' „ y / l| "i'l" ¥■ :iHOy long or short periods. They are Issued I Y ill' : for large or small amounts, earn 3 per : JwSg cent, and can be turned into cash at 1 IIJP /i A =3*CTF any time. Call and let us explain all 1 I rt >| 11 ; jftflU , about them. ■HH of Pennsylvania EBPSBEigjlii Union Tnist Building *1 1 ,J r— 1 i Checks Pouring ■ In Upon Him ■* on lls mor >thly collections the merchant T:' - or manufacturer would be glad to have many of his payments remitted bydraft. We make drafts on New York, Pliiladel phia, Baltimore and Chicago for our A winl'tlf patrons when so desired, and transact a 1W f aLI jU; regular banking business, issue Letters P[ h of Credit and Travelers Cheques payable \ in all parts of the world. You will find this bank a source of great convenience * t U^ 6 }OUnK business ma n who banks First National Bank r •224 Market. Street, Harrisburg, Pi, 1 "Onyx" Hosiery Tradb Mask The "Otiyr" Brand will give better wear than any hosiery known. For Men, Women and Children, from 85c. to $5.00 per pair, in any color or atyle yon wish from Cotton to Silk. Be sore to look for the trade mark shown above stamped on every pair. Sold by all good stores. LORD & TAYLOR >totrlbutor» NEW YORK | Try Telegraph Want Ads.Try Telegraph Want Ads. j strong, healthy condition, so they can filter the blood and keep you well. If you suffer with backache —have pains In the neck or sides—nervous or dizzy spells—a few doses ,of Crox one will relieve the congestion and you will be surprised how quickly all kidney, bladder and rheumatic trou bles will disappear. Croxone is different from all other remedies. It is not like anything else on earth ever used for the purpose. It starts to work the minute you take it and relieves your suffering the very first time you use it. It is so prepared that it is practically impossible to take it into the human system with out results. You can secure an orig inal package of Croxone at trifling cost from any first-class druggist. All druggists are authorized to personally return the purchase price if Croxone should fail In a single case. Adver tisement. derfully. I have a good appetite, sleep well, and think I have gained weight." Stories of health restored like that come from thousands ol' happy users in all parts of the nation. This remedy is known everywhere. The first dose will convince—no long treatment. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and poisonous matter. It brings swift relief to sufferers from ailments of the stomach, liver and bowels. Many declare it has saved them from dangerous operations; many are sure it has saved their lives. Because of the remarkable success of this remedy there are many imi tators, so bo cautious. Be sure it's MAYR'S. Go to Geo. A. Gorgas' drug store and ask about the wonderful re sults it has accomplished in cases they know—or send to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist. 154-156 Whiting street, Chi cago, 111., for free book on stomach ailments and many letters from grate ful people who have been restored. Any druggist can tell you its wonder ful effects.—Advertisement. BIBLE WNIH 111 LITEST NOVEL Truths It Teaches Are Good For All Time, For All Lands and AH Conditions The International Sunday School Lee son For March 8, Is "Watchfulness: a Temperance Ijesson." —JLuke 12: 36-48. (By William T. Ellis) This story is Oriental, from first to last. The average person reads this familiar New Testament passage for the first time with bewilderment. It Is all out of his range of experi ence. He might as well be asked to explain the symbols on an Oriental rug. What does he know about girded loins? He does not wear long skirts that have to be tucked up into his girdle when he runs and does active work. The men in the near east do that very thing to-day, as I have seen countless times. Nor does the un traveled American know aught of wedding processions and feasts, with a portion brought home by the guest to his faithful servants. We ring electric doorbells; in the east, one hammers loud and long at the outer gate, waiting for the movements of a sleepy watchman; that, too, I know. The fear of thieves, against which the house is barricaded, has scarcely a counterpart in this west ern world. And the unjust steward, the "Number One Boy" of China, who takes advantage of his Master's absence to be hlirh-handed and op pressive—that, a'so, is true in the east to-day. There are more important teach ings in the text than little lessr>n9 in Orientalism. There is a present meaning in all the teachings of Jesus. His messages ars always ap plicable; truth is forever up-to-date. That is why the Bible is moi'.j mod ern than the novel which came off the press yesterday. The inspired book is true to all times. Its essen tial teachings can be taken right out and practiced on the next per son you meet. The Attitude of Faithfulness Canny old Ben Franklin said that the eyes of the master accomplished more than his hands. He meant that the oversight of the employer is nec essary to the efficiency of the work man. As ten thousand men can testify, the average worker eases up when "the boss" is not looking. It is a rare class that can be left out of the teacher's sight. Most of us need to be superintended. Now Jesus bade His followers live and work in an attitude of faithful ness, which is vigilance. They were to act as if the Master were near, and hourly expected. To be ready for Him at ail times was the great motive He implanted. This was the sure preventive of unfaithfulness and poor work. The inspection of the Master was at hand. Every thoughtful person has rec ognized this principle. Some day we ! shall not return to our desk, our I bench, our kitchen, our books: will our day's task be left completed? Tho housekeeper does not want her neighbor, suddenly summoned in the morning, to find the supper dishes still unwashed. The bookkeeper wishes to leave his books in such condition that an expert accountant will not have to be called in to un ravel them. There is no greater in centive to good work every day, right here and now, than this great teaching of watchfulness. A Pluinb-Une For Watchfulness Some truths are mere abstractions, and wholly speculative. They have nothing in particular to do with this year of our Lord, 1914. There is none of that in the discourses of Jesus. All that He taught is livable. In New York or New Mexico. At the base of His doctrines lies this spirit of practicability; it works out into real life. Tho Sermon on the Mount helps a servant to sweep un der the beds and in the corners. It makes a builder as careful of the in tegrity of his out-of-sight construc tion as of his facade. The great cathedrals are marvels of thorough workmanship, because men wrought in the spirit of "Thou God, seest me." Paraphrased, this lesson on watch fulness reads, "Live j our life with re spect to the great ideals. Take God : into our planning. Chart your course in life by the eternal verities. 'Do 1 justly, love mercy, walk humbly'—■ 'that is the program, if you are really | on the watch for the Lord's coming." The Dominating Passion : There is something more than con | scious caution to this quality of : watchfulness. It is a deep purpose, | a passion, a soul-attitude. The New j Testament phrase, "Looking unto Jesus," embodies it. As a mother's | thought, present and absent, is 1 with her babe, so the faithful disci ple's thought is of Christ. Just as a devoted lover has his beloved ever in mind, his whole day being tinged with her personality, so the Chris j tian is dominated, in deed and mo ' tive, by the expectation of his Lord. This looking-Christward attitude I deeply affects life. It makes one a \ better person to live with. Sun shlnyness. courage, helpfulness, pa tience—all qualities of grace go along with watchfulness. For, very clearly, if one is ready for Christ, he is ready for anything. The life lived in His fear has no lesser fears. Just as a revival of religion elevates the whole social, and. commercial j and civic life of a community, so ! this expectation of the Lord touches inspiringly every phase of character. The Makers of Social 111 ( Biting and tenacious are the words of the gentle teacher when he arraigns the men who abuse their post of responsibility, and who for get their obligations to the higher Authority above them. They cease to watch, and, to quote the lesson text, they, "begin to beat the men servants and the maid servants and to eat and drink, and to be drunken; the Lord of that servant shall come in a day when he expecteth not, and and shall cut him asunder, and ap point his portion with the unfaith ful." To all perpetrators of social ill, to all men who underpay their work men, to all women who leave (heir dressmaker's and grocer's bills un paid, to all owners of foul tenements and resorts of evil, to all makers of dishonest and hurtful goods, this stern message runs as a solemn warning from God. The fear of God Is to be the final correction of all ills that afflict our community. When men do business as God's under stewards, whether they dig coal out of the earth or build huge sky scrapers, they will work as those who watch for the coming of the Lord. A certain Pastor Russell and his followers have predicted that our times are to end in October of this present year. Ten Millerites looked for the return of the Lord a genera tion ago. Some devout persons are sure that the signs of Christ's coming are all being fulfilled now. What say the Scriptures'.' The surost, safest word on the subject is to be found in this lesson: "Be ye also ready, | for in an hour that ye think not the |f>on of Man cometh." We may not | For Every Man Who Has New I I Clothes to Buy We Have This Message | i ifSfc man ' no matter w^at he pays, i| H can get a better Suit (or his money everything is high in quality and;| | The man who is hard to please, j| « who has never seen ready-to-wear ;§ 8 clothes that exactly suited him is ;| H cordially invited to get in touch H 'Slffljm Mi » We have Four stores in One. We save 2 ♦♦ ' J1& * ill w $1 y° u at ' east ' rom in the High Hr Bf **' Ift ent ' ce Ouf spring line ♦♦ tl k ; §}jf< j' jflf ;'! M awaits your inspection. Your Judgment is f| H k,jH|M | Our spring line is ready. We have the ♦♦ H I latest weaves and colorings that tease and ♦♦ | 1 if M/ Mea's Spring Suits .... $6.75 to S4O B |J fM. Men's Spring Overcoats $4.75 to $35 || fiSn ir 11 Iff ml Balmacaan Overcoats $12.98 to $24 H '1 I if 111 —** *' ' to sl~ H if Imß Boys' Overcoats $1.98 to $lO | ißr I H 188 Winter Suits and Overcoats are |f IBF SB ; S 11 ipR being closed out at your own price. At ♦♦ jjH IjH Jpf p these reductions you are privileged to have !: ur Now | | G§i&£ Pay I fx ♦♦ XX m iiwiwmMWMwwnwwnwmwwwwtnwHMiitutxti ♦♦ TT _ | Home || Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co. j Fami| y | g Furnishers jj 29-31-33 & 35 South Second Street jj Clothiers JJ H OUR LOCATION MEANS A GREAT SAVING TO YOU know certainly when the Lord is to i return, but we are not left uninformed I concerning our duty, which is to 1 watch. i The Temperance Phase This is designated as a temper- i ance lesson. The implication is that j the watchful life will be on guard i against the evils of strong drink, i both personal and social. Of course, one cannot stand guard as Christ's trusted servant, wjthout 1 withstanding all that He opposes. To be His friends is to be the foe of all His enemies. As a newspaper edi tor remarked to me a few hours ago, "Evidently, from the growth of tem perance sentiment in the West, that part of the country is decidedly reli gious." He took it for granted that anti-liquor activity springs primar ily from a pro-Christian spirit. The surest sign of the impending over throw of the liquor truffle on tnls con tinent is the aroused interest of the whole church in the subject. Christ animated men and women are finding new ways of warring against' this eneiny of society. Filling and lirlng all means and methods is the Christ-passion. This Intense spirit is the realy formidable foe of intemperance. Methods may be matched by methods, schemes by schemes. The saloon has no adequate! THESE FORERUNNERS of Factory Outlet Spring Styles Will Please You Let Us Show Them to You Even Tho' You Are Not Ready to Purchase Women's Black Suede Women's $3 Tan Rus- Women's $3.00 Patent Women's New Kidney Button Boots; Goodyear sia Calf Button Shoes; Colt and Gun Metal; but- Heel Boots; patent vel ton and Lace. vet and gun metal, tip '// . HHBBv welt; positive A« Goodyear welts, * . Goodyear welts and plain toes ao \ BwSia. value $4, at at at #1.90 at .f1.90 MBmr Men's $3 Patent Colt Men's Yost Army Men > s S3OO Tan Eng- Women's $1.50 Comfort \ jßr/W and Gun Metal Button Shoes; tan and black; \\ Btr /vpy Shoes; Goodyear A* valiie $3.00, a# Hsh Bals. Low «« QQ Juliets; tip and JA& welts, at at ' heels SI«SFO plain toes, at.... JfOC FACTORY OUTLET SHOE CO., power with which to meet the deep, 1 hew purpose of the aroused Christians 1 who consider themselves the vigilants of Christ; whose motive is loyalty to Him and all the men and women for whom He died. They dare do for patriotism and religion all that the adherents of this business will do for gain. New York School Girl Ridiculed, Takes Poison Special to The Telegraph New York, March 6. Gertrude Schroeder, 19 years old, who drank poison because she was too big to get her knees under her school desk and was teased by her classmates, children half her age. probably will recover, but she does not want to if she has to go back to school. She is in a hos pital, charged with attempted suicide. The girl had difficulty in passing her examinations, but her mother kept her in school. Boys called her "Fatty" and girls called lier "Dummy," and all the children laughed at her. NEW REFINED TONE Is characterized in the Behi* Bros, player. See them at once. Spangler, i Sixth above Maclay.—Advertisement. I Senator Borah and G. W. Perkins in i Political Controversy Senator Borah, of Idaho, who, it < seemed at one time, would walk out|i of the Republican party with Colonel j J Roosevelt) and George W. Perkins, | i the steel millionaire, who did go out, i j have engaged in a biting controversy | < on the merits of their parties. Mr. j J Perkins, answering a statement of j Senator Borah about the Internation- | • al Harvester Trust, defended that or-j 1 ganlzation and the senator went back 1 at him. i Senator Borah has told Mr. Perkins that he is now trying to distribute to the public some of the beneilts and ] profits of the harvester trust, which j should never have been created. Mr. , Perkins is one of the chief backers of ] Colonel Roosevelt and was very j 1 prominent in the Bull Moose ranks lit 1 the last campaign. Senator Borah ' fought for the colonel at the Re publican national convention at Chi- ( cago, but when It came to leaving his J party, he and the colonel separated. HEARTS TREATED FREE B" Dr. MIIM, the Great Specialist Who Sends a New 92.50 Treatment, Free. Heart disease is dangerous, hundreds) drop dead who could have been saved. Many have been cured after doctors failed. To prove the remarkable ef ficacy of his new Special Personal Treatment for heart disease, short breath, pain in side, shoulder or arm, oppression, Irregular pulse, palpitation, smothering, puffing of ankles or dropsy, Dr. Miles will send to afflicted persons a $2.60 Free Treatment. Bad cases usually soon relieved. These treatments are the result of SO years' extensive research and remark able success .in treating various ail ments of the heart, liver and stomach, which often copipllcate each case. Send fur Remarkable Cures In Your State So wonderful are the results that ho wishes every sick person to test thin famous treatment at his expense. Af flicted persons should avail themselves of this liberal offer, as they may never have such an opportunity again. l)i lays are dangerous. No death eorne.i more suddenly than that from heart disease. Send at once for his Free Book and Free Treatment. Describo your dlF case. Address Dr. Franklin Miles, Depl. HF., 325 to 536 Main St., Elkhart, Ind. —Advertisement.