, .l m. #pw* 1 r ' - - * '#*■;"■ "'- "•" t .' s ... '" % .'. ''' ''' . ' •/,' .' " " •<;■-■ '• " • r ; ' '" ' ' ' ;• ; ; . •- V '•' v "'' " ' ' SECOND SECTION. FRIDAY EVENING, H ARRISBURG £fl|pt? TELEGRAPH 1 JANUARY 16, 1914. Brown Your Hair Don't Be Misled Into Thinking That You Can "Restore" the Color by Any Gradual Process Thr Only One Satisfactory Way la To VSE WALNUT TINT HAIR STAIN The Attradlrraru of Rich Hrowa Hair la Beyond Compare Wo all know that gray, streaked or failed hair spoils a woman's looks and takes away the charm of what might otherwise be an attractive or pretty face. Why then, will some women let their hair remain so unattractive, when It Is bo simple and easy to remedy this de fect in a few moments' time and with hardly any trouble? Mrs. Potter's Walnut Tint Hair Stain has been tried and tested and has been in constant use by thousands upon tiiottsands of women for more than lf> years. It has proven Itself over and over again as being the most depend able and satisfactory stain ever offered. Can not be detected, will positively not wash off or rub off. acts instantly, and will not injure the hair. You simply brush or comb it into the hair and presto! all your gray and streaked hair has vanished and in its place you have the most beautiful brown of any shade von desire. Or you can have it black if you preier. Mrs. Potter's Walnut Tint llair Stain is sold by llrst-cluss druggists oterv whore. The price is Cne Dollar, and a bottle should last you a year. Satisfac tion guaranteed. Don't accept a substi t u te. If you prefer a test before buying, send 25 cents for a trial package, with full directions and a valuable book on the care of the hair.. Trial packages are not sold by dealers and can only be obtained by sending direct to us. Address Mrs. Potter's Hygienic Sup ply Co.. 2032 Uroton Bldg., Cincinnati, Ohio.—Advert isement. ■ a HH »r» curable. All kinds H ■ |jl H SjP M f mean suffering and Bl %H danger. The CAUSE I H ia always internal. E 9 yBUI JM BbV Dr. Leonhardt's W HEM _ R Q| D tablets produce tmazin? r«irolts by attacking the INTERNAL CAUSE. The piles are dried up and permanently cured. 24 days' treatment. SI.OO. DR. LEONHARDT CO.. Buffalo, N. Y. ffreebooU Sold by Kennedy Medicine Store, Harrlebarg. J. A. McOurdy. Uteelton. and dealers. MERCHANTS -«lny trip, peraomillr conducted to Savannah, Jacksonville nml St. Auicus sso.oo Including transportation. meals and stateroom accommodations on steamer, hotel accommodations. drives, etc. Leave Baltimore on new S. S. Suwan nee, Monday, February 16. I'or itiner ary, reservations, etc.. address W. P. Turner, P. T. M.. Baltimore, Md. 1111111111111111 Ip*! 5 Factory-Outlet H jfjj jgg Economy Shoes [o| Are Always Bargains 7^^ |7=n During the month of January sacri- Jr . ' ' lice prices the gory red prices If=l prices made to clear out all the sea- - [|§ ARE YOU GOING TO SHARE IN js=il THESE EXTRA INDUCEMENTS? = [E===i| Men's English Men's Tan Rus- Men's Black rgl Walking Bals sia Calf Button Calf Bluchers fi^l y $1.98 Goodyear Welta ' Lew Heels -p 1 .c/O tf»*i qo ZHZ jSHB lg=il Black Calf; Blind Oak Soles. Nab »——. Eyelets by Toe Shapes Not All Sizes . m o==ll Values $3.00 Value $2.50 Value $3.90 rp - | Men's $1.25 QO n Men's 4-Buckle tf|| in Buckle Arctics •'OC Arctics $2 Quality [ 3$ \ jß] $1.98 Button and Lace |5) A (Si F u T ° e> High Kidney" S^ l "' C "' hil> ° &f ) ' 1 High Heels Heels. S °l es yj y yS' A H=4 Va'.ues $3.00 Values $3.00 Values $3.00 Men's $2.25 Wale, Women's 50c Rub- {EE3| Goodyear Bucklt bers {(D |p ■ | $1.69 Mostly Large Sizes —&&= Boys' High Cut Little Boys' Satin j Men's $2.00 Sat- b=~l IIIIP^ r~—, Shoes Calf Shoes i n Calf Shoes r—jt 4t||§ lltlbl ~ $1.98 98c $1.49 td ® Size, 5, Button and Bin- Blucher Style , SI Values $3.50 Sizes to 13 Solid Oak Soles IS m Factory Outlet Shoe Co. l§) 16 N. Fourth St. wAiwgMjwow. F. C. JENNINGS AT f BIBLE CONFERENCE; Well-known Student of Scriptures Will Address Harrisburg Audiences The third monthly conference of the j Harrlsburg Bible Conference Associa tion will be held Monday and Tues day. afternoon and evening, January 26-27, in the First Baptist Churi-li. Second and Pine streets. F. Jen nings, of New York city, will give a series of four talks on "Is the Bible the Word of God?" The Harrisburg Monthly.Bible Con ference is supported largely by bust- | ness men of the city and was organ- ; ized for the purpose of encouraging Bible study. It has already done a ' good work in this line and is attract- I ing much attention. Mr. Jennings will make his first ap- ; pearance in Harrisburg next week. He 1 is a scholarly man and deep student I of the Scriptures. President Wilson Plans to Halt Office Grab . Special to The Telegraph I Washington. Jan. 16. President I Wilson let it be known to-day he op- I posed a return of the "spoils system"] of postofl'ice appointments and would; veto the postoffice appropriation billj now before tho unless (he; "rider" exempting assistant postmas- j ters from the classified service iselimi-l nated. The President, it is understood .hasj decided to call a halt to what has; been charged by civil service advo- j 1 cates as a tendency in Congress to break down the merit system. WHEN" VOi' TRY TO ECONOMIZE By buying lower-priced player-pianos than we offer, it's like "stopping the , clock to save time." Investigate. J. 11. Troup .Music House, 15 South Mar ket Square.—Advertisement. W. c. T. V. si'ECIAI, SERVICES Blain. Pa., Jan. 16. —On February ! IS the Woman's Christian Temperance- I nion at Stony Poirt will hold special I; services In the United Evangelical,' Church, p GOFF'S COUGH SYRUP | raises the phlegm in your throat j without painful coughing. Heals irri- ; tat ion; allays soreness; brings relief j from chest colds, bronchitis, coughs j that "hang on," grippe, asthma, croup j and whooping cough. Absolutely : harmless. Contains no opiates. Get j a 25c. or 50e. bottle today. Money j back by the dealer if it doesn't help i you. ' Titanic Unseaworthy; Plea in Damage Suit | Brought by Survivor London, Jan. 16.—The plea that the I Tllanic was unseaworthy when she left Kngland In April, 1912. on her I disastrous maiden trip to the United ; States which cost tho lives of over 1,500 people is to be advanced in a j suit for damages brought against the ; White Star Line by Thomas Whlteley, i one of the surviving stewards. The plaintiff sustained a fracture of the right leg in the wreck. Cold Storage Egg Test Case in Court The Lrelsford Packing and Storage Company, Of this city, was named as defendant in a test case brought in the January criminal court to-day by State Dairy and Food Commissioner James Foust, charging it with violat ing the State law relative to cold stor age eggs. Tho section under which the prose cution was brought prohibits the transfer of eggs from cold storage except for sale; in other words none may be taken out of one cold storage i plant and placed in another. I The specific case concerned the j transfer of twenty-eight craies of eggs i from the local plant to a smaller one. : I AST CHANCE TO GET A VTCTROLA ;On our liberal Club Plan. Only thirty i more to be sold. If you want to take ! advantage of this offer—take it NOW. J. H. Troup Music House, 15 South | Market Square.—Advertisement. True Bills Found in Three Murder Cases Prior to adjourning tT> visiting the ; county almshouse to-day the Dauphin county grand jnify to-day found true bills against three defendants charg ed with murder, none of which however will likely be tried at tho present term. During the morning Edward G. Smith, the • youth, who was charged with robbing and killing his aged grandfather. John Bush, near Ingle nook, was indicted. The others slated were John Thomas, and Steve Doncar. Thomas is alleged to have killed a fel low negro; l.oncar Is a Steelton foreigner who killed his wife and Is now a fugitive. The grand Jury yesterday Indicted Hans Solbring, the Stale insante hospl tiil attendant, and District Attorney St roup said he meant to begin this trial before January sessions ends to morrow. Augustus Bell was tilted $1 and sentenced to four months in Jai) for adultery: Ktnma llouser got the same sentence: I Hick Sliaeffer got nine months for carrying concealed deadly weapons and Israel Waltner got four months for attacking a woman. Retail Grocers Decide to Cut Out Middleman fly dissociated Press Pittsburgh, Jan. 16. —■ Retail grocers of the Pittsburgh district, met here yes terday, and formed a .lobbing associa tion through which they hope to elimi nate the middleman and thus lower the cost of living. The leaders claim they will be able to make a reduction of from 1n to 110 per cent in grocery goods by buy tag in wholesale quantities Be sides Allegheny county, grocers from nineteen counties of Western Pennsyl vania. live In Eastern Ohio and four In , West Virginia joined the body. The association is capitalized at {I.OOO 000 WHOI IS ONE REM. "GOOD SAMARITAN"? Title Is Reserved For Those Who Help Those Whom They Owe Nothing Ihe International Sunday School Les son For Janunry 18tli Is "The Good Samaritan."—Luke 10:23-37 (By William T. Ellis) Petrified phrases form a large part of common speech; everybody uses the words "Good Samaritan," but few who do so understand their real point. A man is not "a good Samaritan" when he helps a mem ber of his own lodge or church, or an old friend, or a fellow townsman, or one of his own kinfolk. He is worthy of praise when he does this, but he is not in the good Samaritan class. That title is reserved for the Irish who help Italians, for the Jews who are kind to Russians, for the British who deal tenderly with Ger mans, for the Californians who suc cor Japanese, for the Texans who serve Mexicans, for the Protes tants who play brother to no man Catholics, for the white men who minister to the negroes, and for all others who give friendliness where unfriendliness might bo ex pected. The whole point of this story is that an alien did a good deed to a hereditary enemy who despised him. It was no mere kindness of man to man, of friend to friend. The good Samaritan stands as the type of those who go outside their own crowd and their own natural sympathies and their own racial group to do a kind ness to the needy. For "the Jews have no dealings with the Samari tans." The poorest Jew counted hijnself better than the greatest Samaritan. The latter was of mixed heathen blood, and so was disdained and despised. But when a Jewish wayfarer fell among thieves on the Jericho road his own nationals, the priest and the Levlte, both of whom should have worn the * spirit of "nobless oblige" on their hearts passed him by in selfish unconcern. And the "foreigner," the "heatehn" Samaritan gave instant, efficient and continuous help to the man tvho was down. This is a good story for these times. For ourß is the centurv of cosmopolitanism. We are learning Ihe lesson of world-brotherhood. The basic, human ties that underlie all national or racial groupings are un derstood as never before. We are shaping our international relations and our Christian civilization to that ideal. When north mid-China was starving, a few years ago, and the prosperous Chinese themselves were heedless, it was the people of the United • States and Canada who sent the relief which broke the famine. So to-day this western, world is hear ing the cry of starving Albanians and Bulgarians. The earth is full of the good Samaritan spirit in this year of our Lord, 1914. No other book has so many inter nal evidences of genuineness as the Bible. Thus, this little story tells how the traveler "wont down" from Jerusalem to Jericho. Those of us who have been over the road know how he "went down," a descent of almost a mile in a short journey of about twenty miles. Jericho lies In the deepest depression of the earth's surface, which is the valley of the Dead Sea. That difficult road haa been, by on* of the strange persistences so common In the Orient, a resort for thieves from time Immemorial. Only recently have the .Turkish soldiers made It reasonably safe, and forced the line of outlawry to the Jordan River. Every hearer of the story, as Jesus told It, recognized the appro priate setting of the Incident on that lonely and dangerous road; which now, however, is safely traveled by hundreds of pilgrims every year. A rest house and souvenir shop to-dav stands on the reputed site of the scene. Typically Oriental, too, is the eagerness of the priest and the Le vite to avoid entangling themselves in the scrapa "Don't mix up in the other man's trouble," is the seltish rule there. In China they will let a man drown, rather than try to suc cor him. A rare Samaritan was the hero of the parable, to take personal responsibility for the stranger in trouble, and put himself to incon venience and expense. 1 met a young American Jew at Jaffa once who took exactly this same sort of care of a poor old woman whom he met in the steamship office, eager to get to Alexandria. He was a modern im provement on the priest ajid the De vite. The parable points the truth that life is won by deeds of kindness. To have life, which is fullness of experi ence, we must give of ourselves to other lives. "A man's life consists of the number of things to which he is alive." A wealthy western busi ness man boasted to me recently that he has never been a hundred miles from his native city; and he has no interests except his business of making money. Poor fellow! I pitied him more than any beggar I saw on his city's streets. He cannot even see why it is that his business is slipping away from him, he is los ing money, and his soul is like a shriveled pea. He has missed life. Had he. been wise enough to give he would have been able really to live. The niggardly, self-serving, self-en grossed life misses even the little goals at which it alms. The Good Samaritan way is the way of wis dom, as well as of helpfulness. Altru ism is a workable philosophy. Red Cross Society Will Receive / Funds For Japan Sufferers The local Red Cross Society has re ceived notice of an appeal inadc by President Wilson to the country to aid the suffers from the volcanic eruption in Japan. The local society is ready to receive any contribution Irom the people of Tlarrisburg. George YV. Ueily, the treasurer of the society, will receive any funds at the Tlarrisburg Trust Company and the local newspaper offices wili turn over any funds received to him. GOVERNMENT WINS FIGHT AGAINST li.VBOK IN AFRICA Capo Town, Union of South Africa. Jan. 16.—Dispatches from all parts of the union report that the strikers are returning to work and that, victory lias been won by the government in tho struggle with the Federation of Trades. ItBADY FOII APPQINTMUNTS Washington, r>. « Uisap uolnted. S Continuing With I || Renewed Vigor I H HARRISBURG'S ONE REALLY 1 REMARKA ON MEN'S APPAREL I DOU MARK DOWN > SALE s of KuprentioßCf in its Third JBJ- Big Week Every advantage possible to give is incorporated in this sale. Some offer lower prices, of course, on goods 0 of lower quality and lesser worth. A If wßm S2O suit or overcoat cannot be sold at J fl|||l |Ki |j less than $16.50 at this time of the 1 year no matter who claims to do it. 181 W If you see merchan- Our clearance prices P! dise styled are intended to get out B our word for it the former price we putin. If you fl'li IJilSl II price, as slated, is ficti- atl y e ] se j s g e t_ JSc|lL |ajj tious. Merchants are not jfcZyi T Jggr sg Copyright 1913 The House of KuppenHdw* n| sls Values djl O fA I Suits Marked * * I ; S2O Values (M /? f A I « nd Marked . . SIO.OU I Over- $25 Values (Ol f A I r -lMarked . . «p£I.DU I S3O Values dJO A PA I Marked . . I I • 304 Market St. Harrisburg Pa. Motorcycle Cop Climbs Through Window to Save Woman From Her Spouse By climbing through a window In the home of Clarence Murray at 232 Cherry strcret last night Motorcyclo Policeman Shelhaus was able to res cue Mrs. Murray from her husband, who was trying to beat her. it is said, with broomsticks and chairs. Murray was drinking, it is said, and | aroused the neighbors with his abuse j of his wife. He was given a hearing by Mayor Royal this afternoon. . TYPOS TO HO LI? BANQUKT Harrlsbnrg Typographical Union, No. 14. will celebrate the anniversary of the birth of Benjamin Franklin, Satur day evening, with a banquet at the Ho tel Dauphin. John Wisp is chairman of the banquet committee and .1. C. Bicker Is secretary of tills committee. IIAISRir RIMPIiB ON CAMS Charged with causing a disturbance on a Humnwlstown car, Joseph Iveefer and W. Ream, both of Palmyra, were arrested last evening. At a hearing before Alderman Ilovertcr, at 3.15 o'clock this afternoon, the two men averts held for court. Senator John T. Fisher, of 27th District, Dies Shamokin, Pa., Jan. L6.—John T. Fisher, of Shamokin. who represented the Twenty-seventh senatorial district in the State Senate, died to-day of double pneumonia in a Philadelphia hospital to which he hud been taken in an effort to save his life. M. Fisher was elected a senator two yeas ago as a Democrat. lie had pre viously served two terms as an assem blyman In the sessions of 1901 and 1903. ITe was 01 years old. PI.AN SMOKER Arrangements have been completed for the smoker and open meeting to be held by the G. R. C. Knights of St. j George Branch, No. 168, Sunday after ' noon at 2 o'clock, at the meeting rooms, i Fifteenth and Market streets. The ad dress of welcome will be made by Pres ident John Czernlskl of the local branch. Supreme President Joseph H. Kidman of Pittsburgh, will deliver an address. HUM Alt'aL'lSS FOII PHII.ADHLPIII A Washington, D. C., .lun. 16. —Phila- delphia and Pittsburgh bankers ap peared before the Federal Bank Or ganisation Committee here to-day to urge the claims of their cities for regional reserve banks. U 1,. Rue, chairman of the Philadelphia Clearing Mouse, was selected to speak llrsl for Philadelphia and Pittsburgh bankers waited to bo heard next. NERVES TREATED FREE DK. PK AMi LIN MiI.KM. The Great Spe cialist, Ulvea New Hook find 92,50 Worth of Neuropathic Treatment Prce. Sick people whose nerves are weak or deranged—who have weak heart, liver, stomach or bladder; blues , headache, dizziness or dullness; nervous dyspep sia, Irritability, cold hands and feet, shortness of breath, palpitation or ir regular heart-beat, dropsy, drowsiness, nervousness, sleeplessness, trembling, wandering pains, backache, irrltablo spine, rheumatism, hysteria—would do well to accept Dr. Miles" liberal offer. You may never have another oppor tunity. His Book contains many remarkabla cures after tive to twenty local physi cians and specialists failed. It also con. tains endorsements from Bishops, Clergymen, Statesmen, Editors, Busi ness Men, Farmers, etc. Send for Remarkable Cures la Yam State. His Improved Treatments for these diseases are the result of 30 years' ex perience and are thoroughly scientific) and remarkably successful, so much so that he does not hesitate to offer Free Treatments to the sick that thev ma.v test tliem at his expense. Write al once. Describe your case, and he will send you a two-pound Treatment and a new Book Free. Address Dr. Franklin Mile*, Dept. NS. 525 to 555 Main St., Elkhart, ind.—Advertisement.