial appraisal of his real worth. But these old missionaries were of a differ ent sort, and the demonstration in tended for them set to tearing their ■ clothes and showing an excitement ihat no ill treatment had ever aroused in them. Nobody ever heard Paul and Barnabas lamenting or wailing when they were mobbed. But when they were being deified they crieu, "Sirs, why are you doing all this? We also are hut men, with nature kindred to your own; and we bring you the Good News that you are to 1 'turn'from these unreal things. to nor ' ship the everliving God, the Creator , |of earth and sky and sea and every f thing: that Is in thom. In times gone . !by He allowed all the nations to BO I their own way; and yet by llis benefi • fence He has not left His existence unattested—His beneficence, I mean, |in sending rain from Heaven and fruitful seasons, satisfying your hearts with food and joyfulness. Even with 5 words like these they-had difficulty in preventing the thronging crowd from I i offering sacrifices to them." i These men were in apostolic suc i cession to John the Baptist, who said - "He must increase but 1 must de • crease." They were prophets from I the same school, "Not unto us, O Je hovah, not unto us, l>ut unto Thy j ' name give glory." This unprecedent ' ed ovation to themselves they used s merely as an opportunity for preach-1 ' ing the living God. whose humble ser- L vants they were. It is a great man ■ who can take praises for himself and ' Iturn them into a pulpit for the preach " IIR of Christ, so that he himself is " forgotten. i Deifleil. Thou Mobbed l Every man who has observed life t has remarked upon the fickleness of - popular favor. The world seems to • weave alternate crowns of laurel and • crowns of thorns for its great. Hid- , den in obscurity and poverty in many ; 1 parts of the land today are men and r. women whose names won applause ; land figured in the front pages of the t newspapers. There is no form of ! success more unstable and unsatis-; • factory than the applause of the, t crowd. The amietite tot it has ruin- ! • ed more men than have been inspired ■| by it. The simple truth Is that any- j • | body who is strong enough to lead the t j multitude aright, thus winning its, I plaudits, is reasonably sure, if he re- I I mains strong, to incur the enmity pf ; the multitudes by unpopular views, i If a man has no belter measure of ] , (success than the buxzas of the crowd, ' then he Is in a sorrj way indeed. !! The heads of these missionaries ;j were not turned by the attempt at i 1 apothesis. They went right on preaching the Gospel. Nor were they ' < surprised when, in a short time, the < same people who had tried to engar land them stoned Paul and dragged j I liiin out of the town, believing him to i !be dead. That was an experience!! I which the missionaries could stand I better than they could the ovations . of the fickle multitude. < It is worth remembering that the , disciples of Paul collected around him > when he lay as dead. Those were ! | courageous saints in the days when I discipleship meant persecution. The j' early Christians knew how to die for j 1 their faith, and they knew how to live i for ti. Earnest Crosby's little poem is pertinent: I "So he died for his faith. That is fine; ■ More than most of us do. [ 1 | But staj, can you add to that line ! That he lived for it, too? "It is easy to die. Men have died For a wish or a whim— 1 1 , Prom bravado or passion or pride— Wan It harder for him? "But to live; every day to live out |' All the truth that he dreamt, ' \Vhile his friends met his conduct with ' doubt, !' , AnO the word with contempt— Was it thus that he plodded ahead, \ Never turning aside? Then we'll talk of the life that he' led— | Never mind how he died." Men Who Could Xot Be Ifownetl I One day Paul lay outside the gate of; 1-ystra, apparently a corpse, bruised j ! bleeding, soiled; the next day we find i hini on his way to Derbe and pro-j claiming the Good News there. His hard times were not counted a rea- i son for running away from his work. Paul simply could not be discouraged, i His only passion was for the preach- j ing of the Gospel. He had no time to think of wounds or weariness. With j him the work was the thing. There ' is nothing that interferes with the ef ficiency of a worker like beginning to contemplate his own stale of health or of mind. After a season of successful preach ing at Derbe, what did these magnifi- | cent adventures do but retrace thetr steps to the very place where they had ' been mobbed, Lystra. Iconium and j Antioch. There is courage for you. "A burnt child dreads the fire," but Paul never feared the place of hard ship. . | "I count him great. Who, by a life heroic, conquers fate." That is a thrilling picture in the gallerv of Scripture which depicts Maul and Barnabas retracing their steps openly through the cities where thev had* narrowly escaped death. Making Fast the Work At the siege of Ladysmith a man : was courtmart ialed for being a dis- ' courager. Paul in this hard experi ence returned In order to strengthen the disciples by encouraging them to hold fast to the faith. One might think it was he that needed the en-! couragement. He laid down the prin ciple. "It is through many afflictions that we must make our way Into the | kingdom of God." In every church in these centers of persecution Paul and Barnabas lielfl meetings at which elders were elect ed. and established the Church so that the work would go on whether the apostles were present or Wise with the wisdom of Holy Writ is that i worker who establishes his work so j that it will continue whether he lives 1 or dies, succeeds or fails. VI I t.— 1 L ■ | ■ aww-gßia^ FRECKLES Now Is llip Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription ©thine—double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine—dou ble strength—from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even tl.« worst freckles have begun to disap pear, while the lighter ones have van ished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce Is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back if It fails to remove freckles.—Advertisement. Resorts ATI.A vne CITV, IV. J. ENJOY A COMFORTABLE SUMMER AT THE IDrAt RESORT HOTEL Fireproof. On the Ocean front. Capacity Wffl, Hot and cold nea water in ail 1,. th» Orchestra of •o'oi«t*. Private paraare on rr miaes. Illustrated | literature. Ownership management. HARRY M. HOFFMAN ISlat'FFamr to J. .1. Ogelaby) UNDERTAKER SI A North Secoad Street Try Telegraph Want Ads 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers