18 R*matnb*r thmmm two thing» in cowwefiow with S.S.S. fPare Vegetable Ingredients Wjt Fifty Years Successful Use * THE FIRST MEANS TO YOU - H A remedy for Rheumatism, Catarrh, Kgl Malaria or Skin Troubles, that has t ... T g! qualities to drive these impurities ratf the blood, and vegetable ingredient* BO wwrr swore ca 8* mild the blood op to normal healthy Bag] ~K tions, without the u»uai yiolent ESTi s mineral drugs havat Kjßj t . OND MEANS— p not experimenting when treating ■ 3. The merits of this remedy are tally established, and ■ have found in it the way to renewed vigor and vitality. Ig signs of blood impwirie*, start at once on a bottle of Ef Jet it at any druggist. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.. ATLAWTA, GA. JK Pastor, 6 Feet 4 Inches, Is Good Debt Lifter Lyons, Neb. —The Rev. Charles j Wayne Ray, pastor of the Methodist Church here, stands six feet four Inches In his stocking feet, and Is be lieved to be the tallest clergyman In Nebraska. He is well-proportioned. In his first pastorate In Nebraska, at Crawford, he succeeded in lifting a debt that had hung over the church I 1 % Unbeatable Exterminator fcj .of Ruts.Mice and Bugs Used the World Over - Used by V.S.Government The Old Reliable The? Never fells - /5 c.2sc.At Druggists THE RECOGNIZED STANDARD-AVOID SUBSTITUTES JABREQU Eradicate* Dandruff: makes New Hair Grow and Promotes Hair Health. For sale by druggist or sent to any address on receipt of 25c. KUTZ MEDICINE COMPANY 1325 Derry St., Harrisburg. v- ~,/ TO TAKE OFF FLESH AND REDUCE WEIGHT Eat Plenty of Wholesome Food, But Breathe Deeply and Try a Little Oil of Korein With Meals. Some people seem to be able to eal f whatever they please without its in creasing their weight to any degree, while on the other hand other folks, in clined to stoutness, try to eat lightly of the so-called fleshmaking foods but keep gaining weight all the time. Such a condition is both unnatural and dan- ; gerous but can often be quickly over- I come by practicing deep breathing in i the open air. The blood of the average overstout person seemingly falls to ac- 1 cept enough oxygen to consume the ex cessive fatty material in the food. But 1 frequent open air deep breathing forces additional oxygen into the system, largely overcoming this defect and pre- j venting further increase in weight. Then if this deep breathing plan is ac companied by the use of a little oil of korein, taking a few drops in a capsule with each meal and again before going to bed. it becomes possible to greatly j reduce the weight even in a very few j days. The best feature of this reducing I method is that It is absolutely «afe and unlike so many flesh reducing systems. I T FlllLnit" Ln silver U R«(titrrfd jdßr A % Jmr Gold crovrtui and H T Office open dally 8:80 22K gold cr0«n,..W.00 I J^ r A f V to e p. m.| Mon., Wed. and Sat., till 9 p. ro. t Sun day*, 10 a. m. to 1 p. iu. BEI.I, FHOXE 3322-R. 4L • EASY TERMS OF PAYMENTS ' v/ 320 Market St. tOver the Hub) S Harrisburg, Pa. It dldn . t hurt . Mt minimllßi iiuinHi niiii inn uMmiwmm rnittttntttittttttttttntnittxtiittutiiitttxtttxt | IT'S THIS WAY | IKING OSCAR I | 5c CIGARS I it ♦♦ | Are packed full of quality. | f§ Get wise and give yourself fj | a treat by smoking regu-» | larly this 25 year old § H quality brand. g ♦♦ 5* |K John C. Herman & Co. \\ FRIDAY EVENING, for twenty years. From Crawford he went to Valentine, where another debt was Boon cleared. Later he went to I Columbus, where the struggling con gregation was placed firmly on its feet. After four years at Columbus he was transferred to this town. He is forty-one years old •OAJLI, OFF PICNIC Camp No. 5,250, of the Modern Wood men of America, have called off a pic nic which was to have been held at I Hershey Park on July 14. r produces no weakening effects. In fact • there are those who have tried it who say it almost seemed that they gained in strength with every pound of excess fat they lost. The use of oil of korein Js Intended to eliminate the need of weakening pur- I gatives, sweating processes, dangerous drugs, starvation diets or the various | forms of violent exercises which so I many use in a vain effort to reduce flesh. Instead, oil oi .torein operates , in a natural and wholly harmless way to gently reduce the excessive accumu latiows .t>T fat -wherever thev -exist on your body while the oxygen you are j breathing into your system from the pure out door air not onlv helps the action of the Korein but is helpful in preventing a return of the unnatural fat. It is a good plan to weigh yourself once a week so as to keep close check | on what weight you are losing and do j not skip a single dose until your weight lis down to normal. Any dr L gtst can ; supply you with these capsules.—Ad- I vertisement. BIBLICAL NAMES - FIGURE IN NEWS Dispatches From War Front Tell of Scene Familiar to Stu dents of Scriptures The International Sunday School Les son for July 2 is "Paul at Thessa loniea and Beroa," Acts 17:1-5 By William T. Ellis Actual foreign travel has been largely prevented by the war. Uterary travel has been immeasurably promoted. Mars has taught a universal class In geography for the past two years. When this Sunday school lesson was last up for study, se\ eral years ago, 1 hessalonica was a mere name, a semi legendary place "over there." Few persons would have attempted to bring it back out of the mists of antiquity and show it as an actual city, with as veritable an existence as Chicago or London. Now, even the children who study this lesson Know that the story is laid in Saloniki, where the allied troops have concentrated for their Mace donian campaign. The city, which i» now an armed camp, and one of the centers of world interest, has retained the substance of it suneient name; for . aloniki is not greatly different from Th essalonica. If space permitted, tt would be of uncommon interest to go into the ro mantic history of this old seaport about which ail sorts of battles have raged for uncounted centuries. Any alert student who has facilities for investigating thfi story of the Saloniki a ™ their conversion to Islam will find himself on the trail of a storv as romantic as any in the Arabian iMgnts. The Young Turk party, which at present rules Turkey, had its roots an .^u°° nter Iar * el y Saloniki. This \* ould be an appropriate place to un dertake a study of the future of the lands about Saloniki and of Turkey especially. Can the influence of the Apostle Paul be traced in the present situation? Whftt is there to be said about the type ot Christianity which prevails In the eastern churches to day? A Rervivnl or a Riot Tens of millions of members of the Sunday school have been following the ups and downs of Paul's travel experi ences. The present lesson rinds him at oalonikl. Wherever he went there was sure to be a revival or a riot — usually, as in this case, a riot. What a dynamic thing Christianity was as Paul preached it! Following iiis sensible rule of going as far with every man as possible, and of Identifying himself with the best cause or organization in sight, Paul became an attendant upon the syna gogue. Thus he usually began "at Jerusalem." He was grateful for a platiorm from which he could pro claim his radical Good News. A good exemplar is Paul of the art of work ing with people to the best possible point of agreement. Sabbath after Paul the Jew reasoned in the synagogues. But he had something to say. His message was distinctive. There are some sermons that might be preached in any heathen temple in perfect ap propriateness. Paul, however, had one distinct announcement. The old Scriptures had been fulfilled by the coming of Jesus as the Christ. That thesis he supported by all the intel lectual and oratorioal arts at his com mand.. Jesus as the Christ, the cru cified and risen Christ, as his one great sermon. By it he convinced the hearts and changed the lives of a mul titude. Once more we tarry for a mo ment to remind ourselves that the ment to remind ourselves that the Sun day school teacher, and the preacher, who has not a clear and experienced message on the power of Christ to redeem lives. Is In the wrong busi ness. These are two callings in which the Saviour must be exalted above all ethical teaching. Power Is not present when Christ Is absent. That story made as great a disturb ance in old Thessalonica as the arrival of the armies has created in modern Saloniki. Paul had a way of setting a city in an uproar. He would have been surprised and grieved had noth ing happened after hla preaching. Imagine the minister's sorrow who goes on, week after week, year after year .and sees no results of his preach ing: he is but a commonplace wheel in a conventionalized social order. Paul got results; tremendous results. Between the fracas stirred up by the apostle in the old city of Thessa lonica and the modern church quarrel there is as much difference as between Christianity and heathendom. His strife was not between Christians over petty and unworthy issues, but be tween the truth and error, between the Gospel and the world. Paul was never mobbed on account of personal can tankerousness, but for the truth's sake. When the Friend Suffered Almost like an accolade was the charge brought against the two mis sionaries. They were mobbed and their lives sought, and the charge was "These that have turned the world up side down have come hither also" They were revolutionists. The world wan wrong side up: the:.' were righting it. There you have sensational preach ing. The gospel that makes things over was on the lips of Paul. Deeper than we dream lies the tremendous truth that this old earth's many ills of which humanity is newly conscious! AliltleCareand AlMeCuficnm DoWonders for Hair and Shin The Soap to cleanse, purify and beautify, the Ointment to soothe and heal. Sample Each Free by Mall With 32-p. Skin Book on request. Ad dress post-card "Cuticura, Dept. 20U, Btrttn " Sold (hrougboHb iroflfl HAHRISBURG TELEGRAPH Federal Inquiry or Railroad Strike? Faced by demands from the conductors, engineers, firemen and brakemen that would impose on the country an additional burden in transportation costs of $100,000,000 a year, the railroads propose that this wage problem be settled by reference to an impartial Federal tribunal. With these employes, whose efficient service is acknowledged, the railroads have no differences that could not be considered fairly and decided justly by such a public body. Railroads Urge Public Inquiry and Arbitration The formal proposal of the railroads to the employes for the settlement of the controversy is as follows: "Our conferences have demonstrated that we cannot harmonize our differences of opinion, and that eventualhr the matters in controversy must be passed upon by other and disinter ested agencies. Therefore, we propose that your proposals and the proposition of the rail ways be disposed of by one or the other of the following methods: Preferably by submission to the Interstate Commerce Commission, the only tribunal which, bv reason of its accumulated information bearing on railway conditions and its con trol of the revenue of the railways, is in a position to consider and protect the rights and equities of all the interests affected, and to provide additional revenue necessary to meet the added cost of operation in case your proposals are found by the Commission to be just and reasonable; or, in the event the Interstate Commerce Commission cannot, under existing laws, act in the premises, that we jointly request Congress to take such action as may be necessary to enable the Commission to consider and promptly dispose of the questions involved: or 2. By arbitration in accordance with the provisions of the Federal law" (The Newlands Act), Leaders Refuse Offer and Take Strike Vote Leaders of the train service brotherhoods, at the joint conference held in New York? June 1-15, refused the offer of the railroads to submit the issue to arbitration or Federal review, and the employes are now voting on the question whether authority shall be given these leaders to declare a nation-wide strike. The Interstate Commerce Commission is proposed by the railroads as the public body to which this issue ought to be referred for these reasons: No other body with such an intimate directly to the employes as wages; and the knowledge of railroad conditions has such money to pay increased wages can come from an unquestioned position in the public con- no other source than the rates paid by the fidence. public. The rates the railroads may charge the .The Interstate Commerce Commission, public for transportation are now largely wijth its control over rates, is in a position fixed by this Government board. to make a complete investigation and render such decision as would protect the interests Out of every dollar received by the rail- of the railroad employes, the owners of the roads from the public nearly one-half is paid railroads, and the public. A Question For the Public to Decide The railroads feel that they have no right to grant a wage preferment of $100,000,000 a year to these employes, now highly paid ana constituting only one-fifth of all the employes, without a clear mandate from a public tribunal that shall determine the merits of the case after a review of all the facts. \ The single issue before the country is whether this controversy ts to be settled by an impartial Government inquiry or by industrial warfare. National Conference Committee of the Railway* ELISHA LEE, Chairman P. R ALBRIGHT, Gam'l Manatar. G. H. EMBRSON. Gan'l Mama,*. N. D. MAHER Atlantic Com Line Ra.lroad. Creat Northern Railway. Noriolkft ' L W. BALDWIN. Gan'l Managar. C. H. BWING, Gan'l Manager, JAMES RUSSELL G..-I M Central of Georgt. Railway. Philadelphia ft Reading Railway. Denver ftßio C,f^3J C. L. BARDO, Gtm'l Maaattr, B. W. GRICB, Gtti'lSupt. Tramp A M SCHOYRR o u *-- -' S. H'7RUL? ,OTD A , C^" P , E ; KC 4 ° HIO R,ILW,R - ' H. COAPMAN. Vict-Prnidtmt A. S. GRKIG, Asst. (• R»c«ivsr», f|T L BEDDON Vu-* P J Southern Railway. St. Lonia ft Sao Fr.nci.co Railroad. Se.ho.rd AiJ'Unl' Gm '' Um "'~ C W - KOUNS. Garni Manage. a. J STONB i Wabaah Ra.lway A.ehi.on, Topeka ft Santa Fe Railway. Erie P. \Vlu-PruUam. H. W. McM ASTER. Gan'l Managar, O. S WAID Vic-Pn. » n*m-l U-. New York Central Railroad. Wheeling ft Lake Erie Railroad SuaU n .' ** are to be remedied by the preached and practised gospel of Christ. The most revolutionary reformer on this battle-scarred earth to-day is the preacher of the word of God. His function is nothing less than to cause the race to "right about face." A little human touch, of the sort that abounds In Paul's stormy experi ences, enters the story right here. A cleverly engineered riot sought the life of the foreigners. They ran them down to the house of one Jason, which they mobbed. Their prey had escaped, however, and only Jason and a few of the new disciples remained. Upon these they vented their wrath, taking them before the magistrates, and charging them with all the offenses of the missionaries. Jason willingly suf fered arrest and stood trial and finally war let out on bail. Here was a man who suffered for his friend. He fulfilled the highest office of friendship—loyalty when his friend was having hard times. He counted It a prize to be permitted to boar hardness for his friend's sake. "A frirnd loveth at all times." It was an honor to Jason that he could bear some of the blows designed for the man who had introduced him to Christ. What matter if he did suffer unjustly: that made love's sacrifice the sweeter. In these days of political turmoil, when we see crowds forsak ing old leaders for the sake of personal advantage, and giving their brief loyalty where their advantage lies, it is good to have the heart-rending story of Jason, who even welcomed suffering for the sake of a friend whose escape he thus aided. What says the Word? ' Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life /or his friend." Paul and Christ evoke that kind of loyalty. We have not forgotten Armenia, true to the death. The City of the Open Mind "Trouble la a chariot: it either rune over you and crushes you, or else It carries you on In royal progress." With the echoes of that howling Thes salonlca mob In their ears, surely Paul nnd Silas would have been warranted In lying low for a while. Seclusion anil rest were surely now their right. They had done a great deed: why rhould they not sit safe somewhere and onntmplata it? Or thw even have been discouraged and de feated by this riot. What about it, friend Paul? "Forgetting those things which are behind ... I press." Driven out of one city, these mis sionaries deemed the fact but an Invi tation to some other place. Every door shut behind their backs set them to teeking the one that was sure to be j opened before their face. A riot was i merely the eagle stirring up the nest. |to Incite flight. So, mobbed out of j Thessalonica, they made their way to ! Berea. Cities have characters, even as people have. No cosmopolitan person is unaware of this fact There Is nothing strange in the record that Berea was an open-minded city, toler ant, thoughtful and of an investigating turn of mind. They were receptive to the new teachings. The marks of the I modern scientific and scholastic spirit J were strong upon the Bereans. They f.earched the Scriptures for them selves. Most of ustake our Bible second-hand. We get it diluted and interpreted and expounded from the pulpit and from the printed page. Sage saints and sturdy do otherwise. They follow the Berean method and investigate the Bible for themselves. I would rather have ten Bible readers in a church than fifty mere Bible hearers. The glory of this Book Is that It yields its choicest fruits to first-hand study. The humblest saint may get more from it himself than the most eloquent preacher can leach him. There Is no expositor of Scripture that can equal reverent, personal perusal of the sa- | cred pages. When the emissaries of trouble reached Berea they found converts— among them many noble women— grounded unshakably in the faith. The apostlea oould leave the city with serene minds. The Infant Berean Church was pillared in the Book. POSTPONE SALE Sale of 1521 North Third street, which was to have been held in front of the Courthouse yesterday was postponed until next Thursday by J. D. M. Royal, \ trustee In bankruptcy, for T. M. Mauk | inA SOB, bankrupt*. j JUNE 30, 1916. Jury of 12 Women Convicts Fair Thief Eureka, Cal.—A Jury of twelve wo- ! men, sitting in the trial of Mrs. Mary | Heroux, charged with burglary, re- i turned a verdict of guilty with a re- I commendation of mercy. Sentence, ! j which will be pronounced later, will j be from one year to fifteen. Mrs. Lydia Cooper, the only grand- I | mother on the jury, and mother-in j law of Judge Clinton H. Connick, of I the Superior Court, was forewoman. j ONE PIMPLE^I there may be many unless you use POSLAM the Healing Remedy Ready to drive away eruptional troubles just when you need its help. Quickest for results when the skin breaks out. For all Eczemas, Rashes. Scalp-Scale, Oak or Ivy- Poisoning. Mosquito Bites, Sunburn. Stops Itcfc Ing. Allays Inflammation. Cannot harm most delicate skin. ! Potlam Soap, mtdieaUd with Potlam it unturpatted in riehnw and tkoae trualitim ; wk\ch make for htalth of th* akin. Tor FREE SAMPLE, writ, to Etr.r**n<-» j 25111 st - New York C '£ $2-00 Rail and Boat Excursion Tolchester Beach ON Beautful Chesapeake Bay Maryland's Famous Pleesure Resort Sunday, July 9 BatHng, Boating Fishiig, Crabbing SPECIAL TRAIN* Loaves Hirrlsburg - 6.50 A. M. Returning steamer leave* Tol chestc Beach, 4.00 P. M. s2.oo ßou^ Trtp $2.00 C Sale ol tickets limited to ca pacity of boat. Pennsylvania R.R.