SECOND SECTION. jSfe^ML JSS FRIDAY EVENING; PAO es,,„» harrisburg telegraph rDON'T NEGLECT YOUR STOMACH Use Mi-o-na—Sure, Safe and Ef fective Indigestion Relief or Money Refunded vA If you are not able to digest your r Btomach Is sour, gassy, upset; your tongue coated; If your head aches and you are dizzy; if you have heartburn and pains In your colon or bowels, why suffer needlessly? Buy now—to-day—from any drug gist, a fifty cent box of Mi-o-na Stom ach Tablets. Take them regularly as directed and see how quickly you got relief. There Is no more effective remedy for stomach ills than Mi-o-na. It is not only a digestive giving quick relief, but also strengthens and builds up surely and safely the digestive or gans, soothes the irritated membrane and increases the flow of the digestive Juices, which insures a speedy recov ery. Your whole system is benefited and you become well and strong. Start treatment to-day. Mi-o-na Is different from other di gestive remedies. Money back from H. C. Kennedy if not benefited.—Ad vertisement. Sad Sc for trial till For Chapped Hands and Lips Vaseline Rag. U. S. Pat. Off. J* Camphor Ice Soothes and heals cracked skin. Keeps it smooth firm and healthy. Jnsisi on VASELINE Camphor Ice, in tubes and boxes. 10 cents. Drug t and Department stores everywhere. CHESEBROUGH MFG. CO. (Consolidated) 41 Stat* Strati New York City FEEL YOUNG! It's Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets For You! Beware ci the habit of constipation. • develops from just a few constipated < ays, unless you take yourself in hand. Coax the jaded bowel muscles bark »j normal action with Dr. Edwards' j '/live Tablets, the substitute for calo- I /+ie\. Don't force them to unnatural l action with severe medicines or by merely flushing out the intestines with nasty, sickening cathartics. Dr. Edwards believes in gentleness, persistency and Nature's assistance. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets open the botvels; their action is gentle, yet posi tive. There is never any pain or grip wig when Dr. Edwards' Olive Oil Tab lets are used. .Tust the kind of treat ment old persons should have. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil, you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two occasionally and have no trouble with your liver, bowels or stomach. 10c and 25c per box. The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, O. At nil druggists.—Advertisement. . Best Laxative for Old Folks Sweet Lax Links Old folks must be very careful in islng laxatives which gripe or cause iains. Lax Links, those delightful candy Dxatives, exquisitely flavored with the f" of spearmint, are well adapted for 3 folks or Invalids, as they do not ntaln any habit-forming drugs, nor idll they cause any inconvenience. They rill assist the liver in relieving and ireventing constipation. They are mild n their action, but they are sure In rvery case. By reason of their composi •on they are endorsed by physicians. Cor all who become easily constipated ty eating pastry and sweets they are ileal. Use them and your blood will tay pure arid you will be free of head- Hies. Sold by aJI druggists. 10c and 6c. boxes. Write for free sample. Boro lalicine Co., Philadelphia, Pa. COAL IS NOW SOc A TON CHEAPER The Spring schedule of coal prices went into effect April 1, and lowers the cost of coal with few exceptions 50c a ton. Kelley's Coal quality is as high as ever, but prices are 50c lower, Kelley's hard egg is now $5.95 Kelley's hard stove is now $6.20 Kelley's hard nut is now $6.35 Get in your coal now before Spring housecleaning. M.KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third St. 10th and State Street*. MERCHANTS A MINF.RS TRANS. CO. "FLORIDA BY SEA" Direct Houte BALTIMORE and PHILADELPHIA ——to— < Savannah and Jacksonville M Through tickets to principal points including meals and stateroom accom- W modations on steamers Best route to Florida, Cuba and the South Fine Meamers. Best service. Eow fares Marconi wireless. Automobiles carried Kooms de Luxe. Baths. For booklet • all on local ticket agent or address. < it)' Ticket Office, 10." S. nth St., riilln \V. P. Turner, P. T. H„ Baltimore, Md. Try Teleexaph Want Ads. MOST MODEST SET IN HIGHEST PLACES % Christ Pointed Out Many Lessons While Seated at the Dinner Table WERE "BOUNDERS" THEN, TOO Person Who Seeks Social Career as Life Goal Will Taste Apples of Sodom The International Sunday School Les son for April 5 is "Christ's Table Talk"—Luke 14:7-24. By William T. EUis The convivial Christ is the central figure of this story. No anchorite or ascetic he, but a frequenter of feasts, a desired diner-out. Because he spent his early life in a carpenter shop is no warrant for classing Jesus as so cially unsophisticated. The three years of his ministry reveal him often in so cial'aspects, and frequently as feasts. The boorishness which regards the possession of evening clothes as a mark of worldliness would get no en couragement from Jesus. He was so true a democrat that he could meet all men on their own level, from the highest to the lowliest. There was good dining over in the trans-Jordan country, even as to-day. It is a fat land. No traveler can for get the fruits of Damascus. At the lime of this lesson, Jesus was sojourn ing in Perea, where the forms of cul tivated society were farther advanced even than in Jerusalem. We must see the story in this setting. Orien tal hospitality, even to this day, has more of the outward forms ot graciousness than we in the West .viiow. In a recent Atlantic Monthly the Kev. Dr. A. M. Rihbany, a Syrian, tells how he at first declined dinner invitations in America, because they were so curt and casual; he was look ing for oriental urgency. Out of the table talk of a dinner party the text of this lesson is taken, liood table talk is the surest mark of good society. How would that of your home look in a book? Not the viands, but the guests and the con versations make a dinner notable. No other comment is needed upon some elaborate dinners that are reported in Uie daily press than that the guests have to be entertained by hired per formers; they have no resources in themselvea To sit at some tables is as sood as a college education; while as for others, the school teachers say that all their instructions in proper speeches and refined usage are nulli fied at home. The best stories, the most important news, the discussion of all that is worth while in the world, belong at the dinner table. Even. though the roast be tender, if the talk be tough, the dinner is a failure. 1 5 know one family with young folks in' it that has moved its Encyclopedia Brittanica to the dining room, as an aid to profitable talk. "Bounders," Then autl Now As it was, so it is. The keen words of Jesus concerning the socially ambi tious, the persons who thrust them selves forward into prominence, are as up-to-date as though spoken of last night's function. Then, as now, there were "bounders," and "climbers,' liv ing to be seen in the right "set," and reverting to the jungle for their code of manners in order to attain this am bition. The selfishness and ruthless ness of it all, and the bitter heart burnings and jealousies engendered, almost pass belief. Of no aspect of life can blase Wise Man's words be more truly spoken, "Vanity of vani ties! All is vanity!" The person who seeks a social career as a life goal is due to learn to the full the taste of Apples of Sodom. Everybody seems to be in a con spiracy to drag down the person who seeks the best seat for himself. Jesus pointed out, in a few luminous sen tences, how such a one is sure to be called down; while the wiser, more modest person is set in the higher place. That is social sophistication, as well as good manners and funda mental modesty. No truer life appraisal was ever made than these words of Jesus: "For every one that exalted himself shall be humbled; and he that humbleth himself shall be exalted." The shores of social life are strewn with the em bittered wrecks of the once proud and self-exalted. And it is as common as sunrises to see persons who despise social attention having it steadily showered upon them. Thus the laws of the kingdom work out in life. How a "Set" Swaps Dinners We rather rub our eyes at the mod ernity of the conditions revealed by these words of Jesus; "And he said to him also that had bidden him, When thou makest a dinner or a sup per, call not thy friends, nor thy triends, nor thy brethren, or thy kins men, nor rich neighbors; lest haply they also bid thee again, and a recom pense be made thee." That sounds like a present-day social satirist. The thing we call "society," be it in New York or in Podunk, Is made up of an exclusive set who exchange Eczema Stopped ZEMO Proves a Wonderful Success- Stops Itching Instantly and Brings Permanent Results. Oet a 25c Bottle Today and Prore It. Dont think that eczema, that nearly drives you wild, can't be Rotten rid of. It can—and ZEMO is all yon need to do It. This clean, antl- Immediate and ItslkJ results lasting. ZE Vh yVP J A MO has often beenffSgfiM imitated but others, by * * /iHB your Hkln as clear as ZEMO Will Stop All though you had Thi» Torment Instantly never lrnd eczema in your life. You will Set .this relief instantly by Betting a 25c ottle of ZK MO right away— now. There's ; no more oxcuse lor enduring such misery. ZEMO Is sold and guaranteed by druggist* i everywhere, and in Harrisburg oy 1 Golden Seal Drug Htore, E. Z. Grose, Kennedy's Medicine Store, Croll Keller, \\ . T. Thompson, C. M. Forney, J. Nel son Clark Drug Co.- T. Prowell Stee-i --:ot Pa TT isn tso much a man s money as it is his judgment that counts in clothes I buying—in fact, no amount of cash can disguise bad taste in dress. I fggßll We know men—and so do you—who spare I no expense on their clothes, and yet I who never achieve an appearance of I distinction or individuality. On the other hand, there are I / t men * n tki s town whose clothes invariably radiate refinement I y< / I i>>KL and good taste—men who look as they should look in their I I & clothes—and yet who spend very very little—so little that I \ J»yli wouldn t believe it if we to!d you. We happen to I \XjJPknow because they are customers of this Live Store and I w / are wear * n 2 I /I i Kuppenheimer Clothes I 1 \ The kind of clothes you ought to wear, at the price you I 111 ought lo pay— I 111 \||lljk $15.00, $20.00, $25.00, $30.00 I ,||§S \ You've never seen the like of the fine weaves, \ ne st yl es and fine tailoring we're showing this | spring season. Meanwhile, men of long judg -11 I ment are s^mm^n 8 l^e cream, so come early. 304 Market St., Harrisburg, Pa. ——■■ ■Hl—— visits and dinners among themselves, the chief charm of which consists in the fact that most other persons in the vicinity are not permitted to par ticipate. Rebellious complaints are heard in private from the members of most "sets," that they have to go out night after night to meet the very same people over and over again. "Flat, stale and unprofitable" is the verdict of even those who maintain this social barter, with its endless suc cession of expensive and profitless obligations. A radical reform was proposed by Jesus. He said that the sensible and useful hospitality is that which is be stowed upon the needy, and the so cially nonelect. Pity the shallow and conventionalized homes which never welcome to their table anybody from whom a return invitation may not be expected. They miss the zest and im mediate rewards of real hospitality— to put the case on its lowest basis— i because they who entertain strangers 1 sometimes entertain angels unawares, j The guest who is on nobody's list, , often is the most entertaining and profitable. Wayfarers often have an I Individuality denied to the socially I elect, who have lived their common- I place lives In a commonplace way in I a commonplace community. Of course, the teaching runs deeper than this. The latest and wisest ex port in sociology is pointing out the supreme place of the Individual home in all reform. If there were more at tractive homes open to young people there would be fewer on the streets and In the low places of amusement. A wise Christian hostess, administer ing her home as a talent for God, can fix the Ideals of scores of plastic youth, and do truer service for the state than the one who serves on number less committees and works for assort ed reforms. I know one Boston woman who was thus "given to hos pitality," and now workers for the world's welfare, scattered all over the earth, bless her as one of the greatest influences in their lives. "Back to the home" Is a slogan that will be heard Increasingly. When Truth Crowds Uncomfortably , A wee laddie known to me used to try to divert parental admonitions by saying, "Let's talk about the yel low cow." When truth crowds home, change the subject of conver sation. One of the shrewd old Pharisees who reclined at dinner with Jesus, finding the table talk rather too warm for comfort, piously remarked, seizing upon a phrase of Jesus, "Blessed is he that shall eat bread in the kingdom of God." He tried to use religion as a derailing switch; just as the church members whose business has crooked ramifica tions, cry, "Stick to the simple gos pel!" when they find themselves squirming under the preacher's appli cation of truth. Thin unctuous Pharisaism only stirred Jesus to sterner reproof. The self-complacent religious snobbery of the leading Jews, which made them sure that they were the elect, aroused his indignation. Tilt- same itorf of smug assurance is found to- day at old Tiberias, where two sects of rabbis have theological schools, on the traditional assumption that when the Messiah appears he will rise out of the Lake of Galilee, chooso his lieutenants from the Tiberias theologians, and then proceed to the neighboring hill of Safed to set up Ins throne. Just as he could be very tender toward sinners, so Jesus could be very stern toward those who called themselves saints. Cried Frederic Law rence Knowles: "Gentle as she who nursed thee at her breast, (Yet what a lash of lightnings once ] they tongue, ITo scourge the hypocrite and Pharl- I see!) i Nerve thou mine arm, O meek, O I mighty One." Countering full and fairly against the pious snobbery of the Pharisee, Jesus told a story to illustrate that the first chosen might bo the finally left. This parable of the great sup per looks two ways; it is a rebuke to the Phairsees and an invitation to the multitude. In passing, the old I observation may be repeated that | the Master here once more presents I the kingdom invitation in the guise lof a feast. God has spread His finest repast in the gospel of His Son. The Free For All Feast All things were made ready by the host; the feast was spread. That was the host's part. His chosen failed in theirs; they did not come when called. The invitation was flouted. Shall a man spurn God? That is what Is being done every day. The Great Invitation is rejected, with excuses as transparently false as those of fered in the lesson to-day. One man had bought a field, and must go look at it as if men exam ined land after purchase, instead of before! Another pleaded that he must try out a new yoke of oxen— which, of course, should have been tested before purchase. The third had married a wife; and so, as a set tled member of the community, should accept his social responsibili ties. An anecdote relates that one Arab sent to another to borrow a rope. The answer came back, "I need it to tie up a bale of water." "But water Is not tied with a rope," was the response. "Allah permits one to do wonder ful things with a rope when he does not want to lend it," said the owner. Of this nature where the excuses of the guests first invited. "Then the master of the house being angry said to his servant, Go out quickly Into the street and lanes of the city, and bring In hither the poor and maimed and blind and lame." Some persons think God is a mollycoddle, and cannot grow indig nant. Scripture teaches otherwise. The notion that God is a sort of vast, gelatinous Geniality, whom mortal offences cannot disturb, Is as perni cious as It. is false. The anger of the Almighty is predicted for those who reject the Great Invitation. So the invitation was sent run ning through the lanes and streets of the city, where it reached the poor and maimed and blind, and then even out into the highwavs and hedges, where the very riff-raff were to be found. Of course, the picture sets forth the Gospel call to the hea then, and to the uttermost limits of humanity. All through the ages the parable-prophecy has been in course of fulfilment. The Gentiles of old, and the outcasts of India to-day, are showing the greatest zeal to accept that invitation, which the proud and self-righteous refused. The gateway to the feast is inscribed, "Whosoever will." FRECKLES Now is the Time to Get Bid of Those Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othlne—double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othlne — double strength—from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to com pletely clear the skin and gain a beau tiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othlne as this is sold under guarantee of money back If it fails to remove freckles. —Advertisement. Don't Be Weak or Weary Your system needs a good tonic. The blood needs revitalizing. Our Beef, Iron and Wine 1 is a fine tonic for cleansing and stimulating the blood. Per Bottle, SOc—Full Pint (lood for young children. Forney's Drug Store 429 MARKET STREET "We serve yon wherever yon are." SOLID FOOD WAS OUT OF THE QUESTION And Even Pure Water Could Not Be Retained on Her Stomach Stomach troubles of all kinds cer tainly are prevalent in Harrisburg, but they are gradually but surely being subdued by Quaker Extract. More cures of chronic cases are being re ported daily. Mrs. S. Bierbauer, of 118(5 Bailey street, said: "My stomacli was in a dreadful con dition and wits in sucli a weakened state that I could not retain any solid l'ood. Even liquid nourishment would not stay on the stomach and lately I could not even drlnlc a glass of pure water without dreadful consequences. I certainly tried much medicine to be cured, but nothing seemed to help. Finally 1 joined the number calling on the Health Teacher at the drug store. I obtained a treatment of Quaker Ex A good cigar like a good egg is not only good in parts—but all over KING OSCAR 5c Cigars are good all over—good wrapper, good binder and good filler Regularly Good For 23 Years * tract and to-day I can report wonder ful progress, j now eat well and feel well, am the last to leave the table and I can retain solid and liquid foods on my stomach. I still feel weak, but am Improving daily, and eertainly reo- to all suffer-i ers of stomach troubles." This case is all the more remarkable because Mrs. Bierbauer Is a lady well up in years. Quaker Extract not only purines, but strengthens, and Is a tonla of value to men, women and children. It is also for sufferers of rheumatism, catarrh, kidney and bladder troubles. Quaker Herb Extract, SI.OO per bottle; 3 for S2.DO; Oil of Balm (liniment), for all aches and pains, 25 cents, ae W. IX. Kennedy's, 30 South Third street. —Advertisement.