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In the present story he Is still in the clutches of the consequences of the attempt ASTHMA SUFFERER Write to-day, I will tell you, free of charge, of a simple homo treatment for asthma whlcli cured me after physi cians and change of climate failed. I am so grateful for my present good health, after years of suffering, that I want everyone to know of this won derful treatment. Mrs. Nellia Evana. 655. P-11, Des Moines, lowa. Why Do So Many Men Smoke KING OSCAR 5c CIGARS REGULARLY? Because, after costly experiments with other brands, they have found out where they can get UNIFORM HIGH QUALITY. JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. A F 2 a s V Yr. For Makers FRIDAY EVENING. of the Jews to mob him in the tem ple. He had been taken before the high court of the Church, the San hedrln, where his trial had been as unfair as that of his Master. When the high priest ordered him struck in the mouth, the fiery spirit of this doughty lover of justice flamed forth in a bitter arraignment of the man who, while sitting as a judge, had commanded this violation of the law. Quick to resent injustice as he was, Paul nevertheless apologized when he found that the offender was the high priest. He had the combined Jewish and Roman respect for the man in authority. His deference to the offi cial head of his nation, even though he disapproved of him, is a timely point to stress at the present time. Policy and piety were commingled in Paul's conduct when he took ad vantage of the presence of two par ties in the Sanhedrin, the Sadducees and the Pharisees, and threw the ap ple of discord among them, so that all possibility of united action was lost. A great uproar followed, for Paul had divided the house against itself. Still we somehow fail to ad mire Paul in this role of the shrewd politician. It was not becoming to him. He stepped down a degree from his high level in order to take ad vantage of ecclesiastical partisanship. The Chu/ch fares best when she stands on her own ground and uses her spiri tual weapons. A Through Ticket to Rome The trick that Paul played on the Jewish High Court raised such a com motion that It nearly cost him his life; for he was so nearly torn to pieces that the Roman troops liad to enter the judgment hnll and rescue him from the frenzied ecclesiastics His wordly wisdom had gained hin) nothing. He had tried to bo "practi- cal," but without benefit to his mes sage. No wonder ho went to bed that night in the castle feeling depressed and discouraged. So downcast and discomforted was he that it took a vision in the night to comfort him. As he lay on his pallet in the prison ---I have seen the horrible inner dungeon in the old Castle of Antonia in which tradition says the Apostle was lodged—the Lord Jesus Himself appeared by his side. No prison cell is too small to hold both the believer and his Master. There are no situa tions so straitened that there is not room for the Christ to stand by the side of His faithful witness. The message of cheer and courage that the blessed lips spoke to the pen sive prisoner were few but sufficient: "Be of good courage; for as you have borne faithful witness about Me in Jerusalem so you must also beflr wit ness in Rome." "Every man is immortal until his work is done." Paul had a through ticket to Rome, and he could not quit the train until it reached the termi nal. Sweet was the consolation that the Master brought to His servant in his cell. Often we do not get to know Christ until He shuts us apart from the crowded ways of life and from the busy career. As Scotland's sweet saint and singer, Samuel Rutherford, cried from his tower in Aberdeen, "And In my sea-girt prison. My Lord and I held tryst." The Conspirators Appear The deeper one goes Into life, the moro complicated it becomes. Potent personalities know the reality of ene- ' mies and plots and other difflcultiea | undreamed by simpler souls. All great living brings hardships in its train. Yet who would ask for easier lives? Struggle strengthens souls. Better trouble-tossed Paul, hounded and hated and hurt in body and in spirt.i than a sleek, unvexed, com placent Pharisee, the fringes of whose robe were never soiled. Paul's message is one with the greatest les son that humanity has learned in these two war-torn years, namely, that it is better to suffer and die in a great cause than to enjoy personal comfort at the cost of cowardice and failure. So bitter were the foes of this man HI GRM? 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Which, like most foolish vows, was not kept, else they would have been a long time hungry. There is no record of their having died of starvation! Alas for the crimes committed In the name of religion. This pious plot involved not only the forty in tending murder, but also the high officials of the Sanhedrin, who agreed to call for a further examination of the prisoner, so that the assassins might waylay him. The old story is a warning not unneeded in our day, of the dreadful lengths to which blind bigotry may go. Says Dr. R. A. Torrey: "Ecclesiastics have often stooped to the lowest villainy. In our day, they do not murder a man's body, only his reputation; ' and their plots are as' unprincipled acd hellish as that recorded here." A Relative to the Rescue No miracle was needed to deliver Paul from this plot; for he had friends and kindred. A boy or young man, a nephew, the son of the Apos tle's sister, heard the story of the plot, and he foiled It. Give ine a boy for a hard task or a deed of daring. What an adventure that wag for the youth! His alertness and resource fulness weighed against the cunning and power and ruthlessness of the ecclesiastical machino of his day. Cynical saying has it that "God gives us our relatives; we may choose our friends." Which is true In a noble sense. God does give us our kindred, and 'in lif'es extremities it is those of our own blood who stand by us. Tho cheap and ignoble tendency of our day to flout blood ties, and to rise above our families, is both peri lous and wicked. The old- Scotch loy alty to the clan is one of the finest ex pressions of human life. Tho same spirit has made the South strong and solidified. "A brother is born for ad versity." God meant kinfolk to stand together: that is one of the oldest laws written into the blood of human ity. The Son of God in His dying hour with tho weight of a world's sin on His soul, took thought of His mother. Tho early disciples first found their own brothers. It was one bound by blood ties who saved Paul from the Jersusalem conspirators. All parties to the rescue were per sons of prompt action. Paul's nephew carried his news straight to the man most interested, undeterred by red tape. Paul sent the youth to the tribune, who waited not an hour. The honor of Rome was at stake. He had sampled the fury of that Jeru salem mob. So he straightway order ed out a troop of cavalry, and four hundred foot soldiers, to escort Paul to Caesarea. The lurking assassins were powerless In the' presence of such a force. No time was left to raise a mob. Before even the Jews knew what had happened, and while they were congratulating themselves on their murderous plot, the prisoner was safely out of their reach. Rome could not be flouted. Aye. more; God's purposes could not be balked. Paul was scheduled to bear witness in Rome: and as we shall later see, no misadventures by the way could keep the great Apostle from telling at the center of Rome the story of a Greater than Caesar. KLECTGD COMMISSIONER Waynesboro, Pa., Sept. 29.—The Rev. J. Marshall Rutherford, pastor of the Waynesboro Presbyterian Church, has been elected one of the five commis- Isioners to represent the Presbytery of 1 Carlisle at the sessions of the synod at Easton October 24. He Married a Girl He'd Known Two Weeks When Harold T. Webster, of Toma hawk, Wis., who draws "Boyhood Am bitions" and other interesting cartoons for an evening newspaper syndicate, came to New York a few years ago he kept bachelor's hall with R. M. Brink erhoff, the cartoonist, and Ray Rohn, the only illustrator James Montgom ery Flagg is jealous of. Often the trio used to discuss matri mony, generally adversely, and Web ster would cynically remark: "If I ever should get married it will be to some girl I've known at least ten years." Webster was married Wednesday at the "Little Church Around the Cor ner." The girl was Miss Ethel Woerts, of Toledo, Ohio, who came to New York in July to study folk dancing. He had known her exactly two weeks. SOLD OAK TO PAY FIXE Toledo, Ohio, Sept. 29.—Frank Reic. of Ann Arbor, sold a perfectly good tounng car for SIOO to pay his fine. Reic had been arrested for driving the car while under the influence of liquor and was lined SIOO. He could not pay, and so when a local man offered him SIOO in a joking way for the car he took It, paid his fine and left. Brightens One Up There is something about Grape-Nuts food that bright ens one up, infant or adult, both physically and mental ly- What is It? Just its delightful flavor, and the nutriment of whole wheat and barley, including their wonderful body and nerve building mineral ele ments ! A crisp, ready-to-eat food, with a mild sweetness all its own; distinctive, delicious, satisfying — Grape-Nuts "There's a Reason" SEPTEMBER 29, 1916 Chewed Tobacco Since He Was 6; Is 94 Years Old Now Bristol, Pa., Sept. 2 9.—John Sailer, Bristol's oldest resident, who cele brated his ninety-fourth birthday yes- I If you are rich, and want to pay a big price for a pair of Shoes—this ad won't appeal to you. But if you want a good pair of Shoes full of style and ginger at ■L* prices 'way below what you usually pay WfrSifp* for high-grade shoes, this exceptional store has the goods. At least, it won't cost you a penny to stop in and see for ' New Fall Shoes Are Ready. STRONG SCHOOL SHOES / rn or Sturdy Boys and Girls /' £j" '• I * / Children's Gun Metal But \ j \ t<>n 0eS * t0 S ' ZC 98c Boys' Solid School Shoes; —all sizes to 13%, $1.49 Growing Girls' NEW PRETTY BOOTS Women's $3.50 $4 Tan English FOR FALL 8-inch Black ShMS - aWi£" La " $2.95 boou .... ...M.95 $2.95 ————— Women s $5.00 White Women's $2.50 Nubuck Lace d*o QC Girls' $2.50 Gun Metal Boots PJ.£7£ Black English Button Shoes, Women s $5.00 Tan Calf Shoes,. $1.98 f L , a r C ' Boots $4.50 $1.98 MEN'S NEWEST ENGLISH Men's $4.00 Tan Mahogany English Bals Same Style; $3.00 (£2 Men's $3.50 Black Calf English Bals $2 .95 $3.00 Quality ... $2.45 tferday, boasts that he has chewed to bacco since he was 6 years old. He was born In Riegelsville, Bucks county, and In his early manhood waj one of the first captains of the Ked Line deck freight boats which carried freight down the canal from Easton to Philadelphia. 7