FAITH'S 10 FRANCE International Sunoay school Lesson For July 21 Is "Praying to God—Luke 11:1-13; Psalms 145:18-19 By WILLIAM T. ELLIS By William T. Ellis Swifter than the ships that sail, across the sea and the channel;! surer than the messages than flash underseas and fiy through the air, is the path of the prayers that faith' is hourly sending byway of the throne of God. There is not a minute of the day or night when loving hearts in Canada and the United t'tates and in Great Britain and Aus tralia and other lands are not bridg ing the great spaces with yearning, loving petitions for the soldiers in France. Tennyson's figure of the whole world's being bound by golden thains of prayer about the feet cf God has been strangely fulfilled in these days. After love and loyalty! h ve made every gift and every sac rifice. there still remains for them, in their sense of remoteness helplessness, only the power of pray-' ir. Mothers and fathers, wives, sweethearts. sisters, brothers, kin dred, friends and fellow patriots, are leagued in a great fellowship of prayer for our boys who have gone to war. Somehow, we cannot think of the, subject of prayer at all without first ( dwelling upon the new world condi tion which has thrust it into the pub-; lie thought as a present force and, necessity. In the United States it! has become almost a nation-wide, usage to observe a noon-tide angelus. By official direction signals for pray er are so that entire cities may hear and pause for a moment of prayer for our soldiers and our j cause. 1 The nation, even the thoughtless, among us. are holding our armies in their highest and holiest aspirations, .i r. ted toward the Supreme Buler of the universe. We are praying i>c-, iause an instinct stronger than rea son is commanding us to turn to thej onlv Power that can supplement our, helpfulness. We ourselves are 11m-j ited and isolated and weak: all the, depths of oar being affirm that there] is One who is almighty and every-j where present: whose nature and, power enfold our loved ones over seas as well as ourselves at home. j "Since hunger is, bread needs must, be;" the very existence of the days, great yearning and travail of soul convince us that there must be a lov- . lr\g God to satisfy us. Tlio New World Tic Last night I heard a little child's prayer, and her usual form, "Now I lay me." was supplemented by "Take, care of our soldiers, and give them victory." That kneeling 1 figure of innocence calls up a picture of. myriads and myriad? of similar scenes: what a new fellowship of childhood has been created in the common daily prayer for our sol diers. many thousands of them beinp the prayers of little children for their own fathers. And what a school of holy patriotism are these prayers! Kneeling. mankind is coming: clos er together. With what a varied company of people on their knees in churches I have fellowshiped in the past year—Russians, high and low;. Armenians. Assyrians. British,' Xrench and Americans. AH the world in travail is finding itself knit ' together in a new spirit of unity.' Praying people, whose numbers now i include multitudes who never used to nray. .find themselves invested with a new sympathy for one an other. Tolerance and fortitude are being learned in our war-created srhool of prayer. France and Brit ain turn brave faces to the world, .-nd do not weep or wail over their bereavements: but in secret they cry aloud to the Lord God of Hosts for strength. a well as for protection for their loved ones. Out of the depth.® of experience, prayers arise. That rulers have of late so often, and so solemnly sum moned nations to their knees, is a new testimony to the reality of the world's serine of the necessity of prayer. Closer and holier, even, than! our national unity is this seldom-ex r>rssed sentiment of .our common, fellowship within the providence ofj God. Our deepest relationships are in Him. Nothing can shatter thej sense that we meet our absent be loved at God's feet. "Though sundered far. by faith we! meet Around one common Mercy Seat." Peasants by wayside crucifixes, be shawled old women before Russian Icons, statesmen bowed in formal re ligious services. little children' kneeling beside their cribs, families gathered by the fireside altar, groups -if like-minded Christians! assembled for worship, all are pres ent-day evidences that God has stamped the need of Himself so deeply upon the human spirit that, in times of stress we turn as in stinctively to Him as a bird to it* nest. The Kaisor Before the Crih Do our soldiers pray? Certainly not as the Pharisees of our Lord's time prayed, standing in public places, to be seen of men. A shy,; sensitive f-ecret spirit of reverence has been discovered in the breasts of the soldiers. Just as they have sloughed off interest in the petty consideration* of sectarianism and of conventionality, so they have taken on a new, deep sense of reality of God and of His providence. Their very self-abandonment to all the risks and tasks of war is a prayer.! feel that they are about a work which God called them, and In -vhich He has a great stake, and for which they may count upon Hi# oo- Ambition Pills For Nervous People The great nerve tonic —the famous Wendell's Ambition Pills—*hat will put vigor, vim and vitality into ner vous, tired out. all in, despondent people in a few days in many in itances. Anyone can buy a box for only 60 rents, and H. C. Kennedy Is author ized by the maker to refund the pur chase price :t anyone is dissatisfied with the first box purchased. Thousands praise them for gen- i eral- debility, nervous prostration, mental depression .•'.nd unstrung I nerves caused by over-indulgence in ' alcohol, tobacco, or overwork of any kind. | For n> affliction of the nervous ! system Wendell's Ambitlou Piils are ; unsurpassed, while for hysteria ' trembling and neuralgia they are simply splendid. Fifty cents at H. C. Kennedy's and dealers everywhere. '••"•rflturriAnt. ( FRIDAY EVENING, operation. Their faith is itself a pe tition. They offer us their lives as a naming act of worship and suppli cation, as the Russians offer up can dles. f! 5, so a ' B ° do the Germans pray." comments one. True: hut it is only the prayers of those whose, purposes square with the clear Willi of God that may expect an answer, i In a vivid, though rather gruesome sketch, a French writer, Julien Fla-j ment. sets this forth (as summarized in "God and the Soldier"). He de picts the German Emperor, clad in his gray cloak, "flecked with blood." bowing his helmet before the Crib lie addresses the Divine Child: • Thou art on our side. O Lord: I um Thy lieutenant • • Thou wilt share my triumph • • • Lord God of the German armies, bless Thou the German Emperor." The Christ-Child, silent, seems l only to grow pale. The Kaiser pravs again. He promises to place the! ruins of the world: "Thy Cross md i my flag." Still the Child is silent, and the Kaiser with trembling voice. I asks: "Ha v e I not done and suf fered enough for Thee? Millions of! my soldiers lie dead: the ravens arej weary of their feast." At last the Christ-Child softly and sorrowfullv makes answer: "I would fain bless thee, but I cannot. In Belgium last ■winter I lost My way. I took refuge, beneath a hedgerow from the icy blast. Some drunken German sol"-' diers sprang upon Me. I had no de fense but My smile and My tears j * * • To punish Me thev drew i their swords • • * How can li bless three without My hands, the! little hands of a child • * which they cut off." "That visualizes the truth that hands red with innocent blood are raised in vain to a holy God." com-> ments the author of "God and the Soldier." "When a man pravs in his own name, and not in Christ's: name: when he uses prayer merely! as an instrument for the gratifica tion of his own pride, and the real ization of his earthly ambitions:' ■when he desires his will to prevail over the Will of God. and that his arms of flesh should wield the power of the Omnipotent, such a prayer is not addressed to the all-holy God.' but to a God of indulgence fashioned in his own image. The granting of such "prayer would mean that God's Will would never be done. For such prayer there is within the eternal glory no voice nor any that answers. The very soul of prayer is: Thy Will be done on earth as it is in' heaven." " The Winning Sworil That same volume. "God and the Soldier." has many true words that, are pertinent to this Sunday school lesson: " 'Prayer is the very sword of the saints.' .said Francis Thomson. The age of the church's victories has ever seen its swift flash from out the scabbard. If in the last days the words of prayer had become almost congealed on the lips of multitudes, there has now come upon us a new day when prayer has again become a reality. Men and women who had j ceased to pray for themselves have; been driven to the feet of God in KENNEDY S CUT-RATE r™T "Apply Satin akin cream, A /■\ f T T""\ A, X T TTTT X 7" ✓V "Apply Satin akin cream, then Satin akin powder." A I IIIJ I J A V II I I f Q A then Satin akin powder." 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MARKET STREET | at These Prices I 30c Campherol 19c ! an agony of supplication praying for| | their loved ones. They cannot help it. 'We have in these days of scien | title enlightenment a great deal of 1 discussion about the efficacy of pray j or," wrote William James, "and many . reasons have been given us why we should not pray, while others are ! given why we should. But in all . this very little is said of the reasons 1 why we do pray • • • The rea son why we pray is simply that we cannot help praying.' "We have, in very truth, come toj the day when we cannot help pray ing. In the moment of extremity tht I appeal to God. conscious or uncon-! springs from the heart. 'They I are at their wit's end. then they cry j to Jehovah.' is the testimony of thei Psalmist. And even the funk-prayer j jis heard, for he adds: 'And Hej i bringeth them out of their distress I I evs.' What the cloudless day cannot i do, the hurricane effects. 'I have j been driven many times to my knees j : by the overwhelming conviction thatj I had nowhtre else to go,' wrote Abraham Lincoln. 'My own wisdom | and that of all around me seemed! insufficient for the day.' And so it! iis now. The statesman in his -abi-: ; net and the soldier in the trench are! at one in the day when all earthly | refuge, fails and God alone remains, i I had not prayed for years but I ■ ; prayed then." is the testimony of; | many a man. • • • The Groat Reason For Prayer | "There is in the world something ; greater than law. and that is person ality. We ourselves know how the i human personality can mold and : shape unchangeable law and make iit do his will. If gravitation decrees j that water shall run downward, men I can decree that it flow upward to the i level of its source. If electricity can| rend the heavens and spread disaster' and death in the destroying light ning. man can take its laws and so 1 combine them that it drives his ma-j i chinery. makes his cities bright al-j ; most as dav, and send his messages; , round the earth. If law imprisons; j the stone and iron and marble in Ihe • everlasting hills, men by the samej | law can rear St.Paul's and hang: the iron bridges high in air over thei chasms. Instead of unchangeable law making progress impossible, it is the' fact of law making being unchange-| able, and thus to be depended on.) that makes all progress possible. Bv' it the aeroplane mounts to heaven, and the shell screams over head. And! iif man can thus mold law to his! will, who can dare say that He Who j is the course of all law is helpless: 'and imprisoned? What is law but 1 the ordered will of personality? Law: is unthinkable without a law- , giver * * * "The only expression of the source : of all things is a Personality shaping! the universe to His Will. The rela-j tion of men to God is thus a personal relationship—the relationship of the: finite to the infinite Personality.! * * • We know but little of the secret of God's working, but we can understand hew problems which to • us are insoluble are not even prob i lems to Him. To the savage a moier ' is an insoluble enigma; to the me chanic that controls it there is no! mystery whatever within its compass, i And we are far less fitted to judge the universe than the primitive man i to judge a motorcar! • • • I Above the Law "God's personality is the one real-1 ity: and when the sailor on the deep; or the soldier on the battlefield cry : to Him. the cry does not beat against i the prison walls of law. like waves fretting at the base of the cliff, hut i mounts to the hearts of Him, the outgoing of whose will is the susten i ance and the glory of the material, world, and Who is infinitely greater HATLRISBUHG TELEGRAPH than the operation of His law "We make our appeal to Omni science. He made us all, and He made each different, and He will never repeat a single personality. Each is therefore of inestimable value to Him. And the cry of each He will hear. He sees us not in masses but as individuals. That is why 'He never makes two out of the same mold. • • • "Even the. martial world is sensi tive to tjje feeblest force brought to play upon it. When the ball a child throws into the air descends to earth there is a two-fold movement —the movement of the ball downward and the movement of the earth upward to meet it. It is only the lack of sensitiveness in our instruments that prevents our measuring the earth's ascent to meet the ball. And it is only because we lack imagination that we have difficulty in realizing that In the spiritual realm, where personality r.lone is great, God must respond to every approach of His children. Wheresoever the son goes, •I will arise and go to my father." there also the Father must arise and go to meet His son. Such is the law of spiritual gravitation." Railroad's Operating Incomes Are Shrinking Washington, July 19.—Operating incomes of ISO of the largest rail roads and fifteen switching and terminal companies last May showed a net increase of $15,396,187 com pared with the same month a year ago. final reports to the Interstate Commerce Commission shows. The total operating income was $76,978,- 941 while that of the May before was $92,775,128. The net operating income of the roads for the first five months ol the year under government operation was" $233,249,477, compared with $359,366,010 for the same period last vear. Revenues from all sources "totaled $1,689,635,916 againts sl,- 548,726.077 for the first five months of 1917, but operating costs In creased. Australians Win Just East of Amiens By Associated Press British Headquarters in France, July 19.—A surprise attack early last night advanced the Australian line east of Amiens more than a third of a mile on a front in excess of a mile. The German trenches thus cap tured arc southeast of Villers Bret onneux. The Australians took the trenches without much trouble, collecting thirty-three prisoners under an angry company commander, two field guns and two machine guns. —. . 0 ., - rs taken showed more Interest In the battle on the river ihuii n> any other subject and i et'used to believe the statement that the Germans had not captured Rheims and Chalons. The prisoners had been given glowing account s of German success on the first day of the battle and told by their commanders that the German armies would be in Paris before the end of the week. They spoke of the present battle as be ing a decisive one and declared that on its conclusion the Entente allies would be glad to sue for peace. The British front continues quiet save for vigorous enemy shelling in the neighborhood of Ypres and in the hills around Kemmel. GOVERNMENT TO CONTROL MEDICAL MEN OFCOUNTRY Entire Professional Force to Provide Physicians For the Army \Yashiii£ton t July 18.—The gov ernment is about to assume control of .the entire medical profession in the United States to obtain sufficient doctors for the fast growing army and at the same time to distribute those remaining: to the lacallties or services where they are most needed for civilian work. This mobilization is to be accom plished either by enrolling all doc tors in a volunteer service corps un der pledge to accept whatever ser- vice, military or civilian, is assigned them by the governing body of the corps, or, if the voluntary plan is not successful, by legislation provid ing for drafting them into govern ment service. Medical officers of the government believe compulsory conscription will not be necessary. A committee of army and navy surgeons completed to-day recom mendations for inclusion in the vol unteer medical service corps all doc tors. instead of only those disquali fied for military service. Of the 143,000 doctors in the United States it is estimated between 80,000 and 95 000 are in active practice, and 23,000, or about one-fourth, are In the Army or Navy. Nearly 50,000 will be required eventually for the Army. The active practioners re maining, together with those who have retired, butg who can be per suaded to fesume work must carry on the health maintenance work in this country. Careless Use of Soap Spoils the Hair Soap should be used very care fully, if you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is just ordinary mulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and greaseless), and is better than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp thorough ly. Simply moisten the hair with wa ter and rub it in. It makes an abun dance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every par ticle of dust, dirt, dandruff and ex cessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsitled cocoanut oil I at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and! a few ounces will supply every mem-1 ber of the family for months.—Adv.! Germans Fall Ready Victims to Attackers I By Associated Press On the • ivncii Front in France. July 19.—When the Entente allies' attack began at dawn yesterday the Germans were surprised and ofTeied flight resistance in the advanced lines, many immediately throwing up their hands and shouting "Kam erad." The barrage tire preceded the waves of infantry but one of the heaviest storms of this year drowned th" of the shells. Most of the Germans had taken shelter i n tnelr dugouts from the deluge and the Entente allied troops were among them with grenades and Bss^SS9ass==^ Included in this variety of Shoes for men, women and children from our regu lar stock that you'll need for the coming season. A pur chase now means a big saving of your money later, as shoes will not only be much higher in price, but WOMEN'S WHITE POPLIN PUMPS, WOMEN'S PLAIN PUMPS in dull kid, full Louis heel, light turned d* "1 Q ° r m^tar y heel, very stylish last, sole, $3 values. 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Ixtndon, July 19.—A Russian wire- loss dispatch, received here reads: "On July 14 the peoples' commissary received a visit from the Charg® d'affaires of the German embassy who asked the Russian government's consent to the sending of a German battalion to Moscow to guard the German embassy. It was added that the Germans had no intentions of occupying Moscow. Cuticura Soap is Easy Shaving for Sensitive Skins The New Up-to-date Cattcore Method 7
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