' ■ ; • * '< - * * * v* ' SECOND SECTION. FRIDAY EVENING, pagbs.to , 6 HARRISBURG (§SpSP TELEGRAPH w»AK aw P flp JOIN "| | Caplan's j | flgy Watch Club i; |jl 1-r-The Club includes a selection of Ladles' and Gentlemen's Elgin g j" or Waitham Watches, open or hunting case; 0, 12 or 16 size, gold ! gj filled cases, guaranteed twenty and twenty-five years. j BQ 2 —WnUiies given to applicants when card is taken out. : □ 3—Payments to lie made in multiples of five cent a week for 25 II weeks. For example: live, ten, fifteen, twenty, twenty-five cents, etc., p i or the reverse order. I j 5 4.—ln event payments cannot be continued, watch can be returned. 1! i in l| •" s—lf payments are made weekly as indicated on' the card, a re- El fund of $1.65 cash will be allowed at maturity. ! I Q 6—ln case of death, payments cease and card is considered paid tip. fil B 7—A guarantee is given with every watch, to be a correct tiine | keeper, and to be a genuine Elgin or Waltham movement. This 1} I guarantee also covers the case. IH' D f; S —Payments are due Monday of each week and must be paid be- >j, ! : fore the close of business Saturday evening of same week. Call at our store and learn further particulars. £ I The P. H. Caplan Co. j 18 N. Fourth St. -- - jewelers j 0 Open Evenings. I IL^ H in! inr=)nr==irai inr=JH EOT H BREAD, CABBAGE, * AND DIGEST IT. "PAPE'S DIAPEPffI" No indigestion, no sour, gassy >p ur favorite foods without [ear. ° Most remedies give you relief soml- Stomach Or dyspepsia. times—they arc slow, but not sure. Diapepsin is quick, positive and puts Try it your stomach in a healthy condition so the misery won't come back. You feel different as soon as Pape's Do some foods you eat hit back— Diapepsin comes in contact with the , , , ... , nr.. . » stomach —distress just vanishes—your taste good, but work badly; ferment stomaoh Kets sw^.tj n „ Bases ; no into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, belching, no eructations of undigested sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or food, your head clears and you feel Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's fine. Diapepsin digests everything, leaving Cut an end t'> stomach trouble by nothing to sour and upset you. No ! getting a targe fifty-cent case of difference how badly your stomach is Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store, disordered, you get happy relief in ; You realize in live minutes how need livc minutes, but wlial pleases you less it is to suffer from indigestion, most is that it strengthens and regu- ! dyspepsia or any stomach disorder.— lates your stomach so you can eat i Advertisement. CAN 114.11 I I'l Ki: C WCEK? that cancer may be due fo starvation of the cells from lack <>f sun and light. Dr. Thomas S. Blair, "f 403 North He says it is oi-lv a theory, but backs Second street, is the author of an ar- "1' w ith arguments that seem c0n ...... ... , .. ~ vineins. He points out that radium 1,1 I'cbruarj num >er of the perhaps, gets its value in cancer cur- Medical Council, of which he is ed- ing from the fact that it can send the 1 itor. in which he advances a theory I rays of light deep into the flesh. Let me send you FREE PERFUME jfr f ?Write today for a testing bottle of ED.PINAUD'S LILAC ■y V J*-®? I i T£ e world's most famous perfume, every drop as sweet \ I as the living blossom. For handkerchief, atomizer and bath v \ y I & 1 after shaving. All thevaiue is in theperfumt?--yr»u don't XT Irn\ 9 pay extra for a fancy bottle. The quality is wonderful The V /A GLK price only 75c. (6 oz ) Send 4c. for the little bottle-enough W handkerchiefs. Write today. A o f»ARFUMER!E ED. PINAUD, Department M, iIA ED- PINAUD BUILDING NEW YORK I JOS. S. POU LTO^~~j AT 307 JV arket St. BREATHE FREEH! Hi STUFFED HEAD AT ONDE-END GAT.RRK >ly ClcaiiMiig. Healing Halm Instantly Clears Nose. llcad anil Throat — StO|>s Nasty Catarrhal Discharges. Dull Headache Uoet* Try "Ely's Cream Balm." Get a small bottle anyway, just to try it—Apply a little in the nostrils iind instantly your clogged nose and Hiopyed-up air passages of the head will open: you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning: the catarrh, cold-in-head or i atarrhal sore throat will lie gone. End such misery now! Get the Mtiall bottle of "Ely's Cream Halm" at any drug store. This sweet,fragrant I balm dissolves by the heat of the.nos-! ■ trlls; penetrates and heals the' in- ' tiamed, swollen membrane which lints j the nose, head and throat; clears the | air passages; stops nasty disehargt s j and a feeling of cleansing, soothing' relief comes immediately. Don't lay awake to-night struggling i for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils I closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrh] cr a. cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping Into the throat, arid raw dryness Is distressing but truly, needless. Put your faith —just once —In "Ely'." ! Cream Balm" and your cold or catarrh j will surely disappear.—Advertisement. | TOWNSHIP MID BUREAU UNDED WHY Districts Are Filing Reports With the New Branch of High way Department State Highway Commissioner E. M. Bigelow has under way the Bureau of Township Highways of the State High- j way Department, organized under the j Jones earth road act, passed by the i 1913 Legislature, and to it are coming reports from nearly ever)' °ne of the j 1,508 townships of the second class in: the State, giving the organization of, the boards of supervisors which will | work in eo-opertion with the bureau. j Two meetings of the county super- | visors have been held in accordance j with the provisions of Act 109 and an other is announced tor February 23,1 this being the Bucks county meeting, to be held at Doylestown. At these meet- j the township supervisors assemble J to discuss problems of roadmaking and i repair and to hear such instructions as the State Highway Department has to transmit regarding their work. At i the two meetings already held—onej at -Erie for that county and one at; Reading for Berks county nearly two-thirds of the supervisors of each county were present and expressed l great interest in the proceedings. The Erie meeting was addressed by First I Deputy Highway Commissioner Joseph \Y. Hunter, who has been recently up-; I pointed in charge of the Township Highway Bureau by Highway Com missioner E. M. Blgelow. The Bead ing meeting was addressed by Second j Deputy Highway Commissioner E. A. ■ Jones. Mr. Hunter expects to attend the Doylestown meeting and is work-; ing on a schedule of metings to be held in other counties during the Spring. Kittle is generally understood re-i garding the workings of the earth road law, or Act No. 440 of the 1913' Legislature. It was formed to supple ment the work of the State Highway Department as established by the Sproul act. and under its provisions a I general supervision of the highways and bridges maintained in whole or in part by aid of State moneys, ex cepting State or State-aid highways, | is provided for. Each township of the | second class in the State —there are; I.oOS of them —elects, at the municipal election, three supervisors, who meet with the auditors of their respective 1 townships on the lirst Monday in De cember and appoint a secretary and treasurer. This board of supervisors is authorized to levy a road tax not j exceeding ten mills. Each township coming under the provisions of the. act receives annually front the State f.O j per cent, of the total amount of road . tax collected in cash. An important part of the duties of the township supervisors is to divide the township into two or more road districts and employ a superintendent : for the cntiro»township or roadmasters for each district. These roadmasters are to be paid by the hour, their wages being fixed by the township su- j pervisors. As is the case under the Sproul act, the State is divided into districts, with 1% State highway superintendent assign >ed to each district. These State high way superintendents have general . charge over all township highways and bridges, which they must personally! visit and inspect at least once in each year. They must advise and direct how to repair, maintain and improve such highways an«l bridges, and, that they may be familiar with their du- I ties, they must examine the various j formations and deposits of gravel and stone In their districts to be used for I such purpose. Plans, specifications and estimates according to standards pre pared by the State Highway Depart ment must be approved by these su perintendents. One of the most important provis ions of the township bureau act is that , it gives the State Highway Depart ment the authority to furnish plans ind specifications to townships for new roads and bridges free of cost to the township. If a township is desirous of improving a certain road by correct ing the grade, building news bridges and culverts and putting up-to-date surface on the road, the Bureau of Township Highways will make the necessary surveys and draw up the olans and specifications free of all cost. All blank forms and books nec essary for the transaction of the town shit) supervisors' business are fur ' pished by the bureau without cost to the township. Deputy Highway Commissioner Hunter has drawn up the following set of tentative rules for the transac i tion of the business of the bureau, and they will be sent to the various boards 1 of townships supervisors in the near future. SHIRT SALE Manhattan Fancy Sh'rts 51.50 grade $1.15 82.00 grade, 51.38 52.50 grade SI.BB *3.00 -rade $2.25 153.75 grade 52.65 55.00 grade, $3.55 | #6.00 grade, $-1.45 UNDERWEAR $2.00 Keis Union Suits, 98c $1.50 American Hosiery Co. White Cashmere Shirts and drawers. »8c SI.OO Wool Odds and Knds, 60c SWEATERS $7.50 American Hosiery Co., $5.25 $6.50 American Hosiery Co., $5.25 56.50 Wright & Olt.son, $5.25 $5.00 4-in-l $3.25 GLOVES $16.00 Auto Gloves. . .SIO.OO $6.00 Auto Gloves. ...$3.75 $4.00 l.ined. ..$2.25 $1.50 Fownes & Dents kid, $1.15 Fa'dv's Third Street iUJOd {^ car Walnnf I WOMEN AND RELIGION' SUNDAY SCHOOL TOPIC Her First Field Has Always Been the Home and Children ! The International Sunday School lies- ! son Fop January 25 Is, "Serving Jesus."—Luke 8:13; 9:57-62; 10: 38*12 (By William T. Ellis) "The woman question" inescap | ably is one of to-day's living issues. 1 Every thoughtful person is bound to j face It squarely, and to look into it i deeply. Whatever Is merely super- j ' tlclal or inddential should be elimi- j ; nated. Thus the suffrage issue is | ! not "the woman question." Even the ! 1 so-called "feminist movement," ; which shatters the old conventions 1 and finds other sphere for woman | ; tiian that of wife, mother, and home-maker, is not sufficiently in-' ; elusive. Considered dispassionately, ; the distinctive place, the distinctive abilities, and distinctive mission of women must enter into any study of "the woman question." This may appropriately be done in connection > with the present Sunday School les son. For here we lind the attention iof millions of persons the world j around simultaneously concentrated j upon the New Testament stories | i that are sufficiently g eneral to | open up the whole "woman ques- | tion." As we walk with Mary of j Magdala, and Joanna and Susanna, who followed Jesus and ministered | to him of their substance; and as t we sit in the shadow of the hospi table Bethlehem home, where, the ] tired teacher so loved to resort, we I may consider what light the Bible | sheds upon this modern perplexity. A Frank Word About Women Whatever the future may hold, whether woman is to rule by ballot or by battle ax, or by ministry and inspiration, there are certain truths which may frankly be stated about woman's place in the past. Always her first field has been the home and the children. She has been potent in affecting the most inti- | mate and basic human conceptions, j Hers has been the shaping influence | upon life at its springs. She has ; made "home" a sweet word. The I picture of the Bethany home where Jesus delighted to visit is illumina tive. Always women have been more | religious than men. At all times and ] under all creeds they have been the j defenders of the t'aitli and the at tendants of the altar lires of spirit uality. This continues during to-day | both in the Christian Church and in j I pagan lands, "if a man is an incur • able religious animal", then the fe-' i male of the species is more religious! j than the male. No symptom on the i day's horizon is more alarming than I the modern increase in the number I , of women who give religion no place in their scheme of things, and who undertake to get along without Its | j restraints and its consolations. Always woman has been an ideal- I ist. That the claims of Jesus should j be so swiftly and deeply understood i by women is significant. It is a rare i church indeed that is hut attended j by more women than men. This also i is true of concerts, lectures, art ex- } j hibitions, and the highert classes of drama and all literary and ethical i occasions. The idealism of woman is ; apparent on every hand. ! Always woman has been the | heartener of men. Kipling makes! j one of his characters say "There ! 1 are just two kinds of women in the world: those who put strength into; men and those who take it out of j them." The friendship of Martha and i Mary evidently meant much to Jesus. This apparently indirect exer- ! cise of woman's power may not sat- I isfv some persons: but the armorer's; ! part in the battle is as real as that I ;of the warrior. Barrle's exquisite' • sketch of "Margaret Ogilvie" recites [ how his mother declared that she ■ would be proud to be the mother of Robert Louis Stevenson, as for I himself, Barrie vows that all he is or : has done he owes to his mother. 1 The world can ill afford to lose that [ kind of woman. The Ileal (Emancipation Here we come to a profound his- ' torical fact. Jesus Christ has been the real Emancipator of womanhood, j In His discipleship she has gone to newness of honor, to newness of serv- | , ice, and newness of character, i Through all the centuries, since one I little group of women were "last I . at the cross and first at the grave," i : women have been the best friends jof Jesus, even as He has been the j best friend of womanhood. A new sense of sisterly solidarity j has developed in Christianity. We ( might call this a noble sex con-1 sciousness. The passion of Christian ' woman for the welfare of the women i of the world is not often discussed I in the newspapers, but it is the j broadstand and most beautiful phase j of the whole "woman question." Woman's Ideal Man In return for what He has done for her, woman has lavished upon Christ the intensity and fullness of an unmeasured devotion. He has filled her vision of an ideal man. lis strength and tenderness, His mastery and His ministry, have sat sfied woman's loftiest aspirations. : The mothers who have raised their ions by the Christ-standard, and I have fired the hearts of those sons vitli the Christ-passion, have been I ihe greatest servants of the race. Is I here anything that would better I serve these new times, than more of! this spirit in the day's womanhood j The company of women who fol lowed Jesus, as we are told in this | lesson, were the fore-runners of an j innumerable host. It would exalt i the thinking, the living, or the! •haraeters of a multitude of us who I are talking losely about "the-woman I uestion" if we were to get a clear! vision of the type of womanhood vho in home and church and Christ ian women's organizations are mod estly seeking to help the world in the name of the Lord Jesus. Homelessness of the Leader Interjected into this lesson story, as if to accentuate the human needs of Jesus on the comfort that was brought Him by the sympathetic women, are the three instances of the men who wanted to follow Him. To the first the Master replied "The foxes have holes, the birds of the heavens have nests; but the Son of Man hath not where to lay His head." The second wanted lirst to bury his father, and the third to bid fare well to his family; but Jesus pointed out that all else must wait when the kingdom business is concerned. The urgency of the kingdom call sounds through these incidents. Ease at hofaie, social conventions, and the comforts of life are not for the one who gives himself to the mission of the kingdom, i A homeless, weary wanderer was I If you attempt to I of our JANUARY REDUCTION by our pro- I fits you* 11 finds it to be a dismal failure. On the other hand, I if you'll measure it as we measure any sale at the LiVeStore, b / I the savings made for every purchaser, you'll find it to be the I greatest, the most successful event in our many years of sue- I ■cessful merchandising. I PERHAPS YOU ARE NOT NOW, THEREFORE, COMES I familiar with our ideas of value. an opportunity to discover why this I Maybe you have never made that personal critical inspection, that store has S rown to rank fir9t in all ■ proof before purchase test which things a man's store should be and ■ precedes every sale we make. save money in doing so. I HERE'S FOOD FOR THOUGHT for I men who need clothing as well as those who think they don't. I Here are savings worthy anyone's consideration. I IJpL sls Suits and d**l Of A Overcoats, . S2O Suits and d*"| /* C A Overcoats, . yID»DU $25 Suits and C A and Overcoats mHP S3O Suits and (frO A fA I[J || Overcoats, . j yi Every Suit and Overcoat, Blacks y Jtg Included, Are Reduced. B ! I Copyright 1913 The Hou«e o( Kuppenheimer AL TERA TIONS FREE I g| 304 Market Streets Harrisburg Pa. g ■ Jesus and the hospitality in Bethany ' was the more precious because of this. The House of Hospitality The best traditions of Oriental I hospitality were fulfilled in that j Bethany home. A guest was not an occasional event, upsetting the house hold routine and creating an abnor mal life. These two gracious women ministered constantly by means of their home, a new form of Christian service which will come again to its own one of these days. A woman can do more for the world and for religion by the right use of her home j than by making speeches or writing | articles or serving on committees. Two types of women were host -1 esses in the Bethany home. Both. j were beloved friends of Jesus and ; honored by Him. Martha was the I "practical woman, of the housekeeper | type, with a deep sense of the im : portance of dinners; her husband ! would have heard from her had he j been late to meals. She was some ] what under the tyranny of pots and j pans. Means of hospitality had tm | perceptively taken the place of the : object of hospitality. We may make ; all excuse for Martha when we con i sider the crowd of men—Jesus and | the twelve, not to mention others— who were to be fed that day. But 1 sjie had allowed herself to be dls i tracted by her task. She was "rat tled," as an expressive colloquialism . I has it. A Wise Woman's Way : Now hospitality is more than the • ! giving of dinners; it is a sharing of i self. Everybody knows the type of s hostess who is too flustered to en s joy her guest, or to let her guest en ' joy her. The criticism that may ' fairly be made of Martha is that she s i had forgotten the old word of Ec ■ ] clesiastics. "There is a time for all I things." Mary, with keener spirlt -1 j ual intuition, saw that a great hour . i had come. This w~as no time to pot -1 j ter about the kitchen when a great j j teacher awaited companionship in ; i the guest room. Mary was the sort j of woman who perceives the lonell f ness of the life of the publicist and understands that the applause of the crowd is no balm for the wearl ness and loneliness of the spirit seek- ] lng sympathetic fellowship. A bit petulant Martha spoke Ir ritably to her sister and her guest; thus It usually comes about when we let mere things master us. Ten derly, and with the freedom of a privileged friend, Jesus Himself made answer in Mary's behalf "Martha, Martha, thou art anxious and trou bled about many things, but one thing is needful; and Mary hath chosen the good part, which shall not be taken away." That was as if He had said, "Tou have let yourself come under the yoke of mere transitory things. Mary has put first things first, and has chosen the permanent values. Din ners are daily affairs; when a great spiritual opportunity comes, It is unique and all else must stand aside or it." Ater all has been said, would it not help more than anything else toward the solution of "the woman question," and a hundred other questions that trouble our times. If more of us were to learn the art of quiet contemplation in the company of Jesus, viewing life's values as near ' ly as possible from His standpoint? To Keep the Skin Soft and Velvety ■ | Tho use of face powder during the r i cold weather months is chiefly respon- s 1 sible for so many rough skins and ■ | faded complexions. This is because 11 powder absorbs the natural moisture ( • i and exposes the delicate tissues to the • J blighting effect of the raw winds. A ■ | plain mayatone lotion does much to 11 restore the youthful tone and keep 1 ! the skin clear, soft and velvety. This t is prepared by dissolving an original • package of mayatone in one-half pint 1 witch hazel. Using it night and ( f. morning soon banishes all complexion - 1 troubles.—Advertisement. Praises This Remedy For Lung Trouble Many people ara led to believe that Lune Trouble Is a disease which can not be conquered. This Is wrong, as many have fully recovered their health. A change of climate has helped some, but many more have been restored to health by breathing the freshest air, eating well cooked wholesome food, be ing temperate in tliejr habits and add ing' the tonic qualities of Eckman's Al terative. a medicine for Throat and Lung Troubles. Investigate this case:— Bowling Green. Ky., R. No. 4. "Gentlemen: The Bprlng of 1908 I had a severe cough for six months. I tried all the medicine that my doctors recommended to me, but no result* came for the better. I had night sweats, and would cough and spit uirtll I got so weak I could hardly do any thing. But, as last. James Deerinff, ol' Glasgow Junction, Insisted that I try your medicine. In one week's time there was quite an improvement in my con dition, and after I had taken several bottles I felt as well as ever In my life. I firmly believe that Eckman'a Al terative will relieve any case of lung trouble if taken before the last stage. (Affidavit) A C. BETTERSWORTH. • (Above abbreviated; more on re quest.) Eckman's Alterative has been proven by many years' test to be most efTioa clous for severe Throat and Lung Affec tions, Bronchitis Bronchial Asthma. Stubborn Colds and In upbutlahig the system. Contains no narcotics, poisons or habit-forming drugs. Sold by lead ing druggists. Write the Eckman Lab oratory, Philadelphia, Pa., for booklet telling of recoveries and additional evi dence. Advertisement. 1 EDUCATIONAL MAKE NEW YEAR RESOLUTION to enroll next Monday la Day or Night School. SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 15 8. Market Square, Harrlstmrg, Pa. Harrisburg Business College Day and Night. Business, Shorthand and Civic Service. In dividual Instruction. 28th year. 329 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa.