10 RELIGION, IN AND AFTER THE WAR General Pershing's ruthlessness In "scrapping" Inefficient men is one of the surprises of the observer in France. Xo officer or method can continue for an hour after he or it fail.; to "make good." War is not a polite or considerate thing. Its Is sues are so vital and tremendous, that no small thing is permitted to stand in the way of its success. Pre cedents. conventions, convenience, prestige, all are as nothing in the face of the one supreme considera tion. That same spirit, which put first things first, is being imparted to all of life by the war. It is making over many of the great institutions of so ciety. Soldiers have learned a new state of mind, which distinguishes betweon essential or nonessential. So when they come home they will change a great many things that we stay-at-homes have been reluctant to touch, because of timidity, conserva tism or prejudice. They have shaken off old fears, habits and associations, and it will not irk them to throw into the scrap-heap many things that belong there, while they are about the task of bringing essential insti tutions up to a hundred per cent ef ficiency. Every one of us needs to get j flxe4 firmly in his mind the convic-. tion that grave changes are coming in many departments of life, after j the war. War's Effect Upon the Church Now what will happen to the Church? Something, we may be sure. For this oldest and largest of institutions is one of the first and most formidable factors with which the world has to reckon. It under lies and embraces most of the forces that make for change and progress. Out of the Church came the ideals which sent the allied nations to war for the Jesus-ideals of justice, right eousness and brotherhood. There is nothing that touches the life of men "TIZ" FOR ACHING SORE TIRED FEEI Use "Tiz" for tender, puffed-up, f burning calloused feet and corns. People who are forced to stand on > their feet all day know what sore.; tender, sweaty, burning feet mean.j They use " Tiz," and "Tiz" cures their feet right up. It keeps feet in per feet condition. "Tiz" is the only rem edy in the world that draws out all the poisonous exudations, which puff up the feet and cause tender, sore, tired, aching feet. It instantly stops the pain in corns, callouses and bun ions. It's simply glorious. Ah! how comfortable your feet feesl after us- I ir.g "Tiz." You'll never limp or draw up your face in pain. Your shoes won't tighten and hurt your feet. Get a 25-cent box of "Tiz" now from any druggist. Just think! a whole year's foot comfort for only j 25 cents. —Adv. i^^Sj { ZQ9 "VLAX-n TJT ST. I I Men, Women, Children He wl.se finish the nenson with a pair of these extra ordinary values which you can buy tn-morrow. Saturday, at I GREATLY KEDICED PRICES. | Women's Dainty White Canvas v \\ Pumps medium t 'v - ' \ \ 1 \ ° r hlKh he * lß> *V A \ with or % out straps. \ Extra fine ? Mj V \ \ Sea IMe \ % Duck - V& V % a ' ue . $1.49 TAX PLAY OXFORDS All sizes to 11. ( - 11 H to 2 .... \vv Ifev? ! EXCEPTIOX'AL VALVES IX CHILD REX'S BAREFOOT SAN DALS. Men's White /f \\ Cnnvna Ox- I j 'A ' fords; Bal /,' i or Bluch- J j er style! / / leather / / JK? or rob- / ' JSgjg br aolem. .•>' 12.43 Values, Si.9 8 HIlt FRIDAY EVENING, By William T. Ellis. which is not of deep concern to the Church. Already the war has changed the Church. It luis taught her how to create new machinery for dealing with the needs of tho armies, and it has quickened in her afresh the Christ-spirit of solicitude for man kind. Consider what it means that ; there is not a single unit of the | armies of Britain and America, larg- I cr than a company, that is not at this 1 moment receiving the helpful and dl j rect attention of the agents of the ' Church. We sometimes overlook the magnitude of tho war work done by 1 Christianity. Every regiment has its I chaplains. These men are doing an j important part of the army's work, ; under the recognition and direction of the government. I have talked j with chaplains in France, and 1 can • testify to their tireless activity, to J I their broad-minded efficiency, and to; their shepherdly devotion and catho ' lie spiritual solicitude. All the world knows what the Y. ; M. C. A. is doing in France, and in 1 the training camps. This Is done in [ the spirit of the Church, and as her I representatives. It is an innovation, i and on a colossal scale, which is bound to make all Christian hence i forth think in larger terms of reli i gious obligations and opportunity. l lt has revealed the possibilities of practical ministry to men in the name and mind of Jesus. Soldiers ac cept this beautiful service of the M. C. A. as being the work of the Church. They understand the relig iou spirit back of it all. Its toler ance, comprehensiveness, freedom from censoriousness and practical character, appeal to them as being true to the genius of Christianity. Anybody who says that the Church is out of date and ineffective has only to look upon what she is doing in France to-day. in order to have his notions revised. That service flags fly from practi cally every Church in the land, and that the pulpits are putting heart and conviction and patience into our patriotism, and that helpful war work of many kinds is done in and from the Church, are clear proofs of the vital quality of the Church in our land and time. A Look in the Large As a background to our thinking, let us take a long, large look. We are most of us accustomed to think ing only in terms of our village or neighborhood churches, and of our western denominations. We forget how old and widespread is the Chris tian Church. It is not even confined to the Protestant and Roman Cathol ic bodies. I have personal acquaint ance with the Greek Church, which includes the Russian and kindred groups; with the Gregorian, ori Amenlan, Church; with the Xestor-i ian Church and its off-shoots: and! with the Coptic Church of Egypt. All of these bodies date back to within three centuries of the Apostolic age.. Even the person who knows only the surface of history under- j stands how the Christian Church has I been the conserver of civilization, in j the dark days of human history. The j Roman Church saved civilization in j the West, fro mthe Goths and the | Vandals; and the Greek Church; saved it in the East, from the Tar tars and Moslems. At the present! hour, when craft, materialism, self- i interest and military power, flouting! the spirit of Christianity, are seek- i ins to dominate all humanity, it is • the Christian Church which has held steadily to the fore the ideal of! righteousness and brotherhood, to be: maintained even at the cost of j blood. Age is not the only claim of the j Church in reverence. Her far-flung! magnitude has no rival or peer. How ' small and local seem even the great-1 est of the fraternal organizations j when contrasted with the band of brothers founded by Jesus'. There is; not a single nation'on earth, with, the possible exception of interiorl Thibet and Afghanistan, and some j of the tribes in middle Arabia, where j Christians, members of the Church,, may not be found. At times and in j places the Church has been pervert ed and palsied, but withal she is the' most beneflcent. as well as the most t widespread institution on earth. | About one-third cf all the people liv- i ing to-day are nominally Christian. Xo nation is either so large or so old j as the Christian Church for the | continuity of China and Japan Is • racial, rather than governmental, the ] national forms having changed. I "Oh where are kings and empires now. Of old that went and came? But, Lord. Thy Church is praying yet, A thousand years the same. "For not like kingdoms of the world i Thy holy Church, O God; Though earthquake shocks are threatening her, . And tempests are abroad. "Unshaken as eternal hills, Immovable she stands, A mountain that shall fill the earth, A house not made by hands." Tlie New "Good Society" Xow that all thinking persons are looking forward to a reconstruction j of the social order, we are bound to j contemplate the place of the Church j in the new scheme of things. All | pur problems are problems of human I relationship. The question is one of j men and women getting along to gether in kindlier, pleasanter, more brotherly fashion. Wise men tack \ big names on to what we want; but j really, all that we are after is that folks shall be happier and more! neighborly all the folks, every-; where in this big world—and that! nobody shall be allowed to hurt any- j body. Which means that we want "good society" for .everybody; and "good society" that is real is the society of good people. It takes more than a Fifth Avenue tailor and barber and haberdasher and manicurist to fit one for "good society." The transfor mation must begin at the center of things, away down at the springs of being. And that is the business of the Church. She does not introduce candidates for her "good society" to certain social leaders; she introduces them to Christ. He takes them in hand and makes them over, from the heart outward. In simplest definition, the Church is a company of friends of Christ. All congenial to Him. the members find themselves congenial to one an other. The tie that binds them Is their common relation to the Lord. Many barriers separate them other wise: for Jesus draws His friends from every race and condition of mankind. He has all sorts of raw material from the stark heathen African of the jungle to the grad uate of Europe's universities, and gives them a new mind, even His own. He makes them want the same good and shun the same evils. Upon them all He puts His own stamp of brotherhood. He calls them children of His heavenly Father and imparts to them the family spirit. When the Great Change Comes So we have this world-wide fellow ship of men and women and children who give first allegiance to the per sonality and Spirit and teachings of Jesus. Devotion to Him Is their com mon characteristic. They want to live their lives In His way. To win His approval Is their highest ambi tion. They care more about being Christians Christ's "people—than about being Presbyterians or % Bap tists or Methodists or Episcopalians or Catholics or Gregorlans or Ortho dpx. I In these-war-times, when every- I thing is being appraised anew, they are learning from the single-minded , soldiers, who have followed Christ i clear to Calvary, that it does not matter much about denominations or i forms or methods. Over in France I huve seen Catholic priest and Pro testant minister unitedly, In a com mon service, bury both Protestant and Catholic soldiers In the same cemetery with no talk of "consecrat ed ground." And high Church Epis copalians kneel beside Baptists and Presbyterians and men of no church at the Lord's Table, receiving com munion from the hands of a man of God, without -once asking who or dained him, or whether he was im mersed or sprinkled. This sacra mental table, spread under the shad ow of near death, made Jesus very real; but it made the ecclesiastical distinctions cf the homeland seem very unreal and distant. The sol diers are going to help us back to a oneness of Christian fellowship that will shame all our pa?t sectarian nar rowness and bigotry. In this great and good society, there is the world's best hope for social solidarity. When the mind of Christ rules all of us. then nobody will hurt or cheat or oppress any body. Once the ideals of Jesus are given right of way in His Church. W ;?,, shall a rea l fraternity that will make all schemes of state socialism seem paltry and mechan ical. Although she does not yet fully realize the fact herself, it is none the less true that the master word for tnis hour of social flux and change is with the Church. She will do more than allay social unrest; she will make over the life of business and industry and politics and society in a new and beautiful spirit of brother hood. She, and she alone, has a mo tive adequate for this achievement. Poor Russia's Blunder In all seriousness, it may be de clared that to work in and for and through the vitalized Christian Church is the most direct means for bringing about the long-desired era of "peace on earth, good will to men." When men and women learn how to say, "The love of Christ con straineth me" they possess a motive that can meet all tests. When busi ness and consular representatives are fleeing from the most troubled parts of Russia and Persia, it is the Chris tian missionaries and the Young Men's Christian Association men and the Quaker Reconstruction Unit who elect to stay. Their passion for help- WLI lIMIBIWITMIIII^I I Saturday CLARK'S Cut Rate Medicine Stores Sales 300 Market Street 306 Broad Street Stores | No Patent Medicines A IRE A ¥ C Dental Preparations None Mnil Sal Lax ' s aud D 19c > 38c - 75c ¥- I 111 f\ |%, R| | El ,I/\ I Lilly Tooth Paste (large) 340 011 Q* lYlaiL Kilmer's Swamp R00t....38c, 75c Lilly Tooth Paste (small) 170 I JOIO. A. f fiv/J/ivo Wampole's Tasteless Cod Liver • T"\ _ _ | Kolynos Tooth Paste . ...19<* j , I [ ] H flj uraers oil 5 9< Cigar Uepartment Pepsodent Tooth Paste, 340 to L J |g -+-* Fitted . COm . PTher e Are No 6c Cigars at This Store Saifto? Toot? Pas ITI9O Dealers i Xerox!n 37c Cigar Specials 10c Cigars I Sanitol Tooth Powder .. .190 j j f i CJ & $l.OO Kpto , 39c 9 Havana Tucks 350 4La Carma 250 Euthymol Tooth Paste ..150 6c Cigars © Jpjfr jfe ■iS -is Nuxated ICi^" ,i,# : s - ,5 > <8<*50.53.35) oIL | 7~ Jpt* i Iron Tinct Ca,lon,ene 7oc 7 Even Stevens .. j for j 3 Henriettas 25c | Colgate's Tooth Powder, j counsellors ! M j 59c Cardiol 370 7 King Oscars 350 (Box of 25, $2.00) 150 and 240 7 g I gf suipherb Tablets S6c 7G en. Hartranfts Box „ Steam's Tooth Paste ...280 $ W 1 53 j Bromo Seltzer 18c, 36c, 69c 7 Sweet Girls .... of Moja ~00 OOC tm Kgi 0| 35c omega oil, 35c 2ic 7La Tifton 50 (Box of so, $4.00) Toilet Soaps 5T - WB® 4) h 1 Fletcher's 7 CounMlOTB •••• ?° 23 som... s~ P D 6 ?® 2. I gg* fiy I , r as fnrin DiU's Balm Life. 35c 28c (Box of 100, 84.40) (Box of 50, 4.0Q) Woodbury Soap 180 Parisian || Horiick's Malted Milk, si.oo. .75c , , ~ T , n , - Cuticura Soap 180 c_ r*>. S © 23c e s Lax 9c. no, 3ic Hair Preparations Hobson's Soap , ...210 >sage | s#q •——Sal Hepatica. 25c 18c . 50c Herpicide 39c Palm Olive Soap, 15c size, 100 36c HI 05 BUss Native Herb Tablets, $l. ,67c $l.OO Herpicide !! 79c Physicians' and Surgeons' ——^ WCO a m • Pearson's CreoUn 16c. 32c, 63c 50c Glover's Mango 31c Soap, 3 for 250 QQ * ( J H Mavis Diapepsln 29e W 30c Parisian Sage 39c Jergen's Violet Glycerine, 3 - . * . (■*. wl pami Talfitm Doan ' s K ' (lne > Pills 39c 50c Hay's Hair Health 39c for -.250 Listerine P - E?J 18 Ma>T's Stomacli^ Remedy 79e 50c Mulsified Cocoanut Oil 36c Melba Vegetable Oil 150 gg c NN ' Father John's 71c 75c Wye til's Sage and Sulphur .19c Tvnrv Snan'' (iP . . .. en Quaker Herb Extract 71c 30c cunthrox 38c T _ v J Cmn , „ . Lava poap tjo " ~n . „ „ Elmers chocolate Nut Meats ..59c a c Bai-bo Compound Jlc Li f e ßuoySoap ...60 De Witt's Whirling Salve 6c Elmer's Classique Package ....59c 75c Dgmschinsky's Dye 59c # tfrLgud H plr l ,j s - s - s 67c Elmer's Aristocracy 59c 50c Dam.sclilnsky's Dye 39c r„_ .1 Kidnev Spray Jad Salts 5Sc Assorted Chocolates; ...8c Pinaud'.s Eau de Quinine 89c rortneKaDy DMI Sv-infre Mercolized Wax 59c Jtt^, n J i OCO,ate (ovcrc!l Walimtta 38c $3.75 Horiick's Malted Milk, Pills '1 SI SaSOUte c JansoiT Peppermint Parker's Hah- Balsam 38c 59 c jS M fl 1 ) $1.98 Phenol Sodique 9c and 38c Patties 30c Potter s Walnut Stain 79c $3.50 Nestle's Food . .$2.49 jsj W Scott's Emulsion 19c and 98c Elmer s Sample Package 15c Brovvnatonc 21c, 81c $1.50 Vapo Cresoline Lamp, — ' fia ter J— — ~ 9c ~ l-",, s Atomizers, -Jg 25c Dr. Hand's R.mdies, — | OOC Glyoo Tbymoline 21c, 42c, Blc B.>c Rectal Tubes (Goodrich) ..60c 35 $1.98 Johnsons Baby Powder .130 gQ c pSSISH Chichester's Pills $1.53 88c Eo' on Tubes (Goodrich) . ,60e $1.50 Wonpeace Wutcr Bottle, No. Infant Syringes 160 . - jffla 6 $l.OO 10 £„5 U c "~* Co ° a - Dr - jScf®iWwEr.::::BS m 2 ? u J b " Sh f' n S'/ ard --fSf°ff L h hard!. ard! 1 IhS Father "% „i e r.o!f ,te o, Ljj f , , Beef, lien and Wine 68c $2.00 Goodrich Fountain Syringe. Hygeia Nipple and Bottle complete f t i 28c pM™ Johns Atwood's Bitters 18c si 25c plete with nipple 3.10 ■ ... PS Bi T Natures Remedy.... 15c, 30c, 59c S,W ° Ht,p P ,ta l Fountain S,Tinge, Bathing Caps 2:{c Extra Nipples, 2 for 250 P"* gjl |U Medicme Bottks. flat 5c $1.20 | 7sc Beecliam's Pills 15c 29 . $ ,. 18 5-qt. Fountain Syringe Hose . .23c Nursing Bottles, round 50 Miles ® ffl Cuticura Ointment 38c 52.50 Atonpeace Bottle Syi-inge, No. Princess Bulb Syringe 89c Anti-Colic Nipples x-40 T . F""® O inn ff Sassafola 15c U ...$1.58 Rubbcrset Shaving Brushes ...34e ■ Nervine kaij I "' 100 5-gr ... _. o $2.50 Davol Household Fountain Finger Cots 5c C-.-f-,l TA "_l,_ _x __ Ft ' a*, _r ° Black Flag 9c, l.c Syringe $1.68 Crutch Tips ! 5 c OpeCial DrinKS at 79 r MN® | Rlandft Absorbent Cotton, lb 59c —*■———. _, . . vv. Hy !Wj a Irnn PJll* Mango 31c Sample Bottles Saturday Sale 0 the , Soda Fountam . j wX • Iron" 1 " 8 Hall's Catarrh Cure 18c Azurca Sachet 10c T M . \l/ . cl-anf Smash 5c 0 U 19C Weber's -Alpine Tea 9c lijer Kiss Sachet 10c TOllet Water .!.'.'!! .*!!.'!!!!!!! 5c Miles' S I {fl IVeczone 21c Mary Garden Sachet 10c Azurea Toilet Water Fan Vea All Phosphates 5c . . . X I m hi - De>llracle 79c and 48c JJf >üb l?'f nt '®. Sa chct 10c S AH Plain Sodas 5c Antl-PaUl 7" VS ' 75c. c " ■—■ *' etal 98 ? c " ,5 ° P;II. r . I LJh| DierKisS ? Cmo 240 and 6 ' c Mary Garden 25c Hudnut's Rose of Omar Toilet Crushed Cherry 10c \ J J * Doan's RegiUets 23c Houbigant's Ideal 25c w , csli Fruit Limeade 10c Naflirp.' .. . 18c and 38c Garden Fragrance Talcum, _ * " Drinks served In LUly Sanitary 8 Coffee vLnnirinsli ia , rfn ®? c Mavis Toilet Water 980 Paper Glasses for aceommoidation Remorlv I 19c Fiancc o Taleinn 95c Qrk of customers who wish to carry out iVeilleuy | 22c Glycothymollne 21c, 42c, 81c 50c Trailing Arbutus Talcum . ,38c Ujer Kiss Eau Veg 890 drinks to nearby stores and offices. JS C 'jg Buy Buy I Savings CLARK'S Cut Rate Medicine Stores sSj Broad Street Stamps B HARRISBURG tlMS&ft TELEGRAPH Ing people Is so great that they count their lives of no consequence. Russia —poor, bunderlng,' bewil dered and betrayed Russia is the day's most striking example of the Inefficiency of mere socialism with out a religious passion to Bustatn it. Theoretically, no nobler Ideals were eve.r offered to a state than the re volutionists proposed to Russia. Practically, though, the overthrow of the old order, and the breaking of former restraints, merely inaugurat ed an era of unbridled individualism. It set everybody to grabbing for him self. I saw and suffered from that blind and bestial loosening of primal passions amid, a people who thought that liberty meant a new chance to "look out for number one." Book socialism, and practical socialism, have received their worst blow in Russia. It takes a motive outside of self, and supernaturally empowered, to bring in the day of brotherhood upon which we have all fixed our hearts. Restraints will not do it, forms will not do it, programs will not do it. There must be such a divine purpose as Jesus prescribes and imparts. When the lovo of Christ fills human hearts, then love for brother man will overflow. This is the Church's oppojdunlty, to carry out her Lord's desires. To help her fultjll this mission is the tinest opportunity for the expression of one's life and personality. Then "Church work" will be no dreary routine of petty tasks, but a great and joyous and adequate service of man and God. By it the new world era may be realized. To Train a Million Boys For War Work "VYnabington. —Organization of 1,- 000,000 youths to do industrial work, lake military training in preparation for later Army service, and at the same time attend specially arranged vocational or technical schools, is planned by the government as a means of dealing with the growing shortage of labor, without drawing boys away from their schooling. The erops will be developed through extension of the United States Boys' "Working Reserve, which already has enrolled 250.000 boys between the ages of 16 and 21, engaged mainly this summer in farm work. Many of these boys will go back to school in the fail, but a large proportion, together with others to be enrolled, will bo di rected into industrial work to fill va cancies left by men now being drafted for the Army. These boys will be organized as units in each community, serving under an adult training officer, tak ing courses of study in night schools, or by some other systematic program, living either at home or in camps and wearing the uniform of the Reserve Corps, which will be of gray cloth with a roll collar jacket. Another feature of the program for drawing on the great reservoir of youth labor Involves the postponing of the opening of the schools to about October 15 for the boys now at work on farms throughout the country. This will apni" onl- to those boys and not to all pupils. Deflnlto plans are now being worked out through the Federal Bureau of Education. If the draft age minimum Is reduc ed to 18. as Is proposed by Secretary Baker, youths above that age would cease to be eligible to membership in the Working Reserve. Consequently, officials contemplate lowering the ages for accepting boys for the work corps from 16. the present minimum, to 15 or even 14 years. Boys who serve in the Working Corps are to receive medals and ser vice records representing official rec ognition by the United States Gov ernment of their value in the war emergency. Development of the pro ject is assigned mainly to the Depart ment of Labor, under which the Boys' Working Reserve now operates, and enlistment in the corps will be entire ly voluntary. Plucky Lad Fights Huns in Deserting Brother's Place London. —A remarkable story of a plucky boy who impersonated his brother In the big battle was describ ed at police court when Henry Arthur Stevens. 15. was charged with wear ing a military uniform without au thority. Chief Constable Reeve said the boy had been brought from Prance to be dealt with by the civil authorities. He had an elder brother in the Army, but when on leave last November he de serted. In February, when the police made Inquiries, the accused boy dressed up in khaki and surrendered to the po lice, impersonating his brother. He was handed over to the military authorities and was sent to France in his brother's name. He joined a regiment in the front line. For the first sixteen days of the German offensive he wgs actually in action. He said he had killed many Germans —in fact, he could not miss them. His identity was subsequently dis covered and he was sent back to Eng land. In view of the facts the com petent military authority declined to grant necessary permit for a sum mary prosecution, and the magistrate agreed with the military decision. They ordered the case to be with drawn. Get Rid of That Persistent Cough If you are subject to weak lungs, heed the cough as a warning. ECK MAN'S ALTERATIVE may aid vou in stopping the cough. In addition, it is a valuable tonic and health-build er in such cases. No alcohol, nar cotic or habit-forming drugs. Twenty years' successful use. SOe nnil g1.,~0 Unities at all druggists or from manufacturer, postpaid. ECKMAN LABORATORY. Philadelphia. Sun Drying Effects Fuel Saving; Is Inexpensive Sun-drying has much to recom mend it, as there Is no expenditure of fuel and no danger of the fruits and vegetables becoming overheat ed. An Inexpensive tray may be made at home. Make an oblong frame, 36 inches long and 18 Inches wide, of four strips of wood, one and one-half inches wide, and one-half Inch thick. Galvanized wire netting of one-half inch mesh may be stretched across the bottom of the frame and fastened with small staples. Or laths one-eighth inch apart may be secured across the bot tom of the frame. If the trays are made of uniform size, they may be stacked one on top of the other and protected from the rain by canvas. Only bright, sunny days should be chosen for sun-drying, as rain and clew cause the products to decay. Place the trays between chairs, or on legs, to allow a complete circula tion of air under and above the fruits. Place cheese-cloth on the trays before ikying on the fruit. To prevent llies nnd mosquitoes from touching the fruit, a covering of Our AUGUST CLEARANCE SALE Is On In Full Blast 20 to 40 Per Cent. Reduction ON ALL SUMMER FOOTWEAR SEE OUR WINDOWS AND TABLES FOR WAR-TIME SAVINGS 20TH CENTURY SHOE CO. Everybody's Shoe Store Shoes That Wear 3 SOUTH MARKET SQUARE E. F. DEICHLER MGR. AUGUST 16, 191?. cheese-cloth should be placed over the fruit, supported so that It will not rest directly on the food. Once or twice during the day the vegetables or fruits should be turned so that the moisture can be evaporated evenly. After the products have dried the required length of time, the "con ditioning" stage follows. This is per haps the most important stage of the process of drying. Place the product in paper bags, boxes, or cartons. Once a day for three or four days pour the products from one box to another, so as to give the whole mass of vegetables and fruit an even degree of moisture. If it is found that any of the products are not com pletely dry, they should be returned to the drier again. With the conditioning stage com pleted, the vegetables are stored away. Glass jars, paper bags, tin cans, pasteboard boxes, or paraffin cartons make excellent receptables for the dry products. Any receptable which protects the product from moisture and mold is satisfactory. It proves convenient to pack sufficient vegetable or fruit for two or three meals in each bag. Dry products should be stored in a cool, dry, well ventilated place.—Dorothy B. Marsh in Good Housekeeping. Original "Buster Brown/' U. S. Airman, Hurt in France New York—Richard F. Outcault, Jr., the original "Buster Brown," a son of tho cartoonist, was Injured In an airplane accident In France a few weeks ago, according to letters received by friends of the family here to-day. . Young Outcault Is a member of " Mho 213 th aero squadron. It Is said 'his machine collided with two other planes when several hundred feet In the air. Tho extent of Outcault's injuries was not stated. Farm Produce Is Cheap on Haddonfield's Market Haddonfleld, N. J.—Hundreds of ears of fresh-cut corn at 15 and 20 cents a dozen, cabbages at four heads for 10 cents, many baskets of fine peaches and other vegetables and fruit at low prices and as women of the "community market" here could hand them out to eager customers at the curb corner of Kings highway and Tanner street, early this morn ing. Several farmers also opened stands there ancf disposed of their truck in a few hours. The market will continue several days a week all season.