Patent Medicines I BIG SATURDAY SPECIAL SALE AT Toilet Goods I 81.00 Bromo Seluer 57c B A y j WW - UUCI V#WViUO 25c Sal Hepatlca - 15c M M ■ ■ W M M J R[ i| ■ 25c Bcccjbam's puis t"<- ' jgj 1 H ■T ' A 1 |f§ f» Dental Creams SSZL™zn.£i 1 II I 1/ V fl || T jU* •| | A «».»«.<«. «. 35c Limestone Phosphate 20c J -'J ■ ■ SA Q B H ■ |M»Mk Jmk ■ ■ Colgate's Dental Cream .20c I 50c California Syrup of Pigs 20c H klq H H H «| H 5 B gp Bk Jf fl H Pebeco Dental Cream 20c t 81-50 Fellows ' Syr * H »'P° 93c || V& A Iff ft M ■ 9 m L W A ■ ■ Hi Wk H H I Kalpheno Dental Cream 15c I T E ■*■ -*■ MJL. %r M. m» V%> s . s .««. De„,.i o«. m >TC ■ 50c Hay's Hair Health 20c W II 83.75 Horlick's Malted Milk 82.75 fj "m _, Euthymol Dental Cream lie ■ 81.00 Kilmer's Swamp-Root v. 59c jfi U A I §4 |\| I \/T If fITf 1 w! r IY| 1> Lyon's Dental Cream 15c I 25c Nature's Itemed} (N-R) 15c I A A I?X MJaMJMSA & X VJX\ JJrfO Sanitol Dental Cream 14c 1 25c Carter's K. B. Tea ...... 15c I Arnica Tooth Soap 15c I SSI S9O Market St. rSS'Stf 306 Broad St. • I K*?D M TtoEoii»'!!!!"'.!!'. loc I * ' Santtol Tooth Powder n4c '| S | "The Small Store With r :::::::::::L : : S I KM 25c Sloan's Liniment 15c | ' _ ~ 81.00 S. S. S. Swift's Specific 55c | Tooth Powder 15c 50c Phenol Sodique 25c | " ■MMMMIiM ■■■■HMMMMHHiiaHBHHH Pyorrhiclde Tooth Powder 64c HI . » , »«,. H Zhongiva Liquid 34c i Toilet Goods Toilet Goods Toilet Goods a .'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.:'.'.'.::S M 81.00 Othine (double strength) ~.M . 59c H Sozodont Liquid 15c ■ 75c Beef Iron and Wine 38c S ■ p .„, -| 1 _ Rubifoam Liquid 15c H I si.oo linkham s veg. compound 63c Face Powders Toilet Creams ' Talcum Powders sanitoi 14c ■ I 25c Tiz loc * H I §- I '°x.si yC V , 'r Sa ? e 111,(1 Sulplm * ary £ ard t n P ® wd ° r —.... 75c 2 lc giße Pon< j. s Vanishing Cream. Jars. I7c Mary Garden Talcum Powder 37c c S I I SLOO Medietas 59c Azurea *" 8 »c sl '°° S ' Ze ° thlne Cream : freckles, ,59c DJer Kiss Taj cum Powder 19c Soaps I!J J!2 ?;' am P ole ' 8 Ext - C<td t,lver Carmen Face Powder "" 34c *** StUlman ' B Cream 29c Azurea Talcum Powder 19c 25c slze Palmer . s S kln Success Soap.... 15c I I ll Labteche Face Powder 32c 2BC SaUn Skln C ° ld Cream 15C R ° g * rß & Ga " et TalCUm PcWder 19C 25c size Cutlcura Soap 17c I 175 c &T S KuLcy s»H* «c 1 mce .'."7*.V"c cze ! a " n t* ln Qreaselesa Cream ••• 15c ® f,ulbb ' s Talcum Powder llc 2 3c size R U moissaPo aP i 7c I m 82.00 Eckman Alterative 81.19 1 R OS ers & Gallet Rice Powder «lc R ° Be Tlnt 15C Williams' Talcum Powder llc 25c size Woodbury's Soap 15c I BQ I SI.OO JPeruna 57c | M Rogers & Gallet Rice ™ w « er 21c 60c Blze Pom pei an Massage Cream 27c Colgate's Talcum Powder 15c 2Bc „ ize Packer s Tar SoaD ISo | 'M I #I.OO tadomcne Tablets 59c I Rogers & Gallot Face Powder 45c 25c Bize Pompeian Ntght Cream 17c Mennen's Talcum Powder llc ' ® phv ß ?eiln«" a R^n I Daiidi-rine 30c | Satin Skln Face Powder 15c 25c size Woodbury's Facial Cream 15c Babcock's Corylopsis Talcum Powder... llc 10c size Physicians and Surgeons Soap «c |8 I w-y -M-k f T 1 Woodbury's Face Powder 15c BOc size Hind's Honev anri Almond PrVam Jess Talcum Powder 14c 25c size Johnson Foot Soap 15c |\ K IJ f* I TeUow's Gossamer Face Powder 15c Honey and Almond Cream, Talcolette Talcum Powder 15c 10c size Sayman's Soap 7c; 3 for 20c H «. I TetloWs Swandown Face Powder Be Slc Johnson s Baby Talcum Powder ....... 12c 10c size Jergen's Glycerine Soap H 25c Aromatic Spirits Ammonia, 3-oz. bottle I ....« »c 2 Bc size Daggetts & Ramsdell Cold Cream Riveri s Lehn & Fink Talcum Powder.. 15c _ « . „„ 15c H Sanitol Face Powder .......... . 14c .' ?c » » for 20c ■ I 25c Sweet Spirits Xitre. 3 ozs. 15c . - .. , - _ 15c Tcilet Ar-fiVl«o 15c slze Palmolive Soap 6c I 25c Ess. Peppermint, 3 ozs 15c Shavinff SoaDS Creams and Sanitol Cold Cream 14c 1 Oliet Articles 15 j Pear's Unscented Soap ....... 10c I ,me . Wat r', T onaving aoaps, creams ana 26c Blze Sanltol Face Cream 14c gem 2gc size pear , 8 Glycerine goap p 15c I 150 Powders BOc sUie Creme Elcaya 37c Oriental Cream V.*."si'os ■ I 25c Rose Water an.l S-oz. IxitUe I Williams' Shaving Stick 17c 25c size Creme DeMeridor 14c Hoyt's Cologne. 25c, 50c 15c, 30e HI 15c I ; , c " , ? „'° 60c size Ingram's Milk Weed Cream ... 34c Mum ... 15c ■ I 25c Soap Liniment, 3 ozs 15c . Colgate s Shaving Stick 20c 60c slze Palm o „ ve Cream 29c Spiro Powder 15c ® H 25c Spirits Camphor, 3 ozs. 15c Resinol Shaving Stick 18c 25c size Hnkara Skin F nn H ~r . Odo-Ro-No . 30c | A Rtrftcr Clrnrla Ckf I Moth Balls, lb. ....: 18c Cuticura Shaving Stick 18c ' D F °° d 150 Mercolize d Wax 53c | >1 ts€lier UrOOT OT I | c^ZIZ:Z c i^::::::::::::S ' ivj "."' a , J QC r POFFFF vJj iMwiwwiWfIWBMWHHBBMMMMMB————I Johnson and Johnson Shaving Cream... 15c ■ ■ Marie-Antoinette JL PP A ■* iiniMjtam—K -nmtnam Menneh's Shaving Cream 15c I pTnA T) C I n n j SS « Colgate's Shaving Powder 20c I I%TM fv jl pace Powder This is certaJnly a delicious, fi-agTant Ea * T«k •% J 7' I Colgate's Shaving Soap, cake 5c I grade of coffee. In the premium stores you I f\ |%J IB B I Williams' Shaving Soap, cake ... 5c | m Wavana Tuelr® n MP « »•„_ 0 .. fsed by beautiful women everywhere. pay 35c a pound for no better coffee—some -1 I Safetv Ra2OT Blades I KrafiSßJr.:::::::::: £ •"ta.-s.-.srU««, B Millionaire Assorted Chocolates 15c 1 I 7 General Hartrwfft Cigars' 'for2sc 6 '" S ' what >ou SaV ® herc " H ■ Lady Gray, assorted chocolates 23c ■ » .VSri (ipni rl | 7 Sweet Girl Cigars for 25c r% Tfc iA /\ -■ J imi* C H M I GoodTWill assorted chocobues 23c 1 g V . A « « I 4 Ben Mlrza 10c Cigars for 25c v V fIS 9 Maybello Chocolate Cherries 29e 9 B Junior hladeS U 0 4 Moja Cigars for 25c | *-# UUA £,\ Vfl • 111- rj » H | Straul. riies, wiU. whipped cream 39c | | At Market Street Store Only | Jk ** • founds | APOSTLE PAUL STRONG ORATOR Address on Mars Hill One of Classical Examples in All Standard Books By V illinm T. Ellis One of the classical examples of ora tory quoted In ill standard hooks is the address of the Apostle Paul on Mars Hill. Here is the address itself: "Now while Paul waited for them at Athens, the spirit was stirred in him, when he saw the city Wholly given to idolatry. Therefore disputed he In the synagogue with the Jews, and with the devout persons, and in the market daily with them that met with him. Then certain philosophers of the Epi cureans. and of the Stoicks, encoun tered him. And some said. What will this babbler say? other some,He seem oth to be a setter forth of strange gods: because he preached unto them Jesus, and the resurrection. And they took him, and brought him unto Aero pagus, saying. May we know what this new doctrine, whereof thou speaketh, If Threatened With Tuberculosis you must pay proper attention to diet and living conditions, and get plenty of rest and frosh air and good food. Many a life claimed by this, affection might have betn saved by timely at tention to these matters. In many ca«tes, however, a rundown system needs assistance. Under these circum stances, try Eckman's Alterative, a lime treatment which has the unique quality of being easily assimilated bv the average person. Give Nature every chance, but strengthen your own chances bv using this preparation, which often has ef fected beneficial results. No undue claims are made for it. but it has helped in many cases. And it is safe to try, for it contains no opi ates. narcotics or habit-forming drugs. From your druggist. Erkmnn laboratory, Philadelphia. Advertisement. 1 WHEN YOU SMOKE 1 #♦ 11 IKING OSCARi ♦♦ 11 S 5c CIGARS tt g u I You take the benefit of 501 S years' experience in the H :: manufacture of cigars. H :: This 25 year old quality § !: brand has set a standard n H for five cent cigars. 8 ♦♦ 11 H John C. Herman & Co. || FRIDX7 EVENING, is? For thou bringest certain strange things to our ears: we would Know J therefore what these things mean, j (For all the Athenians and strangers j which were there spent their time in i nothing else, but either to tell, or to | hear some new thing.) | "Then Paul stood in the midst of i Mars hill, and said, Ye men of Ath- 1 I ens, I perceive that in all things ye < are very religious. For as X passed by, | : and beheld your devotions, I found an altar with this inscription, TO THE ! UNKNOWN GOD. Whom therefore ye ! ignorantly worship, Him declare I un- i I to you. God that made the world and j all things therein, seeing that He is J j Lord of heaven and earth, dwelleth ; not in temples made with hands; i neither is worshiped with men's 1 | hands, as though He needed anything, i seeing He giveth to all life, and breath, j | and all things; and hath made of one j j blood all nations of men for to dwell on all the face of the earth, and hath determined the times before appoint -! Ed, and the bounds of their habitation; j that they should seek the Lord, if hap- j ly they might feel after Him, and find Him, though He be not far from every i one of us: For in Him we live, and move, and have our being; as certain |also of your own poets Jj&ve said, for; iwe are also His offspring. Forasmuch then as we sre the offspring of God, i we ought not to think that the God ! head Is like unto gold, or silver, or stone, graven by art and man's de vice. And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commanded all men every where to repent: Be | cause He hath appointed a day, in which He will judge the world in ; righteousness by that man whom He ( ihath ordained; whereof He hath given [assurance unto all men, in that He , hath raised Him from the dead. I "And when they heard of the resur rection of the dead, some mocked; and I others said, We will hear thee again of this matter. So Paul departed from them. Howbeit certain' men clave unto him, and believed: among the which was Dionysius the Areopaglte, and a woman named Damaris, and others with them." I "I like to see Christianity travel first-class," remarked a city man J apropos of a great banquet of lay- J men. We are outgrowing the fash j ion of establishing religion in dingy [buildings up side streets. There was ja day when religion and mediocrity were synonymous In the minds of I many. Now we are getting back to the of tha Middle Ages, when ths. best buildings, the fin est books and the loveliest paintings were devoted to religion. That is Paul's idea. He assumed that Christianity was able to holu its own with the greatest phisolophers of the most philosophical age of the world's history. (By the way, the preachers who are troubled by the prevalence of "new" cults would do well to look them up in the old books, lor they are but curious revampings of outworn Grecian and oriental phi losophers.) This man Paul, himself a scholar of the first class, dared carry the Gospel of the Crucified to the proua est centers of the arrogant world of his day. He challenged all the reli gious conceptions and convictions of Koine and Greece under the shadow of the Acropolis of Athens, which to this t day is one of the world's fairest sights. He stood up in the Aeropagus and expounded his message as the fulfillment of all that philosophy had brought to Greece. Nobody can find any warrant for a merely defensive and apologetic Christianity "in this valiant old soldier-scholar, Paul of Tarsus. He stands the embodiment ol concrete scholarship, an inspira tion to the best-trained minds 01 the world. W inning a Crowd. A brilliant example of good sales manship was given by Paul on Mars hill. He found, first of all, congenial points of contact, and established a friendly working basis of conference. His compliment "Ye men of Athens, 1 perceive that in all things ye are very religious" would shock some straight-laced church folk to-day. We wonder why he did not tell them they were nothing but wicked heath ens and doomed to condemnation. The man who so criticises Paul knows nothing about the methods of mod ern missions. Paul's way is the way of all good missionaries. First they find common ground with those whom they seek to convert, and then proceed, step by step, to the desired conclusion. It is strange how the great old tasks persist as the greatest new tasks. Religion has no more serious problem to-day than that o£ inscrib ing the name of the one true God on the nameless altars of the world. She must take the world's thinking upon all social and philosophical subjects and read into it a new and Christian content. We talk about "inter nationalism" with only the vaguest understanding of its meaning; but here we have it stated fundamentally by this ancient Christian philosopher. The basis of it all is that God "has made of one" the nations of the earth. Here is the lesson that ties to-day's Sunday school class closest to to-day's paper. Everybody who thinks is in pursuit of the goal of better re lations among the nations of earth. The path to It Is clearly marked out by Paul In the present lesson. The New Internationalism. Are we big and brave enough to hear this Christian cosmopolite through to his conclusion, and face the truth that we must create a new world over for human life? Presi dent Thwlng said the other day that the greatest failure of our civilization is the present lack of International brotherhood. A reconstruction peri od is coming to the world. Only the Ideals of Christianity can make it adequate. The thinking of the world must be lifted up to the level of Mars hill. Except there be a new sense of Christian obligation to brother every other man, we shall not escape from our present slough of misery and hatred. As yet the churches have no clear program or leadership on this point. The pulpit is silent. Great ecclesiastical gatherings seem to have been blind to It, engrossing them selves wholly with minor administra tive matters. Still the truth grows more apparent every day, that the Church fronts her supreme task; that of creating a new world order that shall be war-proof and hate-proof. She must put into humanity "The mind that was in Christ Jesus." Un less she can make men realize that "All ye are brethren," there is no hope in sight for our civilization. The goal, which five years ago seemed to be the province of missions, has to-day be [Come the most acute problem of HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH ] statesmanship. The LoTd's own law jof love will have to prevail If all j things are not to fall. The simple i way to put this into operation is for j each of us to begin to be more loving toward the next person whose life touches ours—and especially If he be I one with whom we find ourselves I uncongenial. The .■Vim Of It All After his magnificent presentation ]of universal brotherhood, Paul in his oration, proceeds to state its ob ject: "That they should seek the Lord." The goal of all the progress of man is Just —God. "Thou hast made us for Thyself, O Lord, and our i hearts cannot fie at rest until they I rest in thee," said old St. Augustine. |The consummation cf all the process es of existence is the finding of God who made us, and who awaits the re turn of our spirits to Himself. Spir litual concerns are thus seen not on i ly to be the most important, but also | the most practical. Upon them wait [ the issues of all life. | Only as they meet at the foot of j the Cross of Christ, will nations ever | come together. There is not states j manshlp enough in London and Ber lin and Paris and Petrograd to recon cile the European nations now at ! • war. Only a new and overwhelming sense of God can accomplish this es -1 sential goal. As men draw to God jin humble discipleshlp and self i distrust, will they find themselves ; closest to one another. The way . home for the world is newly seen to be the way of the Cross. It is while the chastened spirits of the proud na- I Get Aboard I The whole country is buying this latest Overland. Its popularity has spread like wildfire. No wonder. A 31Vfe horsepower, light, eco- I nomical five passenger touring car at $635 was revolutionary. We could do it because our factory is the largest in the world. Come in and see it today. The Overland-Harrisburg Co. Open Evenings. 212 NORTH SECOND STREET. ■ Both Phones. | The Willys-Overland Company, Toledo, Ohio I "Made in U. S. A.- TOLEDO 4 cylinder an bloc motor Cantilever rear springs Electric starter 3H" bora s B" stroke Streamline body Magnetic apeedometer 4-inch tiress non-skids on rear Electric lights Complete equipment ' tions are saying "Our Father" that I they learn to proceeft to say "Our s brother." The Results of a ( # I Speech. r! Some preachers are (ad of pictur -1 Ing this address of P-iul on Mars ; 1 Hill as a failure. They say it was too % learned and too philosophical, and they portray the Apostle as leaving the Aeropagus with eyes cast down i and heart burdened in the conscious i ness that nis fine speech was a fail ure, and that it had made no con verts. All of which is reading a theory into the text. The converts of this address were important enough to have their names mention ed. When Paul went from Mars Hill and from Athens, he left behind him a mighty leaven in the lump of the city's life. True, some of the merely specula tive philosophers balked at his teach ings of repentance and of the resur > rection. Everybody who thinks that t religion is merely a matter for discus sion finds fault with Christianity on [ this ground. Like every good ser ■ mon, Paul's oration on Mars hill ■ ended with the presentation of a defi • nite duty and of the "Glorious Hope." • The dearest hope of the race that life t shall continue beyond the grave is j made real and near by Christ, who - Himself tasted death that man might 1 taste life. Christianity is not merely - a philosophical conception. It ail 3 heads up in Christ and Him crucified, r the one Saviour and the Everlasting ) Power of those who accept Him. s Paul's message had much in com - mon with the teachings of the phi JULY 14, 1916. losophers of the Areopagus, but In this one point it went beyond them all, in that it offered that of which they were so barren, life, new and more abundant. CHINA, LIGHTNING-CHANGE , ARTIST Less than one hundred dollars was paid for the first locomotive in China. It weighed twenty-two hundredweight. The rails were about the size of walk ing-sticks and lay thirty Inches apart. One day, after the seven-mile line had been operating only a few months, a trespasser was run over and killed by the little engine. The rails were promptly torn up and shipped to For mosa to rust, thus ending the fate of the first railroad in China. That was only forty years ago. Now China has more than six thou sand miles of railway, with a net rev enue of more than eight million dol lars a year. And C. C. Wang, of the government railway bureau, stands sponsor for this prophecy "It is no exaggeration to say that there will be more railways built in China during the coming twenty-five years than in all the rest of the world combined." —The Christian Herald. NO WONDER HOGS ROOT "Only a little more than half of a clover crop is above ground," says Farm and Fireside. "One crop expert has found that for every ton of clover hay cut, about, 600 pounds of root and stubble were left. This means that five ninths of the crop was cut and four ninths was left in the ground." "FRECKLES Don't Hide Them With a Veil: Remove Them With the Otliine Prescription s This prescription for the removal ol .. freckles was written by a prominent - physician and is usually so successful in removing freckles and giving a i clear, beautiful complexion that it ia i j sold by any druggist under guarantee yI to refund the money if it fails, e! Don't hide your freckles under a - | veil; get an ounce of othine and re f i move them. Even the first few appli j cations should show a wonderful im . | provement, some of the lighter freck les vanishing entirely. . I Be sure to ask the druggist for tha . | double strength othine; it is this that ; j is sold on the money-back guarantee, s —Advertisement. I MILK AN EXCELLENT PAIN s j KILLER i ! "This is a remedy everyone should jknow," says Farm and Fireside, "first, I because it gives almost immediate re lief; and. second, because milk or i cream is always available on the farm, s whereas the medicine bottle is often t times found to be empty just when r needed most. If a person or a horse 1 should get tar in the eyes, put in a few t drops of milk or cream. It will also i afford relief if cement or a gnat should ' get in the eye." 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers