12 SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE WITH EMPEY By Arthur Guy Empey (Continued) We were to form two baseball Teaching a classes, Stewart in charge of one, 1 Chinaman the oth er. On the French plaster of the bil let we carefully ' ————scratched out a baseball diamond, and then called the Tommies in. They sat around like little children in a school, eager- j Jy intent. For two hours we explain ed the game to them. When we got through they all knew how to playi baseball—on paper. We dismissed them, telling them another class would be held the following after- COUNT FIFTY! NO RHEUMATIC PAIN Don't suffer! Instant relief follows a rubbing with old "St. Jacobs Liniment" Stop "dosing" rheumatism. It's pain only: not one case in fifty requires internal treatment- Rub soothing. penetrating "St. Jacob's Liniment" right on the "tender spot," , uid by the time you say Jack Robln- Bcn —out comes the rheumatic pain and distress. "St. Jacob's I.iniment" conquers pain! It is a harmless rheumatism liniment whi :h never Oi*appoints and doesn't burn the skin. It takes pain, soreness and st'.:Tncss from aching joints, muscles and tones; stops sciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia and reduces swelling. Limber up! Get a small trial bottle o* eld-time, honest "St- Jacob's Lin iment" from any drug store, atid in a moment you'll be free from pains, uclies and stiffness. Don't suffer' Rub rheumatism away. BACKACHE KILLS! Don't make the fatal mistake of neglecting what may seem to be a "simple little backache." There isn't any such thing. It may be the first warning that your kidneys are not nonking properly, and throwing off the poisons as they should. If this is the case, go after the cause of that backache and do it quickly, or you may find yourself in the grip of an incurable disease. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Cap sules will give almost immediate re lief from kidney and bladder troubles, which may be the unsuspected cause vt general ill health. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are Imported di rect from the laboratories in Holland. They are prepared in correct quantity and convenient form to take, and are positively guaranteed to give prompt relief, or your money will be refund ed. Get them at any drug store, but 1 be sure to insist on the GOLD MEDAL' brand, and take no other. In boxes, three sizes. Bth Year Christmas Savings Club Now Enrolling $1,586,850.59 Saved by Members in Last 7 Years 8 Different Classes UNION TRUST COMPANY OF PENNA. ijj Closing Out Our Entire || H Clothing Stock jjj ® We have some very desirable Suits, Overcoats fil and Raincoats left, in order to dispose of these quickly we will clean them up at HALF PRICE and less. Come in and look 'pi them over. Hp I§ _ / _ • km t§ /2 Price • if | SIDES-SIDES | FRIDAY EVENING, noon. That night. Stewart and I, around the stump of a candle, went into details for organizing two teams. Everything appeared rosy, and wc were highly jubilant. A Tommy eased over in our direction and In nocently asked: "I sye, Yank, isn't it necessary to 'ave byseballs and clubs? We cawn't very well pl'y without 'em." This was a bombshell to us. In our eagerness and excitement we had quite forgotten that bats, balls and gloves were necessary. I thought Stewart was going to burst. Letting out a "Well, I'll be blowed!" which nearly blew the candle out, he turn ed a silly Jook in my direction, and 1 looked Just as cheap. At last the Tommies had stumped us. and we could see our reputation fading into nothing. A dead silence reigned for over Ave minutes. Then Stewart started madly to open his haversack. 1 thought he had sud denly gone crazy. I reached my hand in the direction of my bayonet, fear ing that he was looking for a Mill's Bomb. When he drew his hand out. hanging to his list was a writing pad. 1 let go of my bayonet. Borrowing a pencil from me (Stewart was al ways borrowing), he started writing. I thought perhaps he was going to commit suicide and was writing a farewell letter home, and asked him what was up. He whispered to me: "Emp, we're two bloody fools not to have thought of this long ago. All we've got to do is to write home to one of the New York papers, askiiu: the readers to send out baseball stuff to us. and it will only be a matter of a few weeks when we will have enough to equip two teams." I offered to write the letter, and with Stewart bending over me, 1 eagerly wrote an appeal to the read ers of the New York Evening Tele gram. and turned the letter over to the Mail Orderly. We then explained to the Tommies that equipment was necessary and that we had written home, but while waiting for the baseball stuff to ar rive we would carry on with our in struction classes. The next day Stewart and I made a woolen baseball out of an old puttee fixed up a temporary diamond and showed the Tommies the general run of the game. Their antics were awful. If we had used a regular baseball I don't think there would have been a Tommy in the squad without a black eye. Did you ever watch a girl trying to catch a ball? Well, a girl's team alongside of some of these Tommies would have looked like the winner in our World's Series. It was hard work keeping their in terest up. Two weeks later we went up into the front line; then came back again for another rest. The interest in baseball was dying out and we were at our wit's end. Time passed, and we figured out that we ought to be hearing from our appeal, but noth ing came. Then, once again we went into the Front Line Trench, The Tommies were very skeptical and every time baseball was men tioned they would gaze in 'our direc tion with a sneering look. This com pletely got our goats. One evening we were sitting in a dugout of the support trench; it was raining like the mischief, and we were cold and downhearted, Pretty soon the rations came up. The ra tion party generally brings the ra tions down into the dugouts, but the two men carrying our "dixie" set it' down in the mud of the trench and \ almost 'shot the chutes' down the j entrance to the dugout. They were I breathless with excitement. One of them yelled out: "Yank, there's a limber full of ppreels down in the reserve They're all addressed to you. h'Empey, and they're from America." Stewart let out a shout and I felt warm all over. How we lorded it: over those poor Tommies. That | night we were to be relieved and go back to rest billets. We could hardly wait for the time. The next morning was Sunday. I and after church parade we made a | mad rush to the Orderly Room to get our mail. The Quartermaster Sergeant was waiting for me, and behind him stood j every officer in the company, trying; to disguise the expectant look on : their faces. Every eye was turned, in the direction of a heap of par- j eels. I thought the "Quarter" never j would start. Even the Captain could [ not stand it, and giving way to his eagerness, said: "Sergeant, you had better issue the mail." Stewart and -I were all anxiety. Then, stooping down, the Ser geant took up a parcel and read off: "Empey, No. 5203," and threw it, over to me. I caught* it on the fly.; The Sergeant kept on reading out; "Empey," and parcels came through j the air like a bombardment. The first parcel I picked up was Opened stamped, "Passed bv Censor b >' Censor." and j D> censor contained twelve | brand new base- j balls, or at least, eleven, and thej remains of one. This twelfth ball' was stamped, "Opened by Certsor," j but search as I could, 1 could find no stamp reading "Sewed up by Cen sor." We did the sewing up. but j that ball looked like a duck's egg| when we had finished. Stewart and j I roundly cussed the Censor. Later, I we both cussed the inventor of base ball. There was a reason. The readers of The Telegram had 1 nobly responded to our appeal. There were enough gloves and balls for two teams, and even a chest protec- j tor and mask. The mask was an' article of great curiosity to all. Some) of them thought it was a bomb pro-; tector. Everyone in turn tried it on, and everyone, upon learning that the catcher was to wear the mask, want ed immediately to sign up for the! position. Stewart and I could have been elected to Parliament right there, if these Tommies could havej had their way. The next afternoon. the candi-1 dates, forty in all, and the whole company turned out en masse on the : baseball field, which we had laid out during our previous stay in rest bil lets. From that day on, Stewart and I [ led a dog's life. Though on paper! everything looked bright, and the j candidates were letter perfect in the game, or thought they were, on the field they were dubs of the worst' caliber—regular boneheads. If Mc- j Graw of the Giants had had that mob 1 wished on him, he would have: chucked up his job and taken the stump for Woman Suffrage; so you j can appreciate our fix. Stewart was a really good pitcher: ! plenty of curved stuff, having played j semi-pro ball in the United States. It [ was my intention to catch for him j and fill in the other positions with the most likely candidates. This scheme did not work in with the | popular version a little bit. Out of: the forty trying for the team, twenty- I eight insisted on being catcher. Tf| there had been a camera, each of the forty would have had a photo; taker, of himself wearing the "wirej cage." Here was a great dilemma, j At that time I was only a private, ] and there were Sergeants, Corporals, and even an officer, who wanted to j catch. Stewart again came to the' rescue. Calling me aside he said: ' I "LeaVe it to me. Emp, I'll fix 'em. j I'll try out each one in turn. Let j them wear the mask, and I'll send in ! some curves, and when the ball ] cracks them on the shins a couple of ; times you couldn't pay 'em to put I on the cage." The Tommies were strange to the curved balls, and Stewart had speed. I It did my heart good to see him i dampen their ardor and dent their! anatomy at the same time. The Tommies would see the ball coming to them and would reach up their! hands to get it. Then the ball would I "break" and hit them on the shin or knee. After five or six had re tired, rubbing sore spots and cussing Stewart out. no one else wanted to! catch, and the situation was saved. [To ho Continued.] HXRRISBT7RG C66fttTELEGKXPfI! THE MAN WHO WAS A FINGERBOARD The International Sunday School Lesson For January 6 Is "John Prepares The Way For Jesus" —Mark 1:1-11 By WILLIAM T. ELLIS A six months' journey through the Gospel of Mark now opens with the new year to every student of the In ternational Sunday school lessons. And Mark's message to the man or j woman of to-day is aglow with an | illumination that sheds a flood of j light upon the intricate ways over , which we are passing, j This gospel was put into the soul jof John Mark to give to the world. I He was a son of Mary of Jerusalem, a Jewish woman, and he was a cou sin of Barnabas. Peter was his fa ther in the faith (I Peter 5:13) and ' it is evident from the character of the| gospel that it bears fany sings of Peter's quickening influence upon his j convert. It is probable that Mark's gospel j was written about 53 A. D., and for i Gentiles particularly, rather than for j the Jews. It is distinctly, as Dr. i Griffith Thomas points out, the gos ] pel that "Emphasizes the activity, authority and energy of Christ. His deeds rather than His words. Here we get the very frequent repetition 'of 'straightway,' indicative of the I constant movement and activity of j Christ, as He is doing deeds of kind ness. teaching the truth, and fighting j evil." Into the study of an inspired mes sage with such marvelous fitness foi our own age and conscious need, we may well enter with high expecta tion of discovering therein divine ideals of service for swift application I to the complex and challenging days in which we live. The Forerunner Once upon a time there lived that rare wonder, a man who did not pre tend to be what he was not. There was almost as much posing and pre tending and "bluffing" in his day as in ours: but nevertheless this re markable man would not "put up a front" that was not genuine. With all the opportunity in the world to I pass as some great one, and to re ceive honor and reward, he doggedly I stuck to the statement that he was ! only a "sais"—such as you see all | over he Orient, running ahead of a : Somebody's vehicle to prepare the I way for him. Pressed to declare himself a dis | tinguished personage, he persisted in protesting that he was not a man on horseback, not the man in the royal vehicle, not the man behind the palm branches, but only the forerunner, the servant who ran ahead on foot. |He was not "It:" he merely cried aloud that The One was coming, and that all should be prepared for Him. 110 was not the kind of press agent who puts flattering notices of him -1 self in print, when he should be ad vertising the cause he represents. Our Own Time's Make-Up All this is enough to make this | hairy man of the wilderness,, John the Baptist, a unique charaerer in history. Of course, we see now-*in his case, not in ours—that it is real wisdom, and at least the glimmering of greatness, not to pretend any -1 thing. The person who sets himself l up to be somebody that he is not is ! invariably "taken down." It is bet i ter to seem less than you are, rather than more than you are; the discovery of your real merits startles people into paying you high honor. If the twentieth century could go to school to this uncouth desert prophet, the Baptist, it might give less time and substance to beauty ; doctors, massage artists, barbers. ' manicurists, tailors and jewelers, but | it assuredly would give greater heed j to the real qualities which make for i essential manhood and womanhood. !It would care a deal less about its position in "society," and a deal more about its standing before God. Utter j honesty, which enabled him to re i spect himself in the solitudes of the wilderness as well as amid the 1 crowds by the Jordan's bank, was [John's first characteristic. "Who Art Thou?" I Some men make their living by [hunting up, or making up, distln i ijuished genealogies for persons— I antipodes of the Baptist—who, hav i ing acquired money or power .want , also social distinction. They desire j to be prepared to answer the world's 'inevitable question, "Who art thou?" I That was the query flung at John as soon as he began to make a stir. The I doctors of the law and the ecclesias tical aristocrats would have liked | him to produce such credentials that ' they could "recognize" him. j John was drawing crowds straight i way the same peril loomed before •'him which confronts every person • ality, that the Good Society of his time would open its arms to him and take him into its suffocating embrace, j and soon reduce him to its own level of mediocrity. "Social recognition" ] has been the end of many a prom ising career. The Pharisees who 'went out to examine John wanted to I make him of their own crowd. They would honor him with office and | standing and their own gracious fa- I vor. Holding a Job or Doing It , These Pharisees were known for I the jobs they held and the positions I they occupied: and contemporaneous religious life has plenty of analogous i figures. But John was a person to |be ' reckoned with because he was himself. He did not need an ecclesl astioal job or a rich or fashionable pulpit: he had a message. And a man with his own message may go to the sands of Sahara and lift up his voice (not a voice trained in a school of elocution, either), and the world will resort to him. The man .with a vital massage, which possession makes a true preacher—is as rare as the sartorially immaculate, carefully drilled pulpit ornament is common. This man claimed to be merely a "voice" crying in the wilderness. He was only himself, and claimed nothing but his true work. He was no chameleon. He flew his own flag and stood by it. A servant fore runner, a mere messenger of the great Coming One was he, and noth ing more. A Stick May Point Any kind of a stick, so long as It be not crooked, may point. John conceived of himself as a fingerboard. For that office he did not need polish or social graces or the approving seal of the Sanhedrln. Nobody was expected to pay attention to him, but only to look and to go where he pointed. So the world conceived of this man, girt with camel's hair and subsisting on anchorite's fare, as pointing, pointing, pointing to the Coming One, and crying "Behold!— The Lamb of God!" Everybody points somewhere. The least of us cannot escape standing for something. The very first office of life is bearing witness. One's '"do as-I-please," devil-may-care attitude Is rather checked by the thought that one is pointing somebody some where. At a railway station I once as a boy thoughtlessly and ignor&nt ly misdirected a woman with a bun dle through the wrong tunnel. Later, i saw her tolling back with her load. Her useless and overburdened tramp due to my misdirection; and through all these years I have re morsefully carried that memormy In my mind. But what of the more se rious mistakes we unwittingly cause people, because our trend of life has pointed them the wrong way? As I conceive it the burden of this Sunday school lesson is "Point straight! Point straight!" Hear witness to the truth, the highest truth you know. Without fear, as without self-seeking, stand stead fastly for your highest illumination. That is the way the world moves upward. That is the way society is kept from decay. That is the way the kingdom of heaven comes. The Man With Something to Say In the wilderness. John came to self-realization and acquired his mes sage. Some preachers are affecting the camel's-hair cloth and the leather girdle and brusque speech, without the message. But the message alone is the thing. To hear that, the world would seek out a man in the remot est wilderness, or will not shrink from most fashionable of | Pennypacker Said I jib# • I ''l had a dread of Roosevelt coming into | In these words the late Governor introduces one of America's most force ful citizens and describes him as a man I of "impulse and lack of self-restraint." I But he was delighted with "Little | Miss Ethel" and says so in his autobiog | raphy now attracting State-wide atten- fi , tion to the columns of the Evening Public Ledger. J | His strictures on the Colonel will | interest you. Important! JJ Three ways in which to be absolutely certain of receiving your copy of the Evening fc Public Ledger: 1. Order your newsdealer to see that it is delivered to your home daily. 2. Reserve your Evening Public Ledger at your favorite news stand or with your newsboy. 3. Write direct to the Evening Public Ledger (Box 1526, Philadelphia), and enter a six months' subscription to it now. Do not delay to act on one of these three methods of procuring the daily installments of the greatest life story ever written by the man who lived it. Already we are receiving complaints of friends who are confronted with "all sold out' at news stands. I tenoning Pubic Stefrger |> CYRUS H. K. CURTIS, PUBLISHER churches. Why Is It that Philadel phia crowds flock every Sunday to hear Dr. Floyd W. Tomjdns, while our downtown churches are almost empty? Simply because he has a message about God. He does not re hash the day's news from the pulpit, nor choose topics that command space in the newspapers, nor have prologues or stereoptloon shows. He just preached God to the hearts of the people, and the multitude which gathered in hunger goes away fed. It was a plain sermon that Mark reports John as preaching. First there was the old appeal, "Repent ye." Then there was the warning that the axe was already lying at the tree of hereditary religion, ready to cut It down should they prove un worthy of their fathers. And then there was the promise of the greater One who was to come. John ottered his time Christ. That was its need then: it Is the supreme now. As Richard Watson Gilder so beautifully wrote: "If Jesus Christ is a man, And only a man. I say. That of all mankind 1 cleave to Him, And to Him will I cleave alway. "But if Jesus Christ is God, And the only God, I swear. I will follow Him through heaven and hell. The earth, the sea, the air." jAmmrr'4, ism How the Liggett Stores Were Founded In the American Magazine, Louis Iv. Liggett, the drug store man, says: "Our entire string of business en terprises is founded on n slmplo idea of co-operation. A few years ago I was on the road selling a lino of goods to drug stores. Shortly be fore that I had suffered business re verses, duo to temporary 111 health, asd I had known what it was to walk to savo car fare. So I was locking about for opportunities to ; set ahead. On the train one day, It . seemed as if the car wheels devel -1 oped a rhythmic click that made my I thoughts run faster, and a number ! of Ideas came into my mind. I won dered why a lot of druggists in dif ferent cities, not in direct competi tion. shouldn't co-operate with one another, combining their buying, manufacturing and advertising. "I interested forty druggists in the idea, and they came together for a business meeting. Each one chipped in $4,000 and tho co-operative plan was launched. To-day, we have 8,- i 000 stockholder distributors in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, Hawaii, and tho Philliplnes, and pro I vide our members with a complete. lino of goods running all tho way from drugs and perfumes to brushes and stationery. Wo manufacture our own perfumes and make con tracts to buy all tho flowers of cer tain varieties raised in one entire' nrovlnce in France." Alkali Malces Soap Bad For Washing Hair Most, soaps and prepared sham poos contain too much alkali, which Is very Injurious, as It dries tho scalp and makes tho hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain muisiflod cocoanut oil, for this Is pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap, and beats the most ex pensive soaps or anything else all to pieces. You can *et this at any drug store, and a few ounces will las' the whole family for months. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub' it in, about a teaspoonful is all that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, cleanses thoroughly, and rinses out. easily. Tho hair dries quickly and evenly, and Is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every partlc'e of dust, dirt and dandruff.