12 "SUNKIST" Oranges Ripened^ Special Sale All Next Week # S> j\ ,i E the have they want of " Sunkist M seedless oranges—the safe and healthful treat 7/ || i for children. The little codgers cry for these sweet, juicy oranges. No seeds or fibre to hurt them. fmJm "Sunkist" fruit is the cleanest of all fruits—never touched by bare hands. Every "Sunkist" orange and lemon is picked, wrapped in Jw J® tiSSUC papcr ' 811(1 packcd f ° r by cxpcrts who wcar clcan » white > 0011011 gloves. "Sunkist" packing houses are clean, airy, sanitary. rf "W i "Sunkist" Oranges Do Y jMMMMweminMimieiemniieniieiemiemiee •> J Broadwau I ;!! 1 Jones r| j; i<»! ' From the Play of }!! '' George M. Cohan jo' * ► —————— f T i :: b, II t J I EDWARD MARSHALL (f j o if 4 » VIA FWtwnpfc fna Sum blk Phj I ❖ 4 ► lemiwweieieiieieimiwtweuemieiieiiewieiieimiee I Copyright, 1813, bj O. W. Dillingham Company Her manner now became more seri ous and rather puzzling. It was not as If he had done anything which dis pleased her, it was not even as if she thought he might; it was only that of the delightful woman who ia wonder ing if, presently, she may not think he might She was not suspicious, she inspected that she might suspect. Ha knew It; men always know when worn m are beginning to wonder if they had lot better very soon begin to wonder, t's the only intuition mere men have. Phe others are all feminine mono po les. Presently, while he waited, acutely (onadouß that some unpleasant ele ment had entered into the situation, but densely Ignorant of Its character; And while she calmly went about the FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY 30, 1914. was not too late; she would be a spug next year; not one of those who do not give—that is not in accord with the real Christian spirit. She would give, but she would give what she had received! I have called the society which I am organizing the Society for the Passing on of Useful Gifts, S-P-U-G and every woman is eligible. There are no dues, and the only requisite to membership is a good memory. It would never do to pass back to Aunt Jane, for instance, the shoe bag she has passed on to me. Such mistakes have an embarrassing effect on kin reunions and cause a slump In the Family Tie." Then she carefully tied to each gift the card that came with it, bearing Merry Xmas Greetings, Undying Love, Fond Remembrances, Best Wishes etc.; wrapped each gift in tissue pa per and put It away, to be brought forth next year, when there would be a new card attached and It would be sent on its blithsome holiday Journey. If there are any among you who have received more hairpin holders than you have hairs; whose Christmas tree held so many bags it looked as if it had been attacked by the bag worb, and who got as many bed slip bers as if you were a centipede and suffered with cold feet, Join the New Order of Spugs, a Society for the Passing on of Useless Gifts! FRANCES L. GARSIDE. business of her office management, at which, it may as well be stated now as ever, she showed unmistakable signs of perfect competence, she went to a complicated filing cabinet, extracted from it certain other papers, carried them across the room to the deek near which he had found a seat, laid them on that desk, then slowly turned and faced him "Do you know that Mr. Pembroke, of the Consolidated, is here in town?" the asked, after a second's hesitation. To her great satisfaction, which she would not for the world have admitted, he did not hesitate before he an swered ; he did not try to beat around the bush; he Indulged in no evasions or delays of any kind whatever. "Yes, I know it," he said promptly. It may be that some detail in his tone or manner reassured her, at any rate her voice, when she spoke next, was free from a certain icy hint of criticism which undoubtedly had crept into it "Did he come here with your* "No; he followed me here." "Have you seen him?" She mad* no attempt to offer an excuse for cross-examining him; she evidently asked the question as an interested party who has a right to be Informed. Was she not a citizen of Jonesvllle and an employe of the Jones Pepsin Sum Company?" "No; I have not seen him, but Ml*. Wallace saw him last night and turned down his offer, too." Instantly the reserve, which, intangi ble but perceptible, bad affected her, dropped from her. Shs was no longer in the least suspicious. ~V)h, I'm bo niaa she exclaimed ' cordially. But he failed to note this clrcum ■ stance; he failed to ward against on coming danger. As a matter of fact he was not thinking of her as an employe of the Jones company, he vi| not thinking about Jonesvllle, he was con sidering his own pressing need for money and the delightful possibility that through Pembroke, in one way or another, that need must be relieved. He rose and paced the floor with light and hopeful tread, wholly without ap prehension. "We gave him to understand that we wouldn't sell for less than a million and a half." Ha said this half proudly. Then, with the accents of a hoper: "We expect him here at eleven o'clock with his answer." Her face took on a puzzled and dis approving frown. "But you Just gave your word to the men that—" Now he spoke definitely and crißply. No one listening to him could imagine that he did not mean exactly what he said; that he had not carefully consid ered every meaning of each syllable that he was uttering. "Oh, don't be afraid," he assured her. "I meant exactly what I said to Hlgglns." She sighed with real relief. "I don't mind telling you, Miss Rich ards, that when I came here yesterday my Intention was to sell this business and get it oft my bands at any price or sacrifice." The mere statement of this evidently past and gone intention was a shock to her. He noted, and not without emotion —mind that; Broadway unmis takably was touched—that her face blanched at the thought of that which he had definitely decided not to do. The young man was beginning to think; he was forming some faint realization of the fact that his own troubles were but Bomewhat unimpor tant bubbles in a sea made up of everybody's troubles. The thought was forming in his mind that, while he had been severely worried about ways and means for getting luxuries, these people, here In Jonesvllle, who had lived and probably would die with out ever having heard the names of many of the things his sybaritlo soul had learned to crave, had felt them selves confronted by the possibility of loss of the necessities. Indefinitely, but for the first time In his life at all, he saw how grim the struggle for a bare existence is with the majority; how, although they strain and strive to their limit of abil ity, they never feel quite safe in their possession of the means for getting it. He acknowledged to himself a feeling of embarrassment as he considered the undeniable selfishness of his previous existence. But he brightened visibly, as he went on. He had learned his lesson and had learned It thoroughly. "Carnegie couldn't buy the plant this morning," he said simply, "If ha of fered every dollar he has in the world* Mr. Wallace and I sat up talking It over until two o'clock this morning. I told him everything you said, and went over the whole situation with him. I promised to take his advlpo, and he'w convinced me that the right thing to do la to stick right here and put up a light for these people, the same as my uncle did." Her reserve quite vanished; u la the way of women, she took credit for an Intuition which her previous mani ner had not Indicated. Where she had been suspicious of a reason for sus picion, she became enthusiastic over reason for enthusiasm. "I knew you would!" she cried. "I knew—l knew you would!" She had not known he would; she had feared, had half believed that he would not; but that now made not the slightest difference with her firm be lief that she had known he would. Nor had the fact that Broadway, a short minute before, had suspected, with good reason, that she seriously doubt ed him, any influence whatever on his deep pleasure when he discovered that she did not —did not because she could not, not because she would not. Men do not think clear to the bottom of these things. They take what wom en give them, when they give them anything, and are humbly grateful and surprised because they get a smile when they deserve one, rather than a brick when they do not deserve one. Nothing which the world has ever of fered to the gaze of the philosopher has been one-half so pitiful as the as tonished gratitude of the right-minded male when he finds that the one fe male for whom he has begun, con sciously or without his knowledge, to live his life and do his deeds, does not utterly condemn him when he has done his level best and that best has been worthy. Men are the world's nat ural "come-ons," women the world's natural vendors of psychological, sen timental and often very raw gold bricks. So when Josie eoulfully declared that she had known he would, Broad way did not let It pass with an iraap preciatlve, "Of course you did," but looked at her with gratitude alight In hli pleased face and humbly queried, "Did you?" For a moment the fact that she de clared that she had known he would be decent and not villainously selfish so completely overwhelmed him (and please do not forget that she, within a minute, had admitted that she thought him capable of basest selfishness) that he oould not find words with which to proceed conversationally. All men are that way. But presently he recovered self-pos session and continued: "Now, I don't know anything about business, and I don't know anything about money. I never did a day's work in my life for the simple reason that I never had to." He looked at her with a shamed smile, the first evidence that he had ever shown of anything but pride in his ability to live idly with enormous and successful effort. "The only trial of skill Into which I have entered since I went from Jones ville to New York has been a general, endless contest with the world at large to* see which oould stay up the latest. I have generally won—won in a walk." She was listening Intently. All wom an ggf Intent to br—thla—wfren. they are hearing any man tell his un worthiness; if there is a hint of a con fession of real wickedness in his decla ration they will listen -with an absorp tion which approaches a hypnotic trance. "I've never done anything good, be cause I've never had anything good to do," Broadway went on, before he reached the next full stop. She sat absolutely spellbound. Did she feel a vi\#d hope that he would go into detail of the things which he had done which were not good? Such re citals always pain good women ex quisitely, yet they never shun them, never interrupt them—never, by the way, forget them or fail to have them at their tongues' ends afterwards, when, by recalling them, they can abash the man who in a moment of un guarded foolishness has made them. But Broadway told no details of his villainies. This was not brilliance on his part; it was sheer luck. If Bhe was definitely disappointed her distress tfas more or less allevi ated the next moment, for he burst forth someVhat wildly: "What I've needed ail along was an incentive—something to spur ma on 'something to inspire me. What I've needed was—" He could not complete the sentence. It was as if his tongue had found an insurmountable obstruction in the groove of language which it had begun to follow and had to leap out to a side groove. An expression of disgust j grew on his face. He hesitated, flushed, then reached his hand into his pocket and drew forth the paper on which h» had labored with such assiduity and; such a tensely working, cheek manipu lating tongue In the small hours that morning. "What I've needed was" —he once more said, in desperate endeavor to remember what came next, and, flnd lng It impossible to continue with his recitation, looked at her wild eyed, dis appointed, self-disgust writ plain upon hia face, and dropped his hands in helpless and disorganized fashion to his sides. "Can you beat that?" he demanded of the fascinated girl. "I knew that thing by heart when I left the hotel." Almost angrily he thrust the paper in to her receptive hands. "It took me hours to write that!" he earnestly deolared. "Hours full of mos quito-bites! I got up early, too, and learned the thing by heart. But I might have known that I'd forget It! I never could remember anything." She took the paper, glanced at it with highly kindled interest and was on the point of reading It when there came an interruption. It was Sammy. There ever ia a Sammy ready to step In and spoil big moments in our lives. "Are—you—too— busy —for — com pany?" he asked deliberately and Ir reverently. The imp, though fat, wan quite cognisant of the fact that he had come at the wrong moment, and his heart was filled with Joy because he' felt so certain of it. "Who is it, Sammy?" "Ma—and—Clara." I To Be Continued.] j Advertising Fills This Church to Full Capacity 1 Special to Tin Ttltgraph Philadelphia, Jan. SO.—Tho Rev. Daniel E. Weigle, pastor of Messiah Lutheran Church, who, although he came from a theological seminary less than five years ago, has taken a mode rately successful family church and made Its services so popular that late comers find difficulty in obtaining a seat on Sunday night, told the Congre gationalist Ministers' Association yes terday how he achieved his success. "It was simply by introducing up to-date business methods into church work," sjyd Mr. Weigle. "It was by carrying out God's work In an up-to date program. Americans wouldn't tolerate cheap stuff in their homes. Why plam oft second-hand methods on Jesus Christ?" . Mr. Weigle said he had prominent soloists from the city's leading musi cal organizations »ing in Messiah Church every Sunday evening. He advertises their appearance by means of newspaper publicity, billboards, window posters and an extensive cor respondence. The young minister su pervises his advertising campaign in his automobile and has a stenographer to attend to his voluminous correspon dence. ■SUKT MOSS MA Look, Mother! If tongue is coated give "California Syrup of Figs" Mother! Your child Isn't naturally cross and peevish. See If tongue Is coated; this Is a sure sign Its little stomach, liver and bowels need a cleansing at once. When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, doesn't eat, sleep or act naturally, haa stom ach-ache, diarrhoea, remember, a gen- I tie liver and bowel cleansing should I always be the first treatment given. | Nothing equals "California Syrup of i Pigs" for children's Ills; give a tea | spoonful, and in a few hours all the I foul waste, sour bile and fermenting ; food which is clogged In the bowels | passes out of the system, and you have I a well and playful child again. All ! children love this harmless, delicious j "fruit laxative," and it never fjuis to i effect a good "inside" cleansing. Di rections for babies, children of all , ages and grown-ups are plainly on the I bottle. Keep It handy In your home. A little given to-day saves a sick child to-mor row, but get the genuine. Ask your druggist for a 60-cent bottle of "Cali fornia Syrup of Figs," then look and see that It la made by the "California Fig Syrup Company." Counterfeits are being sold here. 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S. compel the skin, liver, bowels, kid neys and bladder to all work to the one end of casting out every Irritat ing, every pain-inflicting atom of poison; It dislodges by irrigation all accumulations In the Joints, causes acid accretions to dissolve, renders them neutral and scatters those pe culiar formations in the fterve centers that cause such mystifying and often baffling rheumatic pains. And, beat of all, thla remarkable remedy fa welcome to the weakest stomach. I £ you hara drugged yourself until your stomach Is nearly paralyzed, you will be astonished to find that 8. S 8. gives no sensation but goes right to work. Thla is because It It a puro Tegctabla Infusion, la taken naturally Into your blood Just at pure air Is Inhaled naturally Into your lungs. You can get S. S. S. at any drug store. B. S. S. Is a standard remedy, recognlied every where as the greatest blood antidote ever dis covered. If yours la a peculiar cast and yon desire special Information, write to The Swift Specific Co., 810 Swift Bldg., Atlanta, Ga. GLASS OF SALTS GLEANS KIOIEfS if your Back hurts or Bladder bothers you, drink lots of water. When your kidneys hurt and your back feels sore, dpn't get scared and proceed to load your stomach with a 1 lot of drugs that excite the kidneys and irritate the enlre urinary tract. Keep your kidneys clean like you keep your bowels clean, by flushing them' with a mild, harmless salts which re moves the body's urinous waste and stimulates them to their normal activ ity. The function of the kidneys Is to filter the blood. In 24 hours they strain from it 800 grains of acid and waate, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lota of water—you can't drinld too much; also get from any pharmai cist about four ounces of Jad Halts! take a tablespoonful In a glass of! water before breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts la madS from the acid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to clean and stimulate clogged kidneys; also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer Is a source If Irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is Inexpensive; cannot In jure; makes a delightful effervescent lithla-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and • 'isnlie—Advertisement.