Your "Get-Away" PO Wer in Summer is low. Summer brings mental and physical lassitude. The spirit is languid and the liver is lazy. Nature is trying to unload the toxins that come from heavy foods and lack of outdoor exercise. Help Nature to restore natural vigor and vim. Get an eight cylinder stamina by eating Shredded Wheat Biscuit with fresh fruits and green vegetables. Cut out meat and potatoes; eat these deli cious, nourishing little loaves of baked whole wheat and be cool, contented and happy. Eat them for breakfast with milk or cream; for lunch eon with berries, sliced ba nanas or other fruits. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. - Sunbury Cavalrymen Given Money to Buy Auto Truck Sunbury, Pa., July 21.—esterday Sunbury sent $5lO to Troop I, First Pennsylvania Cavalry, in camp near! El Paso, with which to buy an automo bile truck. Letters from the guards men told of hardships they are under going and said water had to he car ried from a windmill two miles from the camp. Members of the Women's Preparedness League, headed by Mrs. H. T. Evans and Miss Elisabeth D.' Grant, called on the people to aid In getting a truck and the needed sum was raised in four days. Troop I is commanded by Captain Charles F. Clement, son of Major General Charles M. Clement, division commander of the National Guard of Pennsylvania. Music Has Odors, Director Tells College Students Chicago, July 21. Can you smell the difference between "11 Trovatore" end "William Tell," or "Carmen" and "Samson." or the "Marseillaise" and "All Coons Look Alike to Me" ? If you cant then you are not really a connoisseur in music. For every class of music has its distinctive odor, and real musicians can detect it. Robert W. Stevens, director of music at the University of Chicago, told his stu dents so at an informal talk on the qualities of music. Mr. Sevens cited Professor Ward, of the University of Illinois, as one of his authorities for the declaration that music has distinctive odors; also he quoted Mme. Rausch, of the opera ballet. "Classical music," said Mr. Stevens, "is like a bouquet of flowers. Rag time airs have the odor of roast 'pos sum. Martial music gives us the acrid smell at gunpowder." To Make Hairs Vanish From Face, Neck or Arms Keep a little powdered delatone handy and when hairy growths appear make a paste with some of the pow der and a little water, then spread over hairy surface. After 2 or 3 min utes rub off, wash the skin and It will be entirely free from hair or blemish. This simple treatment is unfailing, but care should be exercise! to be sure and get genuine delatone, otherwise you may be disappointed. FRECKLES Xow Is the Time to Got Bid of These Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othiae—double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homelv spots. Simply get an ounce of othlne—dou ble strength—from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the 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. LIKE A DRAFT OF COOL AIR ON HOT SWOLLEN FEET If you want to save your poor feet from agony if you want to chase away corns, callouses and bunions— if you want your feet to feel all the time as though a draft of pure, sweet nir was being wafted through your shoes—just go to H. C. Kennedy or any druggist and ask for EZO. Jhe wonderful new foot balm. Rub it into your tired, swollen or aching feet be fore you go to bed and you'll be sorry you didn't try it long ago. No matter how many fussy foot remedies you have tried, there's onlv one that's absolutely certain—that's EZO—Advt. The Expense of Empty Coal Bins The coal bin that's empty now is likely to remain so until cold weather reminds the homekeeper to get busy. Don't go away on your vaca tion with no coal in your bin. Remember coal has ad vanced and if you delay too long you'll pay this higher price. Kelley's coal prices are still the same they have been all summer. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 North Third Street Tenth and State Street* FRIDAY EVENING, 150 WOMEN AT THIMBLE SOCIAL Pleasant Event Held in Hall of Philosophy in Mt Gretna Chautauqua Grounds Mt. Gretna, Pa., July 21. About one hundred and fifty women from the | Chautauqua grounds were present at the Thimble Social held In the Hall of Philosophy. The hall was decorated with pine branches and wild flowers. It was unanimously voted that a meet ing should be held once a week. Some of those present were: Mrs. Rookey, Miss Kaymon, Mrs. McKeag, Mrs. W. ' Goodyear, Mrs. Harriet Heim. Mrs. [Charles Goodyear, Mrs. C. Knoll, Mrs ' Burton Eastman, Mrs. Fred Rockey, Mrs. Labar, Mrs. W. D. Block, Miae Martha Goodenough, Miss Krelder, Mrs. Harry M. Capp, Mrs. Frank Bow man, Mrs. Harlacker, the Missoa Why mars, Mrs. W. D. Happel, Miss Kate Lev&n, Mrs. Light, Mrs. Umberger, Mrs. Forney, Miss Carolyn Mader, Mrs. R. A. Longwell, Mrs. R. J. Pilgran. Mrs. C. A. Hibler, Mrs. Becker. Mrs. P. L. Welmer, Mrs. George A. Hover ter, Mrs. Charles Gates. Mrs. Adams Taylor. Mrs. Nathan Sehaeft'er. Miss Louise Kreider, Mrs. A. C. Rigler. Miss Grace Sheeleigh, Miss Miller, Mrs. J. Perry, Mrs. Rafthton, Mrs. Guest, Mrs. E. Rauch, Mrs. Davis, Miss Altender fer. Milton Strouse, of Harrisburg, arriv ed in Mt. Gretna Thursday evening and will spend some time with friends here. Miss Elizabeth Howard has returned here after a week's visit with friends. Mrs. B. Frank Bowman of Philadel phi is visiting Mrs. Harry M. Capp, on the Chautauqua grounds. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Johnston, of Har risburg, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Wal lis returned to the city Thursday aft ernoon after a visit with friends. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knoll motored to Mt. Gretna Wednesday evening and will stay some time with Mrs. Ed. E. Beidlem&n at the Evergreen. Miss Gertrude Eaton and Miss Claire Eaton are spending some time with Miss Ruth Burke on the Campmeeting grounds. Mr. and Mrs. Lichtenthaelor and Mrs. Hershberger and daughter mot ored to Harrisburg Wednesday. Mrs. S. C. Boyer will spend the week-end with his daughters at their cottage in the Campmeeting grounds. Miss Edithe Dix Long of Popular Lodge, spent Wednesday at Lancas i ter. Miss Frances Hamilton.of the Camp meeting grounds, returned Thursday evening after several days at Harrls j burg. 1 Miss Ida Fiske and Miss Fannie Houx arrived Thursday evening to spend the week-end at the Conewago . Inn. A merry party of young girls mot ored to Lebanon Wednesday evening. The party included Miss Eleanor Shearer, Miss Leddy Kaufman. Miss Helen Witunan and Miss Kitty Beidle man. j Mrs. Rahn is staying some time at Hean's cottage in the Chautauqua grounds. | Mrs. Myers of the Dotty cottage and I Mrs. Ellinger of the Loodge spent the | day at Lebanon. In Jealous Frenzy Woman Burns Out Eyes of Husband Sherman, Texas, July 2. 'Writh ing in agony on the ground at the rear of his residence, L. P. Gathright, a businessman of this city, was found by neighbors and officers at three o'clock in the morning with both eyes burned out with hot concentrated lye and with numerous and serious burns on other parts of his body. A com plaint was filed in Justice Wilson's I court charging his wife, Mrs. Gath j right, with assault to murder. To Sheriff Simmons and Deputy i O'Mary, who were among the first to j reach the house, Mrs. L. P. Gathright 'made a statement, in which she said: j "I did not want to kill him. I j wanted to put his eyes out and spoil | his handsome face so he would not !be attractive to other women. He mistreated me before he was sent to ' Leavenworth, but on his return he said he would reform and make me i happy, and for a while it seemed that ; he would do so. but lately other wo ; men have come into his life, and I stood it as long as I could." Gathright, after having been par | tially relieved of pain, asked the I Sheriff not to molest his wife, saying: ! "I have not done right and, while I 'do not believe I am as bad as she thinks I am, if I die I hope she will j not be molested." Calf Grows Up Before Suit Over It Is Ended Kansas City, Mo.. July 21. A bull calf, four weeks pld, pale red in color, was in dispute between Richard L. Smith and Minor Mailory back in 1914 Smith sued to recover the calf, which he valued at $lO. He won in a suit before a Justice of the Peace. He won on appeal in the Circuit Court, a jury there fixing the value of the growing calf at $25. Up came the calf case then to the Court of Appeals. The higher court decides, first of all, the red bull calf in dispute must in point of law al ways be considered as four weeks old. Smith lost a $lO calf, the Court holds. If he comes forward and formally ac cepts that, well and good, says the Court of Appeals. Hen Hatches Brood 20 Feet in the Air Georgetown. Del., July 21. Perch ing twenty feet in the air, an old hen on the farm of former United States Marshal John Cannon Short, has hatched out ten chicks where the whole family is now making their aer ial home. The nest is In a large tree and is reached by a forty-foot ladder which lays against an adjoining building. The hen ciimbed the ladder and made her r.est in the tree and there she hatched out her family. So tar the chicks have not yet set their feet on the ground and the old hen carries their food up to them. The owner highly prizes the hen and will allow no one to disturb her unique abode. Be Young Looking Darken Gray Hair Be mora every trace ot prematurely gray, streaked and faded balr, easily, quickly, safely, and turn it an even dark, beautitul shade with mm and keep it full of life, lustrous, healthy, soft, wavy and fascinating. Removes all traces of dandruff. Itching scalp and stops falling hair. : too. No dye—harmless to use—use cannot be detected. Large 50c and SI. bottles at your druggists. Send for valuable booklet "Beauti ful Hair." Pbilo Hay. Newark, N.J. PAUL DID GREAT WORK IN CORINTH Apostle Gathered Large Church Together in Wickedest City of His Time The International Sunday Los son for July 23 is "Paul at Corinth." —Acts 17:16-34. t (By William T. Ellis.) There has been many a laugh over the idea of "Billy" Sunday's going to New York City. Gotham and godli ness seem contradictions in terms. Evangelists shun San Francisco, some preachers resent being sent by their bishop to "bad" towns. They say they have no "chance" there. All of which may be interestingly con sidered in the light of the fact that in wicked old Corinth, with a reputation far worse than that of New York or San Francisco or Paris or Cairo, the Apostle Paul spent a year and a half, and gathered together a great church, to which two of the most famous books In the New Testament were addressed. The Sunday school lessons of the next three weeks will be taken from these letters. Obviously, the salt should go where corruption threatens. Yeast belongs in the dough, and not on the shelf. Christianity, according to its Foun der, is for sinners, and not for saints. If the Church has any mission at all, she has a mission to the worst places. At the very basis of this Corinthian lesson lies the assumption that the Gospel may not shrink from any task, however hard; and that the greater the need the louder the call. The Church is not true to type if she does not go up confidently against all the Corinths of the twentieth century and win them for her Master. Only students know nowadays what was common report two thousand vears ago, that Corinth stood for the very limit of lewdness and vileness and all wickedness. To-aay Corinth is as sociated. in the common mind, with Christianity. Such Is the transforma tion wrought by one faithful mission ary. The South Sea Islands have had the same experience. Once dreaded abodes of cannibalism, to-day they are centers of Christian light and ' life. Whenever and wherever the Church has valiantly attacked the citadels of evil, she has come off victorious. The cross is mightier than any Cor inth. Enter a Man and Wife The Emperor Claudius had made Home too hot for the Jews, and they ! had been scattered in exile. The ex- ' perience seemed a bitter one. Among : the victims of the edict of exile were a high-minded tent-maker and his wife, Aquila and Priscilla. Thev were driven from their established' work and their house in Home, and finally t landed in Corinth. Kate seemed cruel i to them. Still, with the stout-hearted i fortitude which their persecuted race i has shown in all ages, they took up ' life anew in this heathen city, joining the tent-makers' colony. now, workers at the same ! <„ r J ned a Aquila and Priscilla belonged to the tent-makers' I union. One day there came to them 1 another stranger bearing, and we should say now, a union card, a trav eling tent-maker from Tarsus, named Paul. They hospitably welcomed him to their home, the more that he wai a rabbi, learned in the Law of Mooes. Together the three of them toiled at their trade, Paul the while talking of the Na*areth Carpenter. "This is the Gospel of Labor, Ring it, ye bells of the kirk. The Lord of love Came down from above, To dwell with the men who work." There is no fellowship like that of a common task, a common cause, a common Leader ana a common pur pose. This insures community of in terests. Therefore farmers get to gether in granges, financiers in clubs, workingmen in unions. It Is difficult for a stock-broker and a carpenter to think alike: they have not even the same lingo. Therein lies the diffi culty of preserving the nation from classism. There must be some com mon tie, some common allegiance, some common purpose, great enough to comprehend all these divisions and to ruse them into oneness on the real essentials of life. If a man is a j banker or a brakeman before he is a patriot, then woe to the country. One great obstacle to the success ; of the Church, and one seldom dis j cussed in religious conferences, is the fact that the average clergyman does not speak the tent-maker's language. His speech is that of a class rather than of the mass. The preacher is t trained as a bookman by bookmen ■ and if he is brainy, book-taught folk enjoy him. As for the great bulk of the people, who are toilers, he so little knows their life and language that he is not even aware of the gulf that separates him from them. Sin cerely and earnestly, he desires to be close to the workingman: but his years of apartness intervene. The Personal Factor This casual contract, following ex ile, was the making of Aquila and Priscilla. It wrote their names among the immortals. They became import ant figures in New Testament his tory; for, of course, they were early converts of their workfellow, Paul, whose daily life and skill gave full proof of his religion. Destiny usually , comes to us in the form of personal ! relationships. Opportunity is ordin arily a man or a woman. The friends we make make us. iCvery fresh con i tact with a person is a serious bus- I iness. Had it not been for their asso -1 ciation with Paul, Aquila and Priscilla would have gone into objivion with . the other unknown Jews of Corinth. The other side of the case Is equal !ly significant. A cause grows by its ' recruits. Just as it was a great hour for Christianity when Paul was con i verted, so it was also a great hour when Aquila and Priscilla accepted the cross. The'hope and reward of every teacher is that among the young lives she shapes there may be i a Paul, an Aquila, a Priscilla, a Moody, a Frances Wlllard. The greatest growth possible to the Church is by the addition of power ful and consecrated personalities. The Time to Quit Coaxing Some parents and preachers miss I the truth that there comes an hour . when entreaty should end. Many a lover would win the woman of his ! choice if he quit pleading so abjectly. S Many a son would be brought to i righteousness if he were made to see that his folly is upon his own head alone. Paul's way with the Corinth ian Jews is sound. When they proved obdurate to reason and invitation, Paul "shook his raiment and said un to them, 'Your blood be upon your own heads: I am clean: from hence , forth I turn to the Gentiles.' " Dr. H. Clay Trumbull used to tell the story of a young lawyer who re turned from the Civil War a dissi pated character, grafting on his friends. One day he appeared at the office of another lawyer, with an ap peal for financial aid. The latter, having given until his patience was I exhausted, said in disgust, "Look : here, you're no good. You're going to hell, —so go," and he kicked him down stairs. That rough treatment brought the wastrel to his senses and changed his whole life. We are forced to remember that, even as HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH | Store Open Until 9 O'clock 1 3Tsat w Ae Big Clean Sweep Sale Brings Unparalleled Bargains 5 Bargain Basement Again Tomorrow Your Unrestricted Choice of 'women's'' 1 MIDDY ' i C Specials For Sat Women's and Misses' Beautiful New Regular 39c BLOUSES, 1 K™ esjbs SUMMER DRESSES u " lTS ' w °%r°\ t for T^uSen N u^ : for Clean Genuine $5.00, $6.00, $7.50 and SB.OO Values 24C 75C i m Clean Sweep Sale Sweep Price, yd. m I }"'«•,» SC • Special fo, only.. f - I T1,,„ ™" SSSS **/2 v j,, „ ... f m B LCSS 111311 assorted sizes. Second floor. I % Extra Special $5 Voile Dresses, Knee length. ______________ r Extra Special TOILET PAPER tc /~t J- j IBS' JF First floor. Extra Special | £ LONmOTH i°„ bl i r ° llS f ° f " rgan le ?m WA H •JP Half Prirp Extra Special 50 Dozen Of I il. . *•»«*¥»<» Linen Druses, Jf •• V MTIIM One Lot of Silk New Voile and , I£iL PT !T* p $7.50 Crepe W BLOUSES, Organdie I 1 590 KXt^B£F ial Dresses f Only 300 to sell. All Worth $3.50, WAISTS. I , Extra special S BOO v o i 1 exquisite new models, in Worth 75c, For | | SEES Kauf- OU d cfothTyJrd ble DreSSCS 3 g°° d Variet y ° f COlOI " S A ' 1 Poa'p S for * >> ' aphtha 12 ;c All sizes in the lot from 16 to 46. .ty°« rgw> o7 sfik i 350 Extra Special On sale to-morrow, Saturday, at $2.75. and Pe atrfp e ed ° h tub broidery 6 an<l e Aii! ' i ALUMINUM : 1 L silks. All colors "I,° ° J Extra Special WARE an(J a]l sizes. „ .. £ STAIR TREADS Aluminum Ware, /\ ci nrwwiri nncrr First P loor ' " J lßc Rubber Stair 3 pieces; Sauce- illi 9 j UT 1 tlHi DHJJ 1 F Extra Special -,0 Women's & Misses' Coats m s^r s t T «5£ «55Sl' | f Extra special 1 Women's and Misses' Coats, worth to $5.00 .. .$? ct , ual J UNBLEACHED CHAIRS Values, For For I I SHEETTNG si.so large size Women's and Misses' Coats, worth to $6.50 ... $9 TfV HC\ ~ 'i J Brown Muslin Lounpns Chairs Z. SL. I D /M(» r)M Q / f wMe-'yird 76 in ' *T * Women's & Misses' White Coats, worth to $8 $4 75 Made of whlte Whlte ribbed % A i 7* 900 ttt . T- Soisette with eith- style, light weight % % 14 \ Women s and Misses Coats, worth to $9.00 .. .tC flfi er long or short short sleeves. % J J p- v ,„„ Extra Special «p«J.VV sleeves. All sizes, length. All sizes. ) ROOM RUGS BENCHES White and Plaid Coats, worth to $12.00 $7 Qf» Extra Special Extra Special f %J" 50 Wool Fibre $1 Lawn Benches, Men's New Men's B. V. D. ■ M 9x12 Rug: good well made and T oc r T? 01Ir ; n . Union SUITS ( 11 a 1 s^95 ,al pamte jo e^ ch Of Women's & Misses' Wash Hand °WASH For I > One Lot of Men's" Dresses, Skirts and Silk Dresses I ( Genuine Women's & Misses' Wash Dresses, worth $2.50, $1.29 Nw Btr ' ipe ~' f . SO ok ade A°u *!£ 5 1 , Women's & Misses' Wash Dresses, worth $5.00, $2.59 fecls - First tloor - First floor. I f ralm Beach Suits Women's & Misses' Wash Dresses/worth $6.50, $3:89 CORSETS.' \ | A Real $7.50 Value. On Women's & Misses' Silk Dresses, worth $6.95, $2.59 n coats? 116 ' Worth SI.OO, € j Sale Saturday Only, For Women's & Misses' Silk Dresses, worth $9.00, $5.00 Worth to $1.50, For i I /l /H (f\ Women's & Misses' Silk Dresses, worth $12.00, $7.50 F ° r TQr L | Women's_& Misses' Wash Skirts, worth $1.50, 950 75c \t,r x" rsC a ql , , u Women's & Misses' Wash Skirts, worth $2.00, $1.19 Lovely models,l—it's Kauf- | M Sizes 34 to 42 chest measure. All : -—2 daintily made, in man SI.OO Special f 1 for B ho e t a weather' est styles Great Women s & Masses' Wash Skirts, worth $2.50, $1.45 | izes °: U, 2 and 3 - — all „ sizes - Sec - J M Secon< l FlOOr. Ond Floor. K | Saturday Clean Sweep Sale Men's Summer Suits I ( Tomorrow Your Choice fv CTr|| Another Big SATURDAY mm 1 Of An, Men', $16.50 to $22.50 *P I / SALE of MEN'S $12.75 v 7 •< & C I Summer Suits for U SUMMER SUITS for I j » ed S S i r f Y L miXt . U v. eS " et £", all J andsome el l tailor- Scores of this season's most desirable and popular new models. C sizea all h«St /»hrio P oc ket and conservaUve effects. All All up-to-the-minute in finish and fit. kegular $12.75 models. On % tomorrow for $7,75. All sizes. I I For Saturday' only Any Saturday Clean Sweep Sale 250 Pairs of Men's Summer Pants' ' \ Man's Sennit Straw Hat in MEN'S SUMMER PANTS; Worth to MEN'S SUMMER PANTS; Worth to I Stock, on Sale £) ** $2.50. Saturday Clean Sweep <f» -I $3.00. Saturday Clean Sweep d* rj f\t\ 1 » Saturday Only, Sale, For <PI.OU Sale, For SZ.UU i J for M ? de of sood fancy worsteds and cassimeres in Extra special big bargain; all sizes; fine wor- m* steds and cassimeres. 1 | I Boys' Wash Suits; Worth to ■rf j j Boys' Norfolk Palm Beach IjAno th e r Lot of BoysM |f \ $1.50. Saturday Only For . . and K ° ol Kl ° th SUITS: Khaki, Crash, Palm Beach 1 1 , J^rl, 2so A o sell- in Sizes from 3to 8 years, made Worth to $4.50. d» « [- KNICKERS; Worth 75c. 1 I SL? h £f P uck ' Whlte Pi^ue - fi ne Madras and Saturday only, I J r->oiea.j 1 \ Kiddy Cloths. All new Norfolk models; On Sale Saturday < I I "' Z f > irst For *ls/C K || | | Paul, with the Corinthian scoffers, I there comes a time when God's Spirit! ceases to strive with man. One of 1 the terrible mysteries of human free : will is that God does not deny a per- \ son the right to go to hell, if he so chooses. The Church in the House One afcljunct of the modern evan- [ gelistic campaign is tne cottage pray- | er-meeting. That is a return to New Testament usage. The church in the house was first and it has never ceased to be a mighty agency of the Kingdom. When Paul quit the syna gogues of Corinth—his first approach to a city wae always by the Jewish synagogue—he established a Church in the house of Justus, who lived next j door to the synagogue. There he i taught both Jew and Gentile. From that house flowed the stream that be- j came the famous Church of Corinth. I Somehow, there is an intimacy, an ! informality, a genuineness and a sim plicity about religious services in a i home that the larger gatherings in ' the Church building sometimes lack. ! These "cottage meetings," as they are called, may profitably be an adjunct to every Church's life. I know a con- , gregatlon which recently dispensed ' with Its Wednesday night service for a few weeks, and substituted district j prayer meetings in the homes of; members. The attendance was many- i fold greater than usual, and a new ! life was imparted to the mid-week meeting when it was resumed. The Church in the house also pre supposes a family aitar, which is per haps the greatest single factor in the ! shaping of the lives of children. : When we crowd and stress religion j in the home, we are following a New , Testament precedent, and adopting a | method of efficiency that surpasses I any thing that modern ingenuity has j devised. The "Much People" Nobody who sees things from God's | standpoint is ever discouraged. When jwe become "blue" It is a sure sign | that we are looking at things from j ; the wrong angle. Knowing all the ; facts makes optimists. Most of the } i spies whom Moses sent into Canaan j saw the giants and tne grasshoppers, j but they also saw God, and they re- ! j turned optimists. If we knew what j | God knows we should never be cast! down. Line all city preacners, Paul seems to have had his hours of discourage ment. So in a vision at night God came to him with the message which j He so often has repeated to His serv- 1 ants, "Be not afraid." Whoever feels j cast down should take a concordance ■ and run through the phrases "Fear i j not," "Be not afraid." "Be of good i courage." The pages of inspiration , are peppered with calls to courage. ! To Paul the message came, "Be not i afraid, but speak, and hold not thy peace: For I am with thee, and no j man shall set on thee to hurt thee; : for I have much people in this city." Even in Corinth God had "much ] people." So he has also in Philadel -1 phla and New York and Chicago and j San Francisco. Write that Scripture deep on your hearts, O you tearful, discouraged, whining saints, who look | and talk as If God had been defeated. There are more Christians in Chicago | than the newspapers know. Two ; days ago, on a Saturday, I read care ■ fully a paper which professed to be the greatest in the world. Within its territory, to my own personal knowl j edge, were notable religious event* In progress—an International Sunday school conference, a. Young Men's | Christian Association conference, and J a general Christian worker's confer - i ence, in addition to all the varied ! work of the churcheu of that city. Yet i there was not a line about religion ;in the whole twenty-four pages, ex i cept the column and three-quarters lof paid church advertisements. The I paper did not know that God had "much people" in that city. It show j ed. however, that it knew that sports 'had 'giuch people," and finance had JULY 21, 1916. | "much people," ana motion pictures 1 and society and theaters had "much I people." ! And the most serious fact about that j situation is that prooably not a single [ one of the hundreds of thousands of i Christians in that paper's territory \ wrote a friendly line to the editor re j minding bim that God also has "much ] people" in his city. For the Church i in the city needs to become more vocal. It should do more than exist: |it should be a felt force. The leader j ship in all moral and ethical advence mcnt should be avowedly and mani | festly with the Church. Militant Christians are the ones who trans form heathen Corinths into Christian I communities. Declares Fish Talk, Although Voiceless Bangor, Me., July 21. Stephen! Decatur Bridges, known as the salmon ' and alewife king of the Penobscot, is positive not only that fish have ; brains, but that fish reason and orm likes and dislikes, and tell their opin- I ions to each other. Bridges explains I the disappearance ot saimon from the Penobscot in two ways—either "sal- I mon tell other salmon how dirty its ! waters are and how it is not fit for j any respectable salmon to live in," or | "the fish resent it because at the : hatchery in East Orland they are ! taken from the water and stripped of their eggs." Breeds New Species of Mountain Duck Lewistown, Pa., July 21. John Lutz is deeply interested in the pro pagation of a specie of mountain wild duck not recorded in natural history, i Lutz found the nest of' a wild tur key hen, containing eight eggs, and I six duck eggs during he» ab- | aetfee. All fourteen batched, and the 5 mother bird took great pride In her web-footed brood, with the result that they are now roosting in the tallest' trees and can be approached only with the greatest care. Lutz believes they will breed a species of duck that will nest on the mountain crags, rath er than along the streams of the valley. COCOA WAFERS Cream half cup butter with one cup sugar. Add two well-beaten eg-gs. half cup shredded cocoanut, one teaspoon ■ e ~pn extract, one cup flour sifted with hair teaspoon baking powder and a pinch of salt. Add enough flour to make a soft dough, and roll out thin. Cut Into fancy shapes and bake in greased pans in a hot oven until lightly brown '/ Don't Throw Away Your Old Automobile Tires WE CAN MAKE THEM GOOD AS NEW | Send us your old auto tires, we make them like new get wise, save real money on your tire bills; j thousands are doing it. Send them (expressage collect), our new IM PROVED DOUBLE TREAD SYS ■ TEM makes that old tire as good as a new one. Prices next to noth ing. Here they are:— 30x3 $5.00 30x4 $8.50 30x3% ... $5.50 34x4% ... $8.50 32x3*4 ... $0.50 35x4% ... $8.50 33x4 SN.OO 30x4% .. . $ll.OO 34x4 SB.OO 37x4% .. . SO.OO Send to-day for our tire folder. R. K. TIRE CO. 1401 RIDGE AVE., PHILADELPHIA 1 If you have no old tires we will I furnish you with a complete double I tread tire at 20 per cent, above the I above price list. Agents wanted good proposition.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers