6 %The Baby Food Always Safe There's sickness for your baby in old milk there's trouble for you in sour milk. Summer complaint comes nearly always from raw cow's milk and summer com plaint carries off more ba bies than any other cause. There are only two ways to keep your baby safe and well this summer. One is to nurse him yourself. Your milk can't sour or spoil or carry germs. The second way is to give him Nestles Fooci (A Complete Food—Not a Milk Modifier) Nestl6'a 8 safe, because you add add only fresh water, and you only water and it is ready. may know that you are giving Where one mother used Nestl6's your baby health and strength in seven years ago five use it today. each bottle of Nestl£'s Food. As the "Better Babies" movement send the coupon for a FREE Triml grows, SO also grows the use of Ptckmie of 12 teedmie end » book about Nestl6's. babies by •pecieliate. Nestle's is the milk of healthy cows in clean dairies. The parts too heavy for your baby are modi- NESTIX'S FOOD COMPANY fied—those things your baby needs Woolworth Building, New York that are not in cow's milk are Please send me FREB your book and added. Reduced to a powder, ' * pac * ee ' packed in air-tight cans, no germ Name or sickness can get near it. You Address. CltjF • e a Pea Coal Will Advance 30c Per Ton on the first day of September. Heretofore Pea Coal prices remained the same through out the year. Egg, Stove, Nut arid Pea Coal will be 30c per ton higher next month. It is a well known fact that the quality of coal is better when shipped in mild weather when mining conditions are favorable. Don't neglect this last opportunity to buy your coal at the present prices. United Ice & Coal Co. Forster & Cowden 15th & Che.taut Third at Bonn Hummel & Mulberry Also Steelton, Pa. Honesty of Purpose KING OSCAR 5c CIGARS Have been made for 25 years with the purpose of giving honest value for any man's nickel. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. MAKERS ——eafcaamw «« i»-m ln T'iaiTMnrT'~igiaap»lMMnmaiaiJ^ Jm cLastCall f orLo w C oalVr ice si i September Ist coal prices will be advanced 30c a ton. This k is the last month in which you may enjoy present low prices, t Save the price of a ton by ordering your next winter's supply r now—and that you may get the best, order from J. B. MONTGOMERY f 600—Either Phone. Third and Chestnut Streets C - Wkol«»o)ne- Pala ta•s! Bread if Diced /com ouc oven A /// Pkone. J Co your CaUe / i Wa t on Jl Pentrook Balierq. r 1,1 The Telegraph Bindery Will Rebind Your Bible Satisfactorily thursday'evening. PREACHER MOBBED BY BIG BUSINESS International Sunday School Lesson For August 20 Is "The Riot of Ephesus" (By William T. Ellis.) I stood amid the marble fragments of the old theater at Ephesus. All about me were ruins, and memories. In front of me extended the over grown marble highway, littered with overturned statues and columns, which ran through the forum to the famous marble docks of Ephesus. Not for centuries, however, has the soa lap ped those walls, though the outlines of the ancient harbor, which once connected the city with the Mediter ranean, show clear and strong, like a huge green frying-pan. Over yond er Is the stadium, now covered with a growing tobacco crop. The ruins of once stately buildings are now but gaping caverns, on which an "enter prising" rug manufacturer has painted hideous advertisements directed to the occasional tourist. Along the marble walks where once trod sages and sen ators and saints, I see furtive serpents glide. The famous theater itself the very one in which the Ephesian mob shouted itself hoarse two thousand years ago, thirsty for the blood of the Apostle Paul still bears its original shape, and traces of its former marble grandeur. What thou sands upon thousands could crowd into this vast amphitheater! Now it is deserted. In whatever direction I look, I see not a single human being, and not a vestige of living habitation. AU is ruin, ruin, ruin. As I tarry in the theater, the scene of one of the most dramatic and sug gestive events in the New Testament, my Imagination peoples the city as it was in Paul's day. I hear again the throaty, frenzied mob proving by noise! the supremacy and immor tality of their many-breasted goddess. A strange fancy siezes me, and amid those barren stones I lift up my voice and cry in mockery, "Great is Diana of the Ephesians!" The only answer is from a crow circling overhead, who seems to wink at me. Diana is dead. In the neighbor ing village, whose natives sometimes gather relics from the ruins of Ephesus, I could not find any token of the worship of Diana, though there were old Ephesiaii coins bearing Christian emblems. Even the site of Diana's temple was long in dispute, and it is now nothing to see. The best preserved survival of old Ephesus is the "Double Church" of St. John the Divine. The centuries have vin dicated the haunted and mobbed Apostle Paul. Demetrius, who had caused such a loud demonstration of the verdict of "vox populi" in favor of Diana, has been put to shame. In all the earth to-day there is not a living creature who names the name of Diana with reverence, while Paul's Gospel still sweeps on to new con quests. In my own case, my visit to the ruins of Ephesus visualized for me the defeat of error and the tri umph of truth. That ancient day In old Ephesus had seemed to belong to Diana; but it takes time to tell where spiritual victories lie. Where are all the gods that combatted Christianity lin the first centuries? To-day in An Ancient Yesterday I The story of that turbulent day in tho Ephesus of long ago is both his tory and literature. So this Sundav school lesson rehearses a familiar scene. The Apostle Paul's two years of work in Ephesus had borne such fruit that the very vogue of Diana was threatened. The image-makers felt that their business was in peril. The town's vested interests were en dangered; for spiritual truth has a serious habit of working out into practical affairs. Led by Demetrius, the silversmiths stirred up a city wide riot against the Christian prop aganda, professing great zeal for the old order, though really caring only for their own sockets. "Conserva- Don't Worry about your digestive troubles, sick headache, tired feeling or constipation. The depression that induces worry is probably due to a disordered liver, anyway. Correct stomach ailments at once by promptly taking BEECHAM'S PILLS They aid digestion, regulate the bile, gently stimulate ■ the liver, purify the blood and clear the bowels of all i waste matter. Safe, sure, ; speedy. Acting both as a 1 gentle laxative and a tonic, Beecham's Pills help to Right The Wrong' LarcMt Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Sold everywhere. In bo see, Simple Indigestion Remedy Hot Water and Bluurated Muernevla Re lieve. Sour Stomach Quickly Sometimes when you have imposed on your stomach too much it will not ao its work even when you put good food into it, but it Just lies still ana lets the food ferment so that you belch and feel a sense of weight and fullness in the stomach, with an acid, burning sensation. Now is the time that your stomach needs help; needs something to make it work just as nature intended i' should And there is no better help than after each meal to drink half a tumblerful of hot water in which one or two tea spoonfuls of bisurated magnesia have been dissolved. The hot water will cleanse tne stomach lining and the bis urated magnesia will sweeten the stomach and overcome the acids which are the cause of the burning misery and padn of indigestion. Try this simple remedy for a few days. Just hot water in which a little bisurated mag nesia lias been dissolved, and see how much better you feel. If you are troubled with heartburn or stomach sufferin" an hour or two after eating repeat the hot water and magnesia. It's a simple prescription, cannot harm the most delicate stomach and is sure to give relief.—Advertisement. RARRISBURG TELEGR APH J Women's and Misses* I Coats —Coatsl skirts skirts I 1 I £1 • J Entire Stock of Wash % I SlllCS Women's and Misses' Skirts Wash and Silk ( C_ . . 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Wonderful Selection. stiff Hats $1.98 $5 Boys' Raincoats, $2.98 J i,p I^"^< IT 'i- lif 1 r^" 1 nni* yffii" ii —ihht« n tism" has always been a convenient cloak for selfishness. The case is paralleled to-day. Pres ent conditions are mirrored in the Ephesus tumult. There is no deny ing the sinister fact that vested in terests still follow the favorite ruse of cloaking themselves beneath ap parent zeal for patriotism or religion or social stability. The one foe that democracy has had to front at all stages of its progress is the estab lished order whose profits were af fected by progress. Even back of the world war we may trace the hideous hand of "big business." The arro gance of wealth and of class and of leagued self-interest is the most im mediate peril that confronts a self governing people. Demetrius is busy to-day in Wash ington and Ottawa and Mexico City and in all the other capitols of the world. Usually his devotion to his Diana is only an insincere cloak; sometimes he himself does not know the difference between his solicitude for his faith and his concern for his own bank account. Usually, the rab ble he raises to support his case are sincere worshipers of Diana of the Ephesians. The Madness of the Mob The worst about the Demetriuses, of Ephesus and elsewhere, is that their only argument is the big stick. They try to answer truth with force. They mob —or discharge—the teach er or preacher whose views they deem a menace to their property holdings. When progressive legisla tion impends, they hire a lobby, and seek to bribe or intimidate the legis lators. They attempt to meet truth with power, which is both stupid and futile, as well as wronx. Christ cruci fied but triumphant should have set tled that point forever; but still small boys and big corporations are meeting unanswerable argument with a leer ing, "I can lick you, anyway." That mob at Epnesus, which De metrius and other shrewd leaders di rected, was so carried away by the mass spirit that it behaved idiotically. The men milled about like panicky cattle. They shouted without know ing why. Any foul deed was entirely within their possibility. They have become in history a foul blot on the name of a beautiful city. In its mad ness, a mob little realizes that it is inflicting an indelible stain upon its community. All the good people of Georgia and Coatesville cannot wipe out the hideous scars left by the lynch ings. The Canny Town Clerk Truth is not decided in town meet ing nor by majority vote. One man has often been right, and all the others wrong. In Ephesus that day there was one man who kept his head. It was the town clerk, a canny, so phisticated man, who clearly saw through the plans of Demetrius and his fellow conspirators. By his little speeoh, the burden of which was "Be quiet, and do nothing rashly," he made the mob see their folly. He cited the pre-emioence of the courts, and the groundlessness of the uproar. Happy the nation, the city, the neighborhood, which has one strong man whom the mob-madness cannot affect and who clearly sees the real duty of the hour. Such a man, who will not be stampeded or panic stricken or frightened or consoled, is of more worth than a police force or a standing army. One man's power shines as brightly from that Ephesus scene as a crowd's futility. It is pos sible for each of us to be, in local disturbances, as the town-clerk of Ephesus. Often this is the function of a wife and mother. Always it be longs to the teacher. One boy in every crowd should fill the office. For these who speak for truth and free dom and justice are servants of God in the eternal struggle of truth with error. "BABY IS CITTING TEETH" Columbus, Ohio, Aug. 17.—"Please release my husband. He is needed at home, as our baby is cutting teeth " Governor Frank B. Willis received this appeal from a woman living at Creston, Ohio. Homer M. Edwards, executive clerk, wrote back to her as follows: "You do not state whether your Imsband is in the army, navy, peni tentiary, reformatory or workhouse. All you say is that your baby is cut ting teeth." 1 SON OF KING IS DINER WAITER Prince Unfit For Government Job; Had to Do Some thing to Live Vienna, Aug. 17.—A passenger on a train from Vienna to Budapest was amazed to recognize in a dining car waiter one of the Christich brothers, illegitimate sons of King Milan, who reigned over Serbia from to 1889. King Milan abdicated the throne in 1889 in favor of his only legitimate son, Alexander—who was assassinated with his Queen (Draga) in 1903. Dy ing in 1901, Milan entrusted one of the Christich boys, whose mother was the beautiful Artemesia, to his life long friend, Count Eugen Zichy of Budapest. For years the Count treat ed him much as a »on, supplied him plentifully with all material things; then died without remembering him in his will or making any provision for him. Falling suddenly from com parative affluence to poverty, the man dropped out of sight. His present discoverer knew the Christich brothers, drew from the waiter a reluctant admission of his identity with the explanation that he I Boy a I £ tfrTrd. I I