16 ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S I ?& —■l I ASTRICH'S ' jfef 9 | 5 8 awF • Thousands of People Are Attending This Sale Daily *J§if 1 § £ <2fln I and are Carry,ng aWay the beSt barga, " S that 11 haS eVer been their good fortUne to get - Ever y da y brin « s new lots and greater reductions on the old ones. \\ \ * 5 ' n *?Pf A Sale Like This Only Comes Once in Twentv-fire YearsLS.'Sr.tSS2?/J,V gj' ilfe § | " |j A MAMMOTH SALE If 4 | &3 dlu Pla 1 " in8 J?®' o'* 0 '* T?, ,75 000 stoclc of new merchandise, consisting of Millinery, Shirts, Coats, Corsets, Gloves, Underwear Waists, Skirts, and all sorts of Ladies' Furnishings, Neckwear, c! Ribbons, etc. Come early it you can—but be sure to come —for particulars see circular left at your door. ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S ASTRICH'S 7DSENTACROSSTHE JORDAN BV JESUS These Men "Drummed" Up New Business Fields For the Kingdom of Heaven The International Sunday School Les son For January 11 Is "The Mis sion of the Seventy," Luke 10:1-34 (By William T. Ellis) . Every long distance train and steamship bears its quota of drum mers, or traveling salesmen. They go everywhere. At the present mo ment more than a hundred thousand of them are scattered over the con tinent. I have met them in remote Mesopotamia, in interior China, and on seven seas. They are the rep resentatives of the firm, the advance couriers of its outstretch. It is not irreverent to liken the seventy men whom Jesus sent across the Jordan to open up new territory for kingdom business to the drum mers of trade. They were to pro claim the message of the firm. In their persons was bound up the au thority and honor of their employer. To receive them was to receive him: to dishonor them was to repudiate him. The vision of the possibilities of the new business that might be done, which had first appeared to the head of the firm, was imparted to these solicitors, who went forth, in the approved fashion of modern trade, two by two. As one business man said. "Anybody can turn down one man. but it takes a strong man ■ to »urn down two." ■ I'ushiiig Into New Ficld.- ■ The curious notion that Chris ■ tianity should not be extended be ■ yond its present borders (an idea which it is well for us was not held by Asia in the days when Europe was pagan and America was un known) gets no support from the New Testament story. Here we find Jesus Himself casting a general's eye OUCH! ACHING JOINTS ~ RUB RHEUMATIC PAIN Rub All Soreness, Stiffness v.id Misery Right Out OLD TIME ST. JACOBS OIL t ' . 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Ideal for women anil ehil dren. Reeommended b.v physleluns. ns they arc positive, though very mild In their action. 10c and 25c Boxes. All Druggists HORO SAMCLNE CO.. Philadelphia, Pa. For quick, sure relief from hacking Coughs that annoy everyone, take GOFFS COUGH SYRUP Heals the Inflammation In the throat, relieves the soreness and stops the cough naturally. Contains no "dope" —no opiates. Get a Usc. or 50c. bottle todar- Money back by the dealer if it doesnt help you. ,-y-U ■ ■ m' • \iyr- ry®" r--., v - *v. -x u^i.•; • -v*r .*■ v- 1 |SP;*' » T - vr* . , r*jj 1 ,■ 1 *; p FRIDAY EVENING, EtAKIUSBURG TELEGRAPH - JANUARY 9.1914. upon the rich cities across the Jordan ' | and planning to share with them the ' truth which He had brought from j Heaven. Few travelers venture across the j I Jordan, but those who do are re-1 | paid by the wonderful ruins of Am j man, Jerash, Heshbon and Medaba. | I confess that not until 1 looked first I j upon the great marble remains ot'j Amman did I ever realize the mag- I I nificence of the civilization which j had flourished here in the time of t Jesus. He coveted these great cities I for the kingdom; even as Christian j strategists to-day look with yearning upon our own cities as keys to the' problem of world evangelization. The spectacle thrilled the heart of j Christ with thoughts of a ripe and i plenteous harvest, with few workers. This kingdom mind, if it may so be | termed, marks all who partake of the character of Christ. One indictment ' to be laid at the door of many of us I to-day is that we are not facing the j harvest field, and are not really con- i cerned over it. More of us are in- I terested in the machinery of the har- I vest, and every new invention in the I way of a patent spiritual harvester is | sure of attention; but we would i j rather tinker with futile wheels than i take a sickle and go out and do hand | reaping. Also we are not lacking for j j enthusiasm in harvest festivals and! domes; even when there is no real J harvest to celebrate. Pitiable? Of I course. But the passion for har- j ; vest increase and for new fields. 1 |is to be learned only in the school of the Lord of the harvest. The Unknown Seventy I The sending of the seventy is the I | largest bit of organization work by I Jesus of which we have record. Ami. I according to our modern notions, the| j press work was very poorly done, j I Not a single man of the seventy got i Ibis name in print! Evidently the ! head of the firm did not think that iho advertisement of his agents was an important matter. A drummer 1 told me the other day of a hot debate ; among a group of talesmen as to I whether the drummer's name should ! be conspicuously in the center of hirs | I business card, with the firm's name; I in small type down in the corner, or | vice versa. All the men except one i voted that the firm's name should be kept small, and the representatives' name should be printed -large! Which I reminded me of some kingdom drum-I mors I have met; but not of these ■ unknown seventy, who are "only re ! membered bv what they have done." Ilonor the seventy because they I i did their job. They went as sent. I I With one work in inind, they trav i eled unencumbered; the comfort of the. soldier is important only to the degree that it enhances bis efficiency. Many of us know that our lives are too greatly cluttered up with con veniences and luxuries and social usages and trivial engagements to permit us to do an\ real work. The seventy went out two by two—there lis your good society of fellow work - crs. the best in the world and they , made all tilings subservient to their I mission. A Louisville pastor has learned that j men are willing to be sent out upon I adequate tasks. His men are band ed together as Yokefellows, pledged I to do any reasonable definite service. Now a multitude are marveling at i tilt* great and varied work wrought j by these men, who g.. where they are | sent, whether it be to visit a definite I man in prison or to ''rive out by i automobile into the country fifty | miles to hold a service. One sage | observer remarked upon this. "If a I preacher is failing, or thinks he is failing, the way to cure the situation jis not to get a new preacher, but I to get an old bunch of laymen busy." j There is a profound message for j every congregation in this story of | the sending out of the seventy. "With Prayer, or Not at All" | The recent simultaneous "Every t .Member Canvas" of three denomina tions have taken as their motto, "With prayer, or not at all." These sagacious leaders have seen that the greater the activity the greater the need for spirltuullty. .More work is no excuse for less prayer, but quite the contt-ary. There is significance lu the fact that right in the heart of this lesson of going—a study in how to be busy for the kingdom— comes the great lesson on prayer. There are many reasons why this should be so. One is that the Lord wants all His friends to have an equal share In His work. That is why the humble old saint, whose life is lived within the four walls of a home, may labor as effectively by her pray ers as the busy, talented Christian I out in the thick of the fight. Prob- I ably many a preacher or missionary or executive leader has been given public credit for Christian victories, won by the prayers of unsuspected and secluded saints. The conviction is growing that our need of needs to-day in Christian work is for deeplv devoted disciples who are skilled in that irresistible form of warfare sometimes cal'ed "knee drill." The sense of crisis which seems to have burdened the Master's soul as He pleaded with the seventy—the active workers—to pray the Lord of the harvest that He would thrust forth workers into the field, pervades the most alert Christian conscious ness of our own day. Never were the "nations in commotion" more visibly than now. A whole set of new problems confront the church WorldlineßS has ingratiated its in sidious power into the most sacred places. The call comes hot from the ! lips of the Christ Himself for a pray ing dlacipleship. and for a disciple ship willing to be sent. In Ainba-smulorlal Dignity On the main street of Peking stands a gray granite arch, to com memorate the death of Baron Ketler. the German minister, at the hands of the Boxers. The Chinese had to make reparation in this and other forms, because the man slain was "Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary" of the German Em peror. He was clothed with repre sentative powers. The honor and dignity of the German name were bound up in his person. The high-sounding title, "envoy extraordinary and minister pleni potentiary," applies peculiarly to the Christian worker. He goes forth clothed with full authority. What said Jesus? "He that heareth you lieareth Ale: and he that rejecteth you rejecteth Me." That is King's business, is it not? The seventy, and all who follow in their train, were no ordinary men; it has been inadequate to liken them to drummers of trade. They have the authority to say, "We are am bassadors therefore on behalf of ( hrlst, as though God were entreat ing by lis; we beseech you on behalf of Christ, be ye reconciled to God." These early pioneers returned elat ed over their success. They were astonished to find how easv and re sultful Christian work really is when one actually undertakes it. In their jubilation they were In danger o? that most subtle and perilous beset ment, spiritual pride. So the Master bade them rejoice most of all that they themselves were redeemed men. and that they belonged to the king dom they proclaimed. For only tie saved can successfully serve. The Show Is Now Being Conducted At Our Store business is changing—growing swifter, bigger, more extensive, more precise, and more exacting. And business methods are changing also; they must to keep up with the mark of progress. 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Thou- Every office needs Its canda of modern offices , n £? £ ■use them because of 4 a a booksv of technical and B tnietlonf ° fine" 'appee r- I' f \ | \\/ £ Th^ a Stability. *They ta are V I\J VV • VULLvIWI vitf latere made In ail steel and ? f modern office furnl- In wood with steel in- * *t . « . turo - bel "S b u, J t wlth to meet the require^ 105 North Second Street II 18 North Court Street and sanitary leg 1 bases. ments of any business* * c . an adaed to a —large or small section at a time aa the ' . library grows. MAJESTIC' To-morrow, matinee uml night— "Within the Law." All next week "The Inside of the White Slave Traffic." OIII'HKtM Keith Vaudeville—Every afternoon and evening. COI.OMAI, Vaudeville and Pictures—Every after noon and evening. "WITHIN THE I,AW" "Within the Ijaw," Bayard Veiller's new play of absorbing heart interest which The American Play Company Is to offer as the attraction at the Ma jestic Theater to-morrow, matinee and night, is an exciting ilrama of contem poraneous American life in a metropo lis. replete with thrills and surprises. The heroine. "Mary Turner," develops from a timlU, shrinking girl into a wo man of extraordinary daring and re sourcefulness. living by her wits and evading the law, and using the law to protect herself.—Advertisement. THE WHITE SLAVE PICTURES The abominable trafficking: in human flesh and blood has become so wide spread and the methods used in secur ing victims so bold that the public is awakened to a need for n general cam paign of education on this subject. The quickest, surest and most interesting method of reaching' the attention of the American public is by means of the motion pictures to be presented at the Majestic Theater next week entitled "The Inside of the White Slave Traffic." j \ —Advertisement. HO(iS FOR THE YOUNGSTERS j As finished an animal act as tbe Or ' pheum has exploited is Ik ward's j musical ponies, who actually rljgr out 1 ' "The Last Rose of Summer" wjth bells ■ on their heads anil apparently without a conductor. A troupe of trained dogs, who have even more than horse sense, assist them to complete a really amaz- I Ingr series of feats. They are one of the i decidedly clever turns supporting Bert Clark and Hamilton, England's | celebrated musical comedy stars, whose appearance at the Orpheuni is causing j a small sensation. For next week the | management is announcing the local j I engagement of Fatlma. the wonderful | Turkish dancer, who proved a terrific, \ sensation at Hammerstein's New York ' theater last summer for seven consecu- I I tive weeks. The celebrated dancer is said to be "distinctly individual," and | she offers a specaclar dance in beauti ful stage settings that Is said to be i the very poetry of motion.—Advertise ment. AT THE COI.OMAI. j The Seven Castelluehes, presenting a | novelty musical act of thw highest • order, head the good things that came to the Colonial yesterday. These musi j cal artists are all virtuosos of a variety J of brass instruments and they produce i j whirls of harmony that fairly bring the ! house to its feet. Their staging and I costuming is effective also. Pierce and Maizee do a clever vocal and comedy turn, and George Moore is a clever j comedian with much originality. Coun- I try St»re will be a special feature of | to-night's performances. ■ — Advertise | ment. \ It 'TOR I \ THE i I'EII j At this theater to-day a picture will jhe shown with a cast of more than j lltft, and with the only and inimitable it Thomas W. Boss, the foremost of American comedians in the leading role, that real play of true American life and heart Interest. "Checkers," has been given to the motion picture going public by the All Star Feature Corpora tion. A Broadway cast has been carefully selected for the presentation of this scilent drama, and In support of Air. Boss there Is to be seen many of the original company, and many faces which have for a number of years been Identified with various of the moro prominent stock companies of the coun try. In order to secure the necessary local atmosphere of the racing life, the pro ducers have at tremendous expense had their company quartered at the Laurel and Havre de Grace race courses in Maryland, and as a result, the picture abounds with views of thoroughbreds pounding down the stretch In races, the morning workouts, the crowds at the grand stands, etc. "Checkers," in six reels and more than 250 scenes, will be shown at this theater to-day.—Ad vertisement. > Sneezing? @ There's no need of it. Sniff little Kondon's, the original and genuine Catarrhal Jelly, up the nostrils. Its soothing, healipg properties quickly re lieve you. Best thing for hay fever,colds, catarrh, sore throat, catarrhal headache, nose bleed, deafness, etc. Relieves the condition which causes snoring. Sold only in 25c and 50c sanitary tubes by druggists or direct. Sample free. Write Koudoir. Mlg. Co.. Minneapolis. Minn. COMB SAGE TEI 111 HAIR 10 DARKEN I! Grandma Kept || el . | A „ Dark,