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■ j [ CAMPAIGN OUTLINED' Qf Maryland, Easton And Delaware Dioceses Meet I WHOLE CHURCH^ ;ri• *o arid plan of the ' ■ ji,iign of the Protes-' |H ' i :r< !i, which will be , . very province, dlo- jj H . , ; the church in Amer jß 1 l*y leaders of the ■ , r , ; ,.y ai an all-day con-'] H church, Baltimore,’ B of the Dioceses of , B and Delaware. B*y ,'r. .r -h Hi arch in the Mary- B represented, Annapo- B i . •pe l hv ltev. Edward B {I He.'or of St. Anne's B Maprtider. D. D. f Chap- B of the Naval Acad- B .i.ilues 1,. Smiley. B tio/.cii delegates each B and Delaware dio- B ■! governor Phillips Lee ; B general chairman for] B • aied. The chief speak- B i>r Hoiiert W. Patton, direc- B , i i. ral campaign; William Bum ■■ a f renera 1 headquarters in , B S( ., A . v,!K. and the Kev. Dr. Philip B - A-.0-Aith Mr (loldshorough, rep- , B Maryland on the national com- ; B fa- n.pi'o’i'wide campaign, it was B !>. tin- speakers, is a mobili- B s !„, n ~f mire church, and will B „,,.hcYt!v man. woman and child in B and mission field within B up intliiem-e of the church. It will B ii,iii lionse-to-house visits to B H-ry Km ropaliaii on the church rolls B lV p.ir:>ii teams Its fundamental pur- B <-■■■•' r*■ mission advance and quick- B fr.uu; ll! !| “' growth and life of the I Tint general policy proposed In the B program includes co-operation with B Cio.rnin>•!t. voluntary and religious B oryiinzatmits in the patriotic side of B An.erii ini/t‘ it. it plans to make the B K;.isc(|ial Department a center of In- I j'i,,iai‘ fur co-ordinating existing B *irk .uni organizing new work, to mo- B bia/' 1 tim resources of the church be- B the purpose of making the for- B horti into good citizens. Every B parish will he hrought into touch wllh I iis foreign lioptiiation and literature, B speakers ami trained workers will le B pr.iviilnl. Services in English, instruc- B tiatt in \:nerican citizenship and ideals, B special social and educational work B through church agencies, and special B Hiapcis ;n meet the needs of foreign- B born cimgregalions ,are among the B provisions of the program. I Vur Left-Over- Fish I If you have a little left-over fish or B tneai ilia! you want to use up, com- B h"e s han appropriate vegetable, B "i-ilc a cream sauce and serve it at B die main course of your meal in little B . r ..ma li s made by cutting out clr of stale bread, hollowing out the s ,uni frying in deep fat a deli m hr„wn. Or you can make shells r D covering patty pans with pns- ami making them. ■ \ d.*lii i.ms garnish for ;t salad, when H uhiu she main course of the luncli- WII, as it is so often these hot sum- B days, is made by turning a mound B[- vmlr best jelly out into the centre Btfaglass plate, surrounding it with B ' ' halls of cream, cheese sprinkled B * ‘i I'.'iTika. and passing with it com r"'nid crackers that have been B h'lit soaked in ice water and then B fo* I ' l in i hot oven until brown. I “OUCH! THAT OLD I RHEUMATISM!” 8 Just got out that bottle of B Moan’s Liniment and 8 ‘ knock it galley-west’! B mi-.KKYI prepared for that 8 Yy quick switch in temperature, 8 , "ere vmi } I.cft you still, sore, H full uf r'acuinalic twinges? I o''”. 1 have had a bottle oi 8 * Xi:i s l-immcat handy that would B l li P the muscles, quieted 8 tni'i i., painful, affected part fl rubbing, bringing 8 /Llpial m all attacks of lumbago, m vat a, cvtoriul soreness, stiffness, S s ‘ r ra.i, mins, sprains. Get a bottle I 35c., 70c„ $1.40. * gggrjra 1 WnMmMISm I " Are You a * I Slave to Stoves? B J ' ur house heated only in ■ I \ H’U want to do away 8 I ti,c :rt and trouble of car- B ; 1 * -it’d a. hes through the B you want more heat B " c y ho: investigate the 1 9 j Heater I Ifosipra! I • ‘ • I —< K. 1 p' - ■ c- !° Yce & f ELDMEYER m L* m Northwest Streets. < 18 r*' —- — B > THE EVENING CAPITAL AND MARYLAND ANXAPOUS, MARYLAND, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 25,1910. If : ITEMS FBOM IGLEHART I <6> - - ■%> Mrs. Eunice Stoffie, wife of John Stoffle, of Philadelphia, Pa., a ydung woman of about nineteen, and daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. John Donaldson, passed away at her parents’ home near Iglehart, on Friday morning. Death was due to tuberculosis, caused from i “flu.” She was the second daughter. Mrs. Stoffle leaves a young daughter of twenty months. Beside her parents. ; husband and daughter, she is survived by four sisters and two brothers. The services were at the house and were held at 4 o’clock on Saturday after noon, and burial was in the family lot at Crownsville. Rev. Edward D. John son, rector of St. Anne’s, officiated. Quite a large crowd from Sherwood Forest, attended the Pershing parade In Washington on Wednesday. A large crowd from Iglehart to Par ole attended the carnival at Eastport on Thursday night and enjoyed it very much. It was one of the finest. Mrs. R. M. Worthington, of “Sunny I Banks,” teacher of Iglehart School No. j 10, attended the Teachers’ Meeting at | Annapolis on Friday and the school heads the list with 92 per cent, for best attendance during the term. They were awarded the banner, but had their choice of a handsome painting which they are all quite proud of. The school is doing wonders, but nothing more can be expected with such a com petent teacher and bright scholars. VOf time* a venturesome pioneer, dissatisfied " X/C J withthequality of his tobaccoaoil, would move Ulr out into the foothills of the Blue Ridge Moun~ W V yA _ _ V—Jrfifo in the Old Domioiofut ' ■ * t *-v __ * Virginia tobacco - improved y for three centuries For threo centuries the iirst families of Virginia have taken pride m the cultivation < of choice tobacco. > a' Today, tobacco experts say that not even < the finest Turkish leaf can compare with * golden Virginia for “life” and “sparkle.” And Virginia has a rich, full flavor and a fine fragrance that make it kleal for cigarettes. * j; To enjoy it most, smoke it straight—in a Piedmont all- Virginia cigarette. Ri'J . \ The Virginia Cigarette edmont ' !• NOTE—Piedmonts, with all their taste-quaEty, , 1 Q/^ coet Jbap than cigarettea of forogn-grown tobacco 1 • w w V which have to tack on the coat of Import duty.' 4 ||| If you want mil ralue in plaw of part walue, ask’ Jlfl MOP MOC for Piedmont, the cigarette. • LL ** , ? i. - v * t ’ ' . • i William F. Cochran, of Baltimore, j spent a few days last week at his I bungalow at Sherwood Forest. H. Henry Wilking. of Iglcdiart, with a few friends, attended the Democratic j Convention in Baltimore on Thurs day. J. W. Hutton and family have left Sherwood Forest for their home in Baltimore. Miss Virginia Taylor and niece have closed their bungalow at Sherwood Forest and returned to Baltimore. Dr. Dunbraeco and family of Sher wood Forest, were in Washington Wed nesday seeing the Pershing parade. 1 Mrs. Edward Donaldson, eldest ' daughter of Mr. and Mrg. John Donald son, who is living at Kane, Pa., was the guest of her parents last week near Iglehart. John Dorsey, of Baltimore, has mov-| * ed to his farm at Hammond's Cross -1 ing with his family and is now r making : it his home. Arthur Reid, who has been South on a business trip spent the week-end with Miss Hazel Nicholls at the “Vine- I yard.” Miss Ellen Proctor spent the week ! end in Washington. L. M. W. Strange & White Co., the Stores of Quality, 153-155-157 Main Street, ' Men’s, Boys’, and Little Gents’ head-to foot outfitters. 525 One-half the world doesn’t even know how the other half can afford to live. > (prices now compared WITH CIVIL WAR PERIOD —T7 — When our own Giyil War had ended lin 1865, when th£ ‘average price of commodities had tfisen 116 per cent as compared with ISftj), but wages, as de termined in the faprons United States Senate report of ISJIi, had advanced on the average only .43 per cent. With the ending of th! war, a decline In prices began at oiJi'ef, and within three years one-third of the extreme war time advance had been lost. The de cline was irregularly distributed, cot- j ton and cotton fcdods falling 50 per 1 cent —a natural consequence of the : lifting of the blockade in wages did not stop with the war. The average las computed for 5&66 was per cent above 1860. Uy-1869. wages aver-; aged 62 per cent hifeher than in that Ipre-war year, wliije prices averaged 'only 53 per cent it. Most people wjd ; remember what ’were the expectatidns. both in and out jof business the war. In ,the United States any rate during our own period of’ neutrality—a hint at European negotiations for peace caused a fall inltjte markets; the fa- ! miliar reason being the prevalent be lief that a great fall in prices through out the world, and, a great fall in la bor costs in Europe, would dislocate our own industrial organism. Since termination of the war would reopen i the world’s to Russia's wheat exports, the nrice Jof food would fall precipitously. With the ending of the purchases of war material by govern ments. supply of manufactured goods for other purposes would quickly over take demand. More than this, the re turn of Europe’s conscript soldiers to their former occupations, so it seemed, would crowd the avenues of European labor, bring down European prices, and, combined with the cessation of the war demands on industry, might easily introduce new and destructive competition with our own producers by European manufacturers.—Alex ander Dana Noyes in “The Financial Situation,” in the October Scribner. Worth Knowing A convenient way to melt chocolate ; is to put it Into a glass jar and stand it in hot wrater. ; The bones of a roast fowl and bits ; of left-over flesh are full of possibili- | j ties for the next meal. Immediately upon finishing the 1 cooking take all draughts off the kit j chen range and save fuel. If the candle is too large for the candlestick dip it into warm water until it has melted to the proper site Delicious extract of orange or lem> on is made by paring the rinds very •thin and putting them into a bottle of alcohol. Travelers can supply their wants hy visiting our Traveling Luggage Department. Strange and White Co., I 153-155-157 Main street. 525 Sand Vs, Blotting Paper la all the precautions for secrecy at ■ the Peace Conference blotting paper | was not forgotten. For, as most peo | pie know, if held to a mirror It re- > | Teals the writing whose ink it has dried, and therbv many a tale has been told in law courts and diplomacy. The English Foreign Office experi mented some years ago with black blotting paper, but it was abandoned, as the ink left a perceptible gray stain. So for documents of the high est sort diplomatists still use sand, sprinkled from a sort of pepper-cas tor—a primitive custom which ambas sadors share with pawnbrokers. Even the prohibitionists can't effec- j tually quench a thirst for knowneldge. The Strong Wit hot and tho Heat of Summer Bettor Than the Weak Old people whaare feeble and younger people who are weak, will be strengthened and enabled to go through the depressing heat of Summer by taking Grove's Taste loss chill Tonic It purifies and enriches the blood and makes you Strong. You can soon feel its Strengthening, Invigorating Effect. GROVE’S TASTELESS chill TONIC is an ex ceptionally good general strengthening tonic for pale, sickly children, for delicate Mothers, for Old Folks or any one of the family who has poor blood. It is pleasant to take. Price 60c. Perfectly Harmleeem Contalne ne Nux- Vomica or other Poleonous Drugs• Yon Khw What Prevents Vibiations Severe vibrations are a warning that lubrication is faulty. To prevent this troubleand the repair expense it causes, use only the highest grade oil—oil that flows freely and lubricates correctly at all temperatures —that lasts in good con dition for hundreds of miles —that gives minimum carbon trouble— applet ri ne FOR MOTOR CARS Look for the sign—the sign of a reliable dealer. ONE UNIFORM QUALITY THREE CONSISTENCIES Polarine Oil Polarine Oil Heavy Polarine Oil Extra Heavy Also, Polarine Transmission Oils and Greases for the lubrication of Motor Cars; Motor Trucks; Kerosene and Gasoline Tractors? Farm and Stationary Gas Engines; Motor cycles; Motor Boats, etc. For Sale by all Reliable Garages, Acces sory and Hardware Stores, etc. ✓ - -0; For quick pick-ups and steady, dependable power, buy clean-burning Standard Motor * ** , j Gasoline. jQi* \ STANDARD OIL COMPANY (NEW JERSEY) ' 411 " • 1 1 Polk Miller’s Liver Pills J The Old Fashioned Kind that do the work. The Mine formula lor $0 years. Unequalled for Biliousness. Sick Headache, Constipa* f A turn and Malaria. At all druggists. II |A Manufactured by Polk Miller Drug Co.. Inc, Richmond, Va. • JjyM .jh DUMFORD |1 THE OLD RELIABLE lv YEAST ft? POWDER Makes every bake —jr:—' dy a success. White, flaky btt cuits, light, spongy cakes, gems that *■*■* melt in yourmouth lt’s Rumford! Go buy it today!