The Store That j 1 The Home of I Makes Them i% J| V% \\gj HI J > Real l| All Advertise SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Cut Prices! I "E? Medicines "Toilet Articles r:::: |zr Toilet Articles r:;:,r I-™ Medicines I 69c Hudnut's Toilet Water 590 .. 35c Doan's Kidney Pills 330 45 c Hudnut's Cold Cream 350 „ C 1 e !f o ax 34c Musterole 290 57c Kilmer's Swamp Root 59<* 21c Djer Kiss Talcum Powder 190 P f nau d's Lla^a^r".!!'.!!!!!! 1! !*.! "!!! 480 17c Carter's K. &B. Tea „ 150 I 34c Foley's Honey and Tar ~80 43c Djer Kiss Face Powder 390 \7 C Pond's Vanishing Cream 150 ?7c Phenol Sodiaue 25* I 17c Olive Tablets 150 38c Daggett & Ramsdell Cream 310 34c Hind's Honey and Almond Cream 310 . ° " 28c Limestone Phosphate 210 13c Mennen's Talcum Powder 110 15c Williams' Violet Talcum Powder 100 Pinkham s Sanative Wash 140 34c Mi-o-na Tablets 296 18c Kalpheno Tooth Paste 150 l7 0 c Sanitol Face Cream 130 67c Hood's Sarsaparilla 590 41c Antiphlogistine 300 17c Lyon's Tooth Powder 150 & PeSS" TolthPaste o™™ 0 ™™ 00S 36c An^cr ' s Emulsion 310 17c Alexander's Lung Healer 120 34c Canthrox 29 0 12c Swansdown Powder 10c ?l ° An^ier ' s Emulsion 61^ 34c Booth's Hyomei Liq 290 - _J SI.OO l<ellow's Hypophosphites 930 34c Pape's Diapepsin 290 T II i D 1, C • 1 Ffc . $ 1 " 34 Eckman's Alterative $1.19 57c Listerine 570 lCy-Hot OOttieS At SpeCUll PriCeS 17c Musterole 150 17c Tiz 140 Satnrd»v Onlv 37c Resinol ° intment 34 0 155 c Peruna 570 . . JaiUPClay Ullly 38c Nu , fey Tablets 310 34c Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 290 An indispensable convenience for motoring, boating, fishing, hunting, camping and picnicking. 28c Lapactic Pills 250 +9c Jad's Kidney Salts 420 Will keep things icy cold three days or steaming hot twenty-four hours. A large number of 37c Phillips' Milk Magnesia 340 59c Father John's 610 these have been purchased at a figure which permits us to sell them at exceptionally low prices. 17c Sloan's Liniment 150 55c Swift's Specific ' 550 Quarts and pints in various patterns, at $1.25, $1.50, $2.25, $3.50 and $4.50. A lim- 25c Sugar of Milk 230 56 Bromo Seltzer 570 ited number at these prices. • 34c Syrup of Figs 290 \34c Williams' Pink Pills 300 17c Beecham's Pills 150 17c Atwood's Bitters 140 I\<m nr n • ~~ I R!ieuma 290 17c Morse's Pills 150 $1.25 Fountain 7Q*% 51. 50 Water AQ I 17c Tonsiline 150 15c Schenck's Pills 120 Svrin?£ lOC R ffl 75c Enos' Fruit Salts 590 H 34c St. Jacob's Oil 290 . . . • • . DOtllC. . • • 67c Phelp's Rheumatic Elixir 590 , L ; iS !! ri " e with extra^afge'tubing 6 and fhret hi * water is guaranteed for one year, made 75c Fruitola 590 5/c D. D. D 630 it was made up to sell for $1.25. Our price, nO heavy rubber, and is bound to give AO 17c Beggy Mustenne 150 ■ 57c Wampole's Cod Liver Oil - 57c Saturday only #OC good satisfaction. Saturday price t/OC 75c Margo Tablets 590 H 23c. Fletcher's Castoria 210 ——— V __ ___J sl.lO S. S. S $1.05 50c Hall's Catarrh Remedy 450 t f 34c Pinex 290 H 14c Carter's Liver Pills 130 ALnkJ e\€\ „» n ~ • 34c King's New Discovery 290 W 38c Bengue Balm 350 AICOHOI 35c Bath OQ. 34c Tonsiline 290 jg 34c Canthrox 290 utOVCS, • • • ** ** Bl*Usll fclOC 75c Resinol Ointment 690 I We Meet Any Advertised Prices * o ' St ° Ve '°" e j AH Rubber Goods Specially Priced] I Ol Uur Competitors Botll for . . ■ uOC for the money. Only a limited number at uuC j For Saturday Saturday Specials—KENNEDY'S— 32l Market Street I REAL EVANGELIST ~ WAS ST. PAUL Results of His Work Pointed Out by William T. Ellis By William T. Ellis The test of the success of an evan gelistic campaign comes a year after the evangelist has gone. Nobody can give a true Judgment of revival meet ings while they are at their height. The adventures of Paul and his com panions. exciting, sensational and dra matic. have engaged the thought of the Sunday schools for weeks past. Now we come to ask what traces could be found a year later of his great ex periences and utterances in these cities of Macedonia and Asia Minor. We are not left to surmise. There is a clear record. That record is found in the letters of the Apostle, one of which is the basis of to-day's Sunday school Calcium's Value in Tuberculosis As a tonic and remedial agent in the treatment of tuberculosis, this ele ment is being studied by scientists and physicians everywhere. For more than two decades users of Kckman's Alterative have tested its efficacy i nsuch cases, for calcium chlorid is one of the chief constitu ents of this preparation, which has produced beneficial results in thou sands of instances. And in this form it is so combined as to be easily as similated. Tf you are thus afflicted, a trial may prove this to be Just what is needed to assist Nature n bringing about a re turn to normal health. It is safe to take, because it con tains no poisonous or habit-forming drugs of any sort. At your druggist's. Gckinan Laboratory, Philadelphia. You'll Pay More For Coal Later Increased wages and shortened working hours are responsible for the increased cost of coal. Homekeeoers who neglect to fill their btns now tor next winter jwill pay the advanced prices. Buy Kelley's Coal which is lower than it will be when cold weather comes. Will you be caught napping? H. M.KELLEY&CO. I North Third Street Tenth and State Street* FRIDAY EVENING, lesson. In these documents we find pictures of the churches founded by Paul that attest the abiding results of his work. The study is of a peculiarly absorb ing kind. In the letters of John Hay, recently published, we find mirrored from a new angle the events of his tory at witch Ue was #. sart. careful reauet of Kipling's travel let ters can trace the originals of the characters who appear in his later poems and stories. The letters of John Keats ara the best commentary upon the poetry of Keats. Naturally, a thorough student reads history in the light of contemporary documentary evidence. To-day we have the letter to the Thessalonians as a supplement to last week's study of Paul's adven tures in Thessalonica. The Letter and the Story Superficial and ignorant readers of the Bible do not put two and two to gether. It never occurs to them that the familiar passages in the Epistles to the Thessalonians have anything to do with the narrative in the Book of the Acts. Yet one is needed to make clear the other. This is the time to find out all possible about Saloniki, the city, the people and its religious history. Three sorts of documents are available in to-day's lesson: 1, the let ter to the Thessalonian Christians; 2, Luke's history in the Book of the Acts, and 3, the place itself. There is need to emphasize the sim ple point that Thessalonica was a real place; that the Thessalonian Chris tians were real people, and that Paul, the author, was a real person. He wrote to his friends and converts just as a teacher or a preacher or a parent would write to-day. He was not formulating texts for ministers to base sermons upon. He had no idea that what he was writing would be studied by thirty million persons nineteen cen turies later. He was writing primarily and only for flesh and blood Chris tians with real problems and perplexi ties, whom he loved and who needed his counsel. Unless we got that sit uation firmly in mind, our Bible study will be unreal. The Personal Element Three names begin the lesson and the letter, "Paul, and Sylvanus, and Timotheus." Of course Sylvanus and Timotheus are but another form of Silas and Timothy, our old friends who have been sharing Paul's adventures. All of them had a keen and personal interest in their friends in Thessa lonica. A year before these men had been mobbed out of the city. Now Aged Man's Skin Simply Raw from Chafing. Nurse Healed it with J <&tfkcs I /fomfprn V^POWDER/ Miss Mabel Garrison-Secretary Okla homa State Board of Registration for Nurses, says, "The skin of an aged man of 72 years was simply raw from chafing. Sykes Comfort Powder gave immediate relief and quickly healed hia sore, chafed skin." That's because of its superior medi cation, which combines healing, sooth ing and antiseptic qualities, not found in anything else. 25 cts. at all dealers. THE COMFOHT POWDEB CO., Boa toil, Ma*& there was, as a result of their trip, a real church with all the marks of Christian growth and permanence. Would that all sensational, preaching, such as Paul did, and all revival cam paigns left behind them a great and growing church. The active and imaginative mind of Paul loved to play around a theme. Thusf ite renArfcs itiat tfce Church •was not only in Thessalonica, - but that it was also "in God." It had a habi tation that was spiritual as well as a local physical identity. Come to think of it, that is the greatest fact of all about a church. It is more than a thing of brick and mortar, or boards and stones, or a body of men and women. It is a spiritual organism rooted in the character of God him self. Some churches remember their local obligations and forget their spiritual ones; others conceive of themselves as a spiritual body, but have too little effect upon the neigh borhood in which they are placed. Every church has business with two habitations; it is on earth and it is in God; it is forced to prayer, and it is also forced to publicity. The Thessa lonian Christians were in fellowship with God, and at the same, time they were making a tremendous impression upon the old heathen city of Thessa lonica. Somebody to Love The personal and tender greetings in the letter are suggestive. Paul had been through great times at Thessa lonica. He had a stake in that city. Therefora his heart turned back to the Thessalonian Christians. Every inan who was in the Civil War looks back upon those years as the greatest experience of his life. Not a single veteran Is sorry for the ordeals of those times that tried men's souls. The war made its participants great. They achieved life in its depth and in its srandeur. The interest of the old sol | dier in his comrades and In the places j of his war experiences is like that of ' Paul's interest in the Thessalonians. So it is with a mother's solicitude for the children who have caused her such suffering. Paul's heart is mir rored in the words "We give thanks to God always for you all, making men tion of you in our prayers; remember ing without ceas'ng your work of faith, and labour of love, and patience of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ, in the sight of God and our Father." Nobody can be as interested in any persons or cause as Paul was in those Thessalonian Christians and their work without giving himself to prayer for their success. What says Tenny ron ? "Pray for my soul. | More things are wrought by prayer Than this world dreams of." The mobs of Thessalontca were worth wlille to Paul. He had Buffered for a cause and thenceforth that cause had his soul's devotion. This Is the peculiar Joy of work accomplished. The pleasures remembered do not sat isfy: work remembered does. It Is great to stay one's soul with the thought that the service we have ren dered abides though we pass; the building stands though the builder dies; life transmuted into service re mains. What a comfort it was to Paul !n his dreary -orison days. Sublime Egotism There is a pride that is petty and mean and ignoble; th«re is also a pride that is great and honorable. Paul points to his work and life In Thessa lonlca. and to himself with real Pride. He even reminds them, "Ye became followers of us." In another place he exhorts his converts to follow his example. That Is the privilege or penalty of service. A man must be an example of his message. A Sunday school teachpr has to Illustrate his lesson by his life. A preacher must practice; he offers himself as "Exhihit A" of his sermons. • So every churcfc serves by being and by doing. Every Christian and every congregation is an advertlsem nt of HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH the Gospel. Publicity is no new theme: we are merely finding new names for it. What says Paul concerning the way the Thessalonian Church sounded out the word of the Lord throughout Macedonia and Greece? Work adver tises the worker. It is essential that a church and Christians be such as will commend the Gospel. Wheia Paul in Thessalonica the charge was made that he was one of those who "turned the world upside down." Now at least a year later we find, through his letter, that a trans formed church had been realized in Thessalonica. A bodj of Jews and heathen had been turned to Christ, end had become engrossed in him. This was the revolutionary result achieved by Paul. The climax of the lesson, as indeed of the letter, was Paul's clear re affirmation of his teaching of the Resurrection. Al! that he had said poinetd to and was founded upon the eternal hope of an endless life with Christ. He also assured them—for the poitn perplexed them as it has psrplexed millions since—that the Christians who should be alive when Christ again comes should share in the Resurrection with those who had al ready departed. Whether in the grave or in the flesh. Christ's own are to be united with Him in triumph. Fair Recruit Flees When Told to Disrobe Grand Rapids, Mich. Attired in a masculine suit of the latest model with a soft felt hat drawn firmly down over closely cropped light brown curls, a pretty maid of 20 applied to Sergeant Nelson Huron of the marine recruit ing station yesterday for enlistment, specifying San Francisco and a com pany in which she said she had friends. Sergeant Huron completely deceived by her disguise, assured the applicant that it could be arranged and the "re cruit" went through the eye, ear, teeth and color tests without trouble and was smiling complacently over the thoughts of her trip west when the sergeant looked up from the blanks he wat filling out and told her to step Into the next room and disrobe for jihysical examination. The smile left the face of the recruit only to return in a flood of crimson. Then a light broke on this sergeant and he rose to his feet with an em barrassed smile as the handsomest re cruit he had ever seen turned and fled hat less from the room and down the street. FORTY-ONE YEARS MINISTER Halifax, Pa.. July 7. The Rev. William Beach, pastor of the Royalton United Brethren Church, is celebrating the forty-first anniversary of his advent Into the ministry. He has been 2 8 years a minister in the Eastern Pennsylvania conference of the United Brethren Church. Before that time he served 13 years in the ministry in England. During the 41 years of his Christian ministry the Rev. Mr. Beach has officiated at 117 weddings, 211 funerals and assisted at 44 funerals, 714 conversions were made during his pastorate at various churches. The Rev. Mr. Beach is -a former pastor of the Halifax United Brethren Church and has many friends here. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears _ ■/? Signature of Woman Laid Basis of Big Estate by Selling Bananas St. Louis, Mo. How Mrs. Marina Sambucetti laid the foundation of a $500,000 estate by peddling bananas, carrying them on her head, was dls clcsed in Circuit Judge Hennlng's court in a suit for an accounting re gai ding her estate. Public Administrator James P. Newell, in charge of Mrs. Sambucetti's eptate, is plaintiff in the suit, which i.i directed against Luigl Sambucetti, son of Mrs. Sambucetti. The property in question is part of the site of the Railway Exchange Building. Mrs. Sambucetti in 18S7 conveyed a one-fourth interest to her daughter, Mrs. Victoria S. Arata, and the re maining three-fourths to her son, retaining a life interest in the son's part. In 1896 Lulgt Sambucetti bought his sister's interest, and on Juno 10, 1910, leased the property for 9 years for SIOO,OOO cash and $16,000 ' CADOMENE TABLETS THE TRUE TONIC ache, weakness, unreliable memory, capricious ness of temper, easily induced fatigue, inef j|_ ficient functioning of the structures or com- A Q ' 0 A profound sense of worry is perhaps the r most marked and characteristic symptom of V \ ' I nervousness. It extends to every detail of 1 - /\ business amusement, food, drink, the physical state, the domestic and social relation; hardly an a . ct or bought S° es by without its dispro symptom often shows itself in the drawn and haggard, disappointed looking countenance. I" recent and chronic cases the good ef i&aE&ffi Jf&@L fects of Cadomene Tablets are felt early and Jgaly/y* every step taken is held ; there is no retrogres- Vy*' j sion. Strength gradually returns, fatigue is diminished, the nerves are soothed to the point allowing restful slumber, the appetite for msKßm ordinary food returns, the unceasing worry is dissipated and the other disagreeable symp- The restored individual looks once more 1 upon life with a quiet, contented heart, sound I \JXW nerves and abounding strength, nerve force JPHIy " kgp and the ability to enjoy in full measure the WV yJHH Remember that Cadomene Tablets contain in US? </WB highly concentrated form precisely and only those elements which stimulate and perma ■p, . ,« * ,• ■, , , nently strengthen and invigorate the nerve Retain your youth, elasticity and normal and t j ssue ce j] s 6 strength. Feed the nerves, the tissues and Cadomene Tablets bring about an elevation every structure of the body. of feeling, a lightness of mood of spirits with ■p, • , , ... cheerfulness and pleasure. Cadomene quickens Dnve away care, worry, sleeplessness, h.de- min( j. s action P and braces , |p , he ' ous dreams, heart palpitation, shortness of tone without exacting any toll by a later reac breath, attacks of dizziness, faintness, head- tion in shattered nerves. i , JULY 7, 1916. a year it is stated. His mother died in 1911, and an acountlng of three fourths of the rental from the be ginning of the lease until Mrs. Sam bucetti's death is asked. Judge Hen nings took the matter under advise ment. Mrs. Sambucetti and her husband, John, who died in 1879, lived in Memphis. Mrs. Sambucetti, to assist In supporting the family during the Civil War, sold bananas to the sol diers, carrying the fruit through the camps on her head. Later she opened a store and saved money. In 1881, according to Mrs. Arata, Mrs. Sambucetti came to St. Louis wlrh $35,000 sewed in the skirt of her dress. She did not believe In banks. "Keep YourEge on the Clock " See Page 15 j 7 P. O. S. OF A. OFFICERS Halifax, Pa., July 7. At the regu lar meeting of Washington Camp, No. 576, P. O. S. of A., the following offi cers were elected: Past president, Ross E. Zimmerman; president, Frank G. Pottiger; vice- president, W. D. Straw; master of forms, S. L. Brubak er; recording secretary, H. S. Potter; assistant, John C. Miller,; treasurer, W. D. Straw; financial secretary, P. C. Fox; conductor, Charles Westfall; in spector, Ira B. Zimmerman; guard, Francis Sheesley; trustee (18 months), John C. Miller; chaplain, John C. Mil j ler; delegate to State camp, Delmar K. ! Still; alternate, Ross E. Zimmerman; | right sentinel, John C. Miller; left j sentinel, Walter E. Rutter.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers