SECOND SECTION. • ' FRIDAY EVENING, PAGES 11 to 20 HARRISBURG TELEGRA.PH MARCH 20,1914. Klein Co. Offer a Nost Varied Assortment of Spring Suits, Dresses, Waists, Underwear & —suit department A Most Varied Showing of Modified French Models At a wide range of Prices $15.00 T0 $85.00 The most advanced ideas of the leading fashions in Europe and America are faithfully represented in "Klein Co." suits. I" Coats I A special offering of the celebrated "Bonwit Golfine" coat in all the leading Spring shades at $19.75 Other coat 9 in all the latest materials and models from I J 1 ?- 50 !! 847 - 50 --blouses Blouses have never before attracted so much at tention and we have a beautiful selection in dressy lace and chiffon models. A most extraordinary offering for Saturday is the renowned "Co-Ed" waists in crepe P* A de chine; regular $5.00 values at... u)0*Ovl The colors are white, navy, Copenhagen, char treuse, Nile green, tango and apricot. Dresses I Taffeta Dresses are all the vogue at present and we are showing beautiful models in all L shades. A special $15.00 dress easily worth $25.00 is our offering in this department. —millinery L A presentation » of the season's most desired vgplL models and shades from the French Milliners. if The New Store for Women" 9 North Market Square Union City Stomach Victim Tells How He Regained Health Quickly Mr. Martinran Finds Good Health After Using Mayr's Won derful Remedy. C. Martinran, of 42 Graves street, Cfnlon City, Pa., after long suffering from ailments of the stomach and the digestive tract, took Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy with the most re markable results. The suffering of years was ended with the first dose. Mr. Martlnran's experience Is told In a letter—written a year after tak ing the remedy, thus proving the per manent nature of the benefits. He wrote: "It has been a year since I -took your treatment, which I am sure did me a great amount of good. My health at present Is good, thanks to your won derful remedy. I will always recom mend It to my friends." Try Telegraph Want Ads. This letter is typical of those writ ten by the thousands of users of Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy In all parts of the country. It is known everywhere. The first dose convinces —no long treatment. Mayr s Wonderful Stomach Remedv 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 ire sure it has saved their lives. Because of the remarkable success of this remedy there are many Imi tators, so be cautious. Be cure it's MAYR'S. Go to Geo. A. Gorgas' drug store and ask about the wonderful results It has accomplished in cases they know—or send to Geo. H. Mayr Mfg. Chemist, 164-156 Whiting St., Chicago, 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. JESUS' GOAL WAS A BM SOCIETY World Is Childish Today in Its De sire For Reforms, Says W. T. Ellis CHURCH LOST LEADERSHIP? Some Folks Not Pleased With Saviour Because of His Democracy The International Sunday School Les son For March 22 la "Lessons by the Way"; Luke 13:18-35 (By William T. Ellis.) Anybody who takes real brains to the task of reading the daily news papers and current periodicals and books, knows that the greatest theme under present discussion is, "Where are we going? What is the meaning of this tremendous social upheaval? Will the world-wide unrest, with all Its new political, economic and so cial theories, lead to chaos, or to a better order of humanity?" AH of which is to say, "Is the king dom of Heaven coming?" There is a wider deeper interest In this ques tion than when Jesus Himself traveled on foot over His little world, talk ing everywhere about the kingdom. Our own new experiences lead us to comprehend, perhaps better than did our fathers, how dominant was the kingdom note In the thought and teaching of Jesus. His goal was nothing less than a new and better order of society—a kingdom wherein the Ideals and sovereignty of God held sway. There Is not a political or social reformer before the world to-day, neither Lord George nor Woodrow Wilson, who has so complete and basic a scheme for the betterment of human life as that which Jesus pro claimed. All that is wise or worthy In to-day's social urge Is but a com ing to their own of the teachings of Jesus. Pity the blindness of the person who can see no relationship between the utterances and practices of Christ, and the upheavals that are going forward before our eyes to-day. These are kingdom-coming times, be vong the compass of our minds. By Law or by Growth? What a child wants, he wants right away. Only the mature can wait patiently for the fulfillment of a desire. We are well advanced in our understanding of life before we begin to grasp the great truth of the patience of God. Candidly, we are to-day childish in our attitudo toward social reform* We want them enacted into laws as soon as we have sighted them. The latest theory must be rushed on to the statute books. Social reformers blithely turn their backs on the long experience of the race, and demand that the very newest idea of the most radical theorist shall be put into general practice at once, whether that idea be human eugenics of a cattle-breeding type or anarchy In child life, masquerading as & new educational method. Our light and easy disregard of the principle of I natural growth has crowded our State J laws with immature legislation, our schools with fads, and our literature with extravagances that make the judicious grieve. No hasty or 111-considered reforms were launched by Jesus. In the ut terances concerning the kingdom of God, which form the present Sun day School lesson, He likened its j growth to that of a mustard seed or' to the spread of leaven In meal. It began small, but it was to grow large. At first a rejected teaching in an obscure Roman province, of a man subsequently executed as a criminal, it later became the dominant power of the world. To-day two-thirds of mankind are under nominally Chris tian rule. The genius of the king dom is working out in a new world order. The best brains of earth are to-day engaged In promoting human welfare; which is to say, they are servants of the kingdom. Nobody who expects to hold any rating as a thoughtful person now despises the day of small things In the kingdom. The shallow and supercilious scepticism of Ingersoll no longer has any vogue. Everybody perecives that the tree which to-day affords shelter and fruit to the weary millions is of Christ's planting. The essentially Christian character of the present social reform is admitted. Jesus is acclaimed as the real leader of the hosts of progress, and His songs sung in political conventions. Leaving Out the Church A new note is being sounded in the present discussions of the deeper tendency of our time. Most persons admit that our day is fundamentally religious. Men and women are hun gry for spiritual satisfactions. But a question was raised in a recent im portant and suggestive symposium in the North American, Philadelphia, wherein leaders of thought made ans wer to the Inquiry "Is a revival of re ligion impending?" Most of the re plies gave Judgment that something like a revival is either coming or else is already here. But, some discerning men queried, "Is it not coming outside of the church?" Broadly speaking, has ! the church abdicated her religious j leadership? Is not the world running ahead of her lnspiritual perception and progress? Are are new expres ; sions and interpretations of the day's j religious mood vocalized by others than the leaders of the church, to the men who are supported by the church and whose whole time belongs to the church? That was what had happened In the time of Jesus. The eclesiastical leaders crucified Him because He did not conform to their encrusted meth ods and interpretations, but was a living voice of vital truth—and truth is ever expanding and growing, like the kingdom which is its cus todian. More than once in her long history, human thought and human service has outrun the church, and It has needed a cataclysm to bring the latter up to the times. Very searching in this kingdom Idea. It penetrates the consciences of all alert church officials and mem bers. The kingdom Is ever growing, and taking on new forms and enlarg ing its approach to new conditions; ' is the church? Consider how in stinctively down-town churches, amid altered neighborhood conditions, seek for an endowment fund, in order to perpetuate the old order. If, as some contend, and as certain English en dowments clearly Illustrate, an endow ment Is the hand of a dead past on a living present, would it not be better to turn some of the energy that the church now spends In raising endow ments into vitalizing the present mem bership? A really alive church is al ways equal to the problems of its own age. Contemporaneousness is a charao , "Leven-Leventy~Leven VERY season there i s a new crop of merchants who jump into the advertising columns of the newspapers with the (to them) startling announcement of S2O clothes for "leven-leventy-leven," or something like that, and to judge from the tone of their tunes one might almost think they actually believe what they publish. We've been buying and selling We've won a reputation here for clothes in Harrisburg for a good of qua ' ,ty r c!othes tha , t g T u service -^° thes ° ° that are guaranteed on a money-back basis, even though many years; we know just where we can get clothes we know that their very goodness makes the chances of to sell at "leven-leventy-leven" but we're strangers to having to put such a promise into practice very, very the men who make and sell such stuff. doubtful. They're the product of the most progres- (Si I sive clothing institution in the U. S. A. The most of them are I ■ Kuppenheimer 12L I Clothes I and if you haven't ever purchased and worn them—better get the jw/fT 11 habit—right now. rVT Q / m IB sls $lB S2O I $25 or S3O \ | I and as good comparatively at sls as at $30 —in every instance the \\ j /li, \ 1 I greatest value any merchant can give, the greatest value any man \4l \\ ! I can secure. 11 aricet' 'JI 11 -in teristlc of Christ's gospel. It la al ways up-to-date. He Is sufficient for each new emergency. By Him all fresh contingencies can be met. "I know of a land that Is sunk in shame, Of hearts that faint and tire; And I know of a Name, a Name, a Name, Can set that land on Are. Its sound Is a brand. Its letters flame, But I know of a Name, a Name, a Name, Will set this land on fire." The Narrow Gate , Some folk arc not pleased with Jesus because He Is too much of a democrat. He does not "make allow ances" for a man's social or linanclal importance, but insists upon treating all men in the same way. Thus, He has neglected utterly to provide a special entrance into His kingdom for automobiles and Pullman cars. He frankly says that the door is a narrow one—such as the little chil dren, and the unencumbered, may pass through easily. But, the man with a great pack of goods cannot get through. As for the person who will not surrender his bulky holdings of wealth, of pride, of sin, of self-right eousness, of good deeds made for man's eyes—well, there simply is no admittance for that man. The king dom is made up of those who can pass throught the gate. Of course, that is so of all king doms —the kingdom of good society, of public usefulness, of knowledge and of friendship. There must be a giving up before there can be a go ing up. Sacrifice is the admission fee to all portals. They who will not sur render time, ease, self-indulgence, ig norance or bad manners, cannot hope to ascend into any of the kingdoms of success. Otherwise the unfit and the uncongenial would swamp all the places of responsibility, and chaos would result. Heaven must be made up of the heavenly, elge it would not be Heaven. So while its gate is open It Is also narrow. When the Door Is Shut A terrible possibility was suggested ECZEMA FORGED 10 YELD 1 POSLtM If your suffering from Eczema or any Itching skin trouble has been intense, the quick relief from one application of Poslam will seem wonderful to you. And to see the trouble disappear will be another cause for wonder. Just as soon as you spread it gently on. itching stops; burning skin Is grate fully soothed; no more need to scratch; no discomfort to keep you awake. Improvement every day. The skin, forced to respond, soon resumes Its natural color and condition. Your druggist sells Poslam, For free sample write to Emergency Labora tories, 32 West 25th Street, New York. Poslam Soap Improves the skin as no other soap can do. New Toilet Size 15 Cents.—Advertisement. by Jesus in this connection. Most of us shrink from talking about it. Some superficial thinkers repudiate it altogether. But Jesus said that there came a time when the gate was shut. Then they who had spurned Its open invitation began to hammer frantically for admittance. But they could only look in from without, and know themselves rejected. Awful. We shudder at the pic ture. Yet a few minutes of honest thinking shows us that this is not only just, but Inevitable. If all who despised and flouted a householder were to be permitted to make them selves His guests, whenever and how ever they pleased, the home would cease to be his and become theirs. It would lose the character he gave it, and take on the lawlessness of his enemies. If the wicked were permit ted to enter Heaven and have their unchanged way there, how soon would Heaven become like hell? All the im plications of a moral law require that the door must be shut against those who will not heed the conditions of admittance. The shut door is a pos 1 | In Eight Days We Move f i, Eg uaj ; '|| This gives you only eight more OPPORTUNITY DAYS in which ||| jUS to select from our large stock of gn ? S>n jg Pianos and Player Pianos at Re-1 fro >£j :| moval Sale Price 1 fe Our new lease is for a long term of years and so you will not have gj II another opportunity at a Troup Bros. Removal Sale for some time || |*j to come. Do not fail to grasp this one great chance. We can save || you many dollars in hard cash. §| H Do Not Delay—Come Now! I fST Troup Bros. j II 19 South Third Street g 1 OPEN EVENINGS 1 sibility confronting everybody who has not accepted Christ's invitation of the open door. A sting Is the tail of this lesson. For the clear intimation is that it was the ecclesiastics of His day, the scribes and the Pharisees, whom Jesus said might be shut out. They thought to ride full panoplied and prideful into the kingdom, simply because they were they. Instead, He pointed to a vision, now being realized, as the very ends of the earth are thronging into the kingdom, "And they shall come from the east and west and froni the north and south, and shall sit down in the kingdom of God. And behold, there are last who shall be first, and there are first who shall be last." Some great reversals await us in Heaven. Earth's iniquities and in justices are all to be straightened out —and this need alone is sufficient to require a Heaven —and many of earth's lowly shall become the high in Heaven. "Social justice," the dream of earth's best to-day, will be realized in the kingdom of Heaven. On Saturday, March 31 STOUFFER'S Will have for sale Country Ham, Cheese Products and a largo line of Delicatessen and a more extensive line of HOME BAKING Stalls In Broad and Chestnut Street Markets Dally Market 449 Broad St.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers