6 See Other Mill and E\* _ w Q * See Other Mill and Factory Sale News YCfVXVJ^POXXVCSJvUVOQXI. Factory Sale News on Page 10 0 on Page 10 Men's $15.00 Blue Chinchilla Overcoats rffc /\ N/\ Specially Offered in the Mill and Factory Sale Saturday Only at / All Sizes from 34 to 42 tfjQk The Men's Clothing Section has an unusu al ally good offering for the Mill and Factory Sale /Gwy\ regular $15.00 Blue Chinchilla Overcoats at lm/i \ 9.so—this price for Saturday only. These hand some garments are from regular stock and are /#| MA \ in the popular shawl collar style with belted mi backs, full lined, single and double breasted. $25-00 Overcoats at $15.00 | Ju Men's brown diagonal weave cheviot and plain grey worsted, In prey Irish frieze, grey diagonal worsted, brown and grey diagonal II striped French cloth and heavy grey diagonal cassimere overcoats, I I shawl notch and convertible collars, full and quarter Venetian lined J | 1 fancy plaid backs, box and belted backs, single and double, plain -V »• r ' and patch pockets. $25.00 Overcoats at $14.50 $22 and $25 Suits, $15.00 Blue and brown chinchilla overcoats, quarter vene- Brown and tan mixed and grey check worsted H " ing ' d0 " ble " S f S ' s,ri P ed worsted and cassimere suits, f~\r\ m 1 ct- | a r\r\ ' Ue rC ' h° mes P tm suits, oxford cassimere suits, blue oalmacaans, basket weave cassimere and cheviot suits, plain blue Brown, grey, green tan and black and white Bal- unfinished worsted suits, plain blue serge suits, plain macaans. black diagonal cheviot suits, two and three-bijtton $25.00 Balmacaans, SIB.OO coats lined with mohair and fancy serge, English and Grey, brown and green mixed, plain grey and co,,scrra,ivc Sad<s with sofl ro " or '"' esscll la P el ' fancy weave BaUnacaans. _ OllltS at Men's plain blue and grey diagonal weave eassi- Men s plain brown and brown checked worsted mere suits, black and blue shadow striped worsted and and cassimere suits, chalk striped black worsted suits. , , shadow weave blue worsted suits, grey shadow . sel £ c suits, grey diagonal weave and mixed worsted striped worsted and cassimere suits, two and three- suits, two and three-button sacks. bllttOtl Sacks. j Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Eloor, Rear. Disgraced Woman Wil! Keep Name Secret, Hoping to Win Back Husband By Associated Press New York, Feb. 6.—The identity of t little woman arrested in a depart ment store recently on a charge of passing bills that had been raised from S2O to SSO was still her own secret to-day when she left the court room acquitted by a federal jury. For want of a better name the detectives had called her "Jane Brown." She i refused to tell who she was because, she said, she hoped some day to be come reconciled with her husband and she did not wish him to hear of her arrest. The jury refused to con vict her because the secret service How Oranges and Grapefruit are Selected and Graded by the Florida Citrus Exchange Every packing house of the Florida Citrus Exchange oper ates under the following rules for selecting and grading fruit: f *?RST GRADE: —Oranges or grape- THIRD GRADE:—AII sound, market fruit which are perfect in texture, thin able fruit not included in the first or sec skinned, juicy, heavy and sweet, and dis- ond grades shall be shipped under the colored by rust not to exceed 10% of the third grade. HMK entire area, shall be graded as first grade. oppAwn T- • • CULLS:—Every association and individual SECOND GRADE:—Fruit in every respect shipper of the Florida Citrus Exchange is equal of the fruit under the first grade but forbidden to ever ship cull oranges under any discolored to exceed more than 10% of its total of the grades of the Florida Citrus Exchange WBf arca » shall be classed as second grade. or in boxes bearing the Exchange mark. HI H Only Tree-ripened, Sweet, Juicy Fruit comes H I under the Red Mark of the Florida Citrus Exchange H HH '^ lC sare5 are exercised by Exchange members in Only tree-ripened fruit is marketed through the B growing and picking their fruit brings it to the Exchange. It is handbd from grove to grocer by packing houses in the best possible condition, white-gloved workers — never touched by hands, that is fit to ship is washed and assorted as The buyer is assured of full value for the money to with moder n machinery and packed by the red mark of the Exchange on boxes and very carefully. No child labor is employed, wrappers, whatever grade of fruit is bought, Your grocer can supply you Florida Citrus Exchange fruit. Tell him that you want it, and insist on having it. Should you be unable to find a dealer who will supply you, please write to k W. H. Moody A A 20? Trustee Building Harrisburg, Pa District Manager, Florida Citrat Exchange «•'. . k , 1 «*-? ■■ - • W 9 •-, ' ' ' •'&*fT 4rr f ''* • *7 ~-T ®» •* ' •. • ' r • < ,7 VG? "? • * 7<* ' - .'*.« * ;•" J V,^ ••' - i -«... v '*■ ' . . J' 4 v ** ' ' : '•* N - *, ; ' /** 4 ■ • •" : " FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 6, 1914. men could not prove that she know the bills she passed were not gen uine. 137,600 Persons Attended Biederwolf Meetings Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., Feb. 6.—The Rev. Mr. Biederwolf on Wednesday evening at the meeting at the tabernacle, made the statement that that was the best evening ho ever had since conducting revival services. He said he had never had a better attendance for the pe riod ho has been holding services. Up to yesterday 137,600 persons have at tended the meetings. The collections have amounted to over $5,000. Combined Evangelistic Work Planned For Mechanicsburg Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg, Pa., Feb. 6.—A con certed effort on the part of the churches in this place in an evangel istic campaign, the details of which are to be worked out later, was agreed upon at a meeting of the ministers and representatives of some of the churches in the Presbyterian lecture room on Wednesday evening. After discussion a committee was appointed to secure information concerning evangelists and dates. Subsequent meetings will be called in which fur ther action will take place. IJOOOMOTIV E HITS WAGON Waynesboro, Pa., Feb. 6. The > Emerson - Brantingham Company's nlckelplate railroad's locomotive ran Into and overturned the delivery . wagon of Grocer S. C. Reynolds, at the railroad crossing In East Third street, yesterday. The wagon was being driven by Samuel Stoner, a clerk. The i end of the step of the locomotive [ struck a rear wheel of the wagon and overturned the vehicle. The wagon was badly broken and Mr. Stoner was i cut about the face and head. FINE SWISS COW SOLD H. O. Kettering, of Palmyra, at one : time proprietor of the Hotel Johnston, at Duncannon, sold a beautiful brown Swiss cow for a nominal sum of S2OO. She was considered by expert judges to be the finest they had ever seen. UKE-UP OF LIFE I is PERPENDICUUIR: I Man of Gallilee Never Drew Any Horizontal Lines While on the Earth The International Sunday School IJCS- | son For February 8 Is, "Darkness and Light."—Luke 11:14-26, 33-30. (By William T. Ellis) After all and after all, Since ever the world begun, Just two have lived, and two have died, In lowly mien, in lordly pride, The rogue and the honest man. After all and after all, The classes are but two; And both are rich and both are poor. And both still know as they knew before. The things that they ought to do. After all and after all. Escape it we never can; Only the choice of one have we, And you must be and I must be A rogue or an honest man. —John Randolph Stidman. The incisive mind of the new Teacher from Galilee, who was great in His simplicity, thus lined up so ciety. The only line he ever drew was vertical, between the good and the bad, the sheep and the goats. No horizontal lines for Him, separat ing men into upper classes. He set humanity into two camps, the wicked and the, godly. And the test of where one belongs in His attitude toward Jesus Himself. "He that is not for Me Is against Me." Nobody can dodge that classi fication; it is easier to escape the income tax collector than this in evitable grouping. Everybody must count either for or against Christ; which means, also, either for or against the things for which Christ stands. Every life has a drift, a, direction, a tendency; let It be to ward Christliness. The Snarl of the Critics The particular day about which we are studying had l>eeti a busy one for Jesus and His helpers. They had no tlM'e so much as to eat. Friends and kindred tried to hinder Jesus from spending Himself so lav ishly for the many needs of this in satiable mob. But that compassion ate spirit' had mercy upon everybody except Himself. The one dramatic event of the day was the casting oyt of a demon from a dumb man, so that Ills speech was restored. The. lips long sealed were opened. We wonder what the first words of tli e emancipated spirit were? Gratitude to the Healer? The name of a loved one? Incoherent enthusiasm? The enthusiasm of the liberated man was not shared by some mem bers of the crowd of onlobkers. They were the critics and the backbiters, who always see the worst in the bet ter, the evil in the good. They be longed to that large group who al ways look for the lowest motives in the deeds of public men. Any reason but the true and the noble will serve them. So these wiseacres winked knowingly and leered. "Ah, He casts out demons by Beelzebub, the prince of demons!" This was devil work, they claimed, and one more proof that Jesus had a demon. The Bible and the Devil Nowadays it is dreadfully un fashionable to believe in the devil. Yet the Bible, which is strangely indifferent to passing fancies, insists that there is a devil—an evil per sonality or power outside of man which besets him and drags him down. Some folks, who live in a clois tered world of books, deny this. Not so those who are at close grips with life. The latter must choose between a diabolical human nature or else an evil spirit of power which is man's worst enemy To all who know life* God is real and the devil is real. And the issue of all time is between these two. The old negro's definition of elec tion is not far astray. Without the dialect, the story goes that the negro said, "You see, there is an election being held to choose who will be king of your soul. Both God and Satan are candidates. You are the only voter. And whichever way you vote, that is the way the election goes." Reduced to its simplicities, ■ life is a choice between God and Satan. Confounding the Critics The story was Jesus' favorite way of meeting criticism. To the charge that He was an ally of Beelzebub, He answered in terse, graphic words, "Every kingdom divided against It self is brought to desolation; and a house divided against a house fall eth." As I heard a preacher in a rescue mission—down where they believe abundantly in Satan —say the other day, "The devil is united; but the church Is divided." The only man who can cast out devils is a stronger man than the devil. Nobody can break into Satan's house and destroy his work except Christ. The proof that He does so is sufficient evidence that He is the deadly foe of Beelzebub. Casting out demons was not the kind of work calculated to make the Prince of Darkness happy. "For still our ancient foe Doth seek to work us woe; His craft and power are great, And armed with cruel hate, On earth is not his equal. "Did we in our own strength con fide, Our striving would be losing; Were not the right Man on our side, The Man of God's own chfioslng. Dost ask who that may be? Jesus Christ, it iB He; Dord Sabaoth is His name. From age to age the same, And He must win the battle." Whatever overcomes the evil of life is of God. The frlerids of God should stand together by all that stands for good. There has been a colossal failure here on the part of the church; her support has not al ways been an assured asßet of right eousness. Consider, for instance, the publishers of newspapers who have fought and suffered for common righteousness; but the church seems little to note or long to remember what they have done. To achieve the solidarity of the friends of God is a basic need of our time. Emptying by Filling What keeps most men straight and useful? A wife and babies. Responsi bility, work, necessity, these are the cargo and engine of the ship of a human life. The law forever holds true that an empty life is dangerous. Why is such disproportionate news paper space given to the misdeeds of the idle rich? Simply because empty lives and empty lie'ads inevitably pro duce wickedness. It is not because he has so much money that the rich man's so often goes wrong, but be cause he has so little life. Our wise new program for social service accepts the teaching Jesus in this lesson, and seeks to fill every life full of worth-while things. For an empty life offers its hospitality to all t the devils in Eight. The way to get! I Hans Kronold I Eminent Cellist of New York I To Appear in Van Yorx Angelus | Player Recital g Assisted by Mrs. Wm. Bumbaugh, Soprano Miss Sara A. Lemer, Violinist | Board of Trade Auditorium Wednesday Evening, Feb. 11 8:15 O'CLOCK Tickets of admission may be secured without £ charge by making request, Feb. 9, 10 & 11, at I The J. H. Troup Music House « TROUP BUILDING 15 S. MARKET SQ. Ot!l><H3ooooooo<>oooooo<H><H>ooo<H?oa<oooooo<t^Oc><H3<H><}i><HWH rid of evil is to crowd in the good. Half our present social problems are due to the increasing leisure of wom en and children, which has followed prosperity. "We must empty l>y filling," cried one soul-physician confronting sin laden lives. Another declares. "Noth ing is over displaced until it is re placed." "We cannot pump Ihe darkness out of a room; we must empty it by tilling it with light." What Do You .Stand For? In these parable answers which He made to the charge that He was a confederate of the evil one Jesus stated the principle of the light, the animating purpose, that radiates from a life. Everybody must shed either darkness or brightness. The line-up is inescapable. The point is made practical by the Teacher, even as It is gathered up the familiar little kindergarten song: "Jesus bids us shine with a clear, pure light, Like a little candle shining in the night." Deslte the evidence of the array of lamps in every lamp store to the contrary, it Is true that lamps are not made to be seen, but to see by. Their business is not to be looked at but to give light. Which is a para ble for Christians. How Jesus would have seized on the modern method of indirect lighting as a metaphor—the lamp itself out of sight, but its light flooding the room. A lamp is to be elevated, said He, to throw light. Hudson Taylor once made a perti nent remark concerning Christians RUGS At the New Rug Store Our entire new stock of rugs and mattings is now arranged for inspection Beautiful new patterns in floral and Oriental designs. Our name tells the story. We aim to undersell on rugs and matting. We quote a few prices and want you to see the quality so that we may prove to you that we really do undersell our competitors: 8-wire Tapestry, 9x12 $9.98 10-wire Tapestry seamless, 9x12 . . .$12.98 Axminstcr 9x12 Rug $17.98 Velvet Brussels, 27x54 Rug 980 Tepee Rugs, Indian Design 98f Axminstcr 27x54 Indian Design $1.69 Axminstcr, 36x72, Indian Design ...$3.49 All-wool Smyrna, 30x60 :..... .$1.49 Matting Rugs at Lowest Prices Underselling Rug Co. Fourth and Chestnut Streets OPEN EVENINGS who -want some bettor place for shining than where God has put them: "A candle that won't shine in one room is very unlikely to shine in another. If you do not shine at home, if your father and mother, your sister and brother, if the very cat and dog in the house are not the better r,nd happier for your being a Christian, it is a question whether you really are one." Slake me to,be a torch, for feet that grope Down truth's dim trail; to bear for wistful eyes Comfort of light; to bid great bea cons blaze, And kindle altar fires of sacrifice. Let me see souls aflame with quench less zeal For great endeavors, causes true and high. So would ] live to quicken and in spire, So would I, thus consumed, burn out and die. —The Survey. In this rather obscure figure, Jesus likens the lamp to the eye: "When thine eye is single, thy whole body Is also full of light, but when it is evil, thy body is also full of darkness." This evidently refers to the way one looks out on life, to the character of His purpose. Some per sons observe the world with a vision that is all darkness; as, for illus tration, those evil-seeing Idlers who stand on street corners ogling wom en. Or, to come closer home, we are startled occasionally by realiz ing the possibilities of evil in our selves. We need the presence of Christ in our heart to keep pure and sincere and single our purpose.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers