4 A DOUBLE TAILORING EVENT GRAND OPENING OF OUR NEW STORE Our Spring Opening of All Our New Late Spring Materials We extend to both men and women of this district a special invitation to attend our grand opening. Everything new and clean, just from the woolen mills. The manufacturers co operated with us in making this a notable event, they picked the cream out of their stock, giving us the best of it in every way to do their part in helping us to celebrate. We can justly say you can't get better materials anywhere in this entire country. Everything new, even our location, but the grand old perfect-fitting tailors, we can't get any better, that's the reason we don't get new ones. We've got the best organization in the whole world, that's the reason we satisfy our customers beyond their greatest expectations. Spring Suit Guaranteed to Fit Perfectly We guarantee the woolens, the linings, the shape and the wearing quality of our suits. We know how they are made and we can honestly and conscientiously say we will refund your money if they are not all we claim for them. We keep suits made by us pressed free of any charge for at least two years. Come to-day or to-morrow select your new Spring suit and pay a few dollars down, the balance when ready. SAMPLES CHEERFULLY GIVEN ABSOLUTELY FREE. O T".* 1 ¥" T f Y TT?TI O Importers and Tailors OIILL oJaU 1 HlaO, 211 Market Street CNRISTIIITY WITH ! PUNCH TO IT COUNTS It Un't All Sugar, But the Salty Kind Is the Worth While Brand i SALTY SAINTS AM) TUEIIS ! SAVOVK The International Sunday School Les son For April lit Is "The (of Dlscipleshjp."—Luke J :25-35. (By William Ellis) Sugar on mackerel, or salt in tea, J hro mistakes which the palate re sents. Sugar and salt are not equiva- I lents, even though some few millions of Christians are trying to substitute j eweetness for saltiness. Christ never sent His disciples into! the world to be sugar. They are not meant to please palaies, but to save lives. And that is the business of salt: it bites but it preserves. Daring to be different—courage to ; be true to one's Christian personality —ls a sign of saintliness. Believers i with tang to them, individualities who care not a whistle about pleas ing old Madame Grundy, but are in- I tensely eager to be acceptable to Jesus Christ, are the real hope of hu- | man society. Their business is to be the salt of the earth. Whatever they : touch, they help. Salt—Christian salt costs. It, represents the high price of living the highest life. Jesus did not make it too easy for persons to follow Him: ! He insisted that they count the cost. 1 To become as salt for this decaying old earth is more expensive than tak ing the highest degrees in a t'rater.- nal order or finding the loftiest place in society. For it costs in life, :n service, in sacrifice, in heart's blood. Only those persons become salty feaints who take up a cross, lift up a cross and are lifted up on a cross. \ Cold Douche For tho Crowd Crowds were still lionizing Jesus. He was the sensation of the hour over in novelty-loving Peri'a. He was the vogue and wherever He went a multitude attended Him. But Jesus knew what was in man, and never suffered any illusions concerning popular favor. Therefore He feared not To be "im politic," "indiscreet" and to tell the wholesome truth as well as that which tickled ears. Turning to the mob, on the occasion treated in this lesson, He said, in effect: "You fo]. low me now. But you cannot truly l»e my disciples unless you put me first in your lives. My claim must take the precedence of all family ties, all business considerations, all politi cal allegiance." What a douche of cold water for these folk who wanted to be on the "popular" side. They were follow ing the line of least resistance, and CASTORIA For Iniants and Children In UM For Over 30 Years Signature of . FRIDAY EVENING, HARR7BBURG TELEGRAPH APRIL 17, 1914. being carried forward by the current. I , Xow this radical rabbi, not content' Jto let well enough alone, must in- j i sist on supreme and peculiar claims. 'He wants only those who wll prefer Him above all else; He will not be j l called Master at alf, unless He can I be Master In all. And that is still itrue of Jesus Christ. He will not be j lord of any life that will not let Him I |be lord of all life. Xo divided al- : I legianco will content Him. This calm assumption of absolute and; [singular authority was one of the' most constant expressions of His con-' sciousness of His Messiahship. He [Would not accept the capitulation of I any life, except on terms of uncoil-. Idltlonal surrender. ! Scant comfort in this for the but- ; ■terlly religionists who want to llit ! from flower to flower—to-day, ortho- j ; dox Christianity, to-morrow. Tlieo-1 ; sophy, next day Christian Science,j the next day Ethical Culture, New | Thought, Babism, or some other i pseudo-oriental cult. One cannot be ! an eclectic disciple and a follower of Jesus too. There is a divine egotism about Christ. His claims are un |ab .shedly absolute. His place in life iis first—before the place of father. I mother, wife; children, brothers or j sisters. Even life itself is not to be considered alongside of loyalty to Jesus. The Sign of the Cross Any student of history must be j thrilled at the vision of the eminent place which the emblem of death and 1 degradation and sacrifice, the cross tof Christ, has held in human affairs for nearly two thousand years. Hun jdreds of millions of people scat : tered all over the earth, offer it su i preme allegiance. It holds higher place and authority than any national ! emblem. Of old the Japanese Roman I Catholic converts died rather than . trample on the cross. Within our [own memory native converts in Korea and China have accepted imprison ment and death in preference to dis } loyalty to the cross. The Turkish Em pire is red with the blood of modern j martyrs. The passion for the cross, | which has been the comfort of lonely :and obscure Christians, and the in spiration of great armies, is a theme | for song and story. As laid down by Jesus, though, in ; the present lesson, the cross was a ; symbol of subjection, sacrifice and (service. It meant willingness to un j dergo suffering for the sake of the ! Xame. It meant the acceptance of j shame. It meant a burden of ignom iny to be borne. As the convict car i ries his own cross to the place of : execution, even as Jesus later did j Himself, so His disciples were to bear | before all men the odium of being ! Christ's friends. For long years after i these words were spoken, it was I a cause of reproach to be a Chris tian. ; "Count well this cost," said Christ, i One of the most praiseworthy aspects lof the "Billy" Sunday evangelistic j campaigns is his insistence that con verts shall pay the price In restitu tion for past evil and in holy living for the future. He does not sweep men and women into the church on a flood of emotion and hysteria. Jesus cited the illustrations of a man build ' ing a tower, or of a king going forth ito battle, but first sitting down to [estimate the cost. Look well to the !' meaning of disciplcship: It costs a life. There is a cross for every con vert. The Clear Break | Moody used to say that it was only I the half-way Christians who are mis j ••ruble. There fcs no joy in trying to serve both God anil the world. After I all, according lo the clear words of Jesus, that is no loyalty to Him at : all. He demands a complete s«r , render of all: if He chooses to remit [to us more than ever we had from llie world, that is of His royal bounty. First of all there must be entiro re nunciation. A clear break with the past, an utter cutting off of old al legiances, is His unequivocal require ment. Before a man can be accepted into citizenship In one country, he must in definite terms renounce his old citizenship and loyalty. Xo king so exacting as Christ in this. In trying to make the Christian life seem easy we have not followed the example of Christ. He declares that it needs all a person is or has to enter His discipleship. Only sur rendered lives have the savour of salt. God cannqt do anything with lives that are not completely made over to Him. Ills program for puri fying and preserving human society is tn leaven it with the salt of Chris tians before they are anything else. With that kind of life as His in strument, nothing -is too hard for Christ. But with saltless church members, He can do nothing. If an observer cannot tell any difference between the Christians and non- Christians in a community, then there is sore need of salt In that vi cinity. For salt makes itself felt: it even hurts: but it saves. mm MEALS Take Mi-o-na—A Simple, Harm less Remedy for Indigestion or Upset Stomach Let us tell you how to enjoy your meals so that even the heartiest din- I ner will set well on your stomach, | cause no unpleasant or disagreeable I after effects. There is no hard work: no need of j a rigid diet list; no disagreeable rnedi ' cine; instead, eat what you like and ! use Mi-o-na Tablets. They are not ! only a digestive and antacid, giving i prompt and effective relief, but a spe ; clfic for disordered stomachs. Do not endure indigestion another day. Mi j o-na surely and safely strengthens the | digestive organs, soothes the irritated ; membrane, and increases the flow of ! gastric Juices so that the stomach can ; care for the food as nature Intended. It is needless to have a bad stomach or suffer after-eating misery. Get from H. C. Kennedy, or any druggist, ! a 50-cent box of Mi-on-a to-day—take two or three tablets at the first sign ;of distress. Keep It in the house— , carry It when traveling—it's at all j times the dependable stomach remedy. | —Advertisement For Children Lax Links Are Safe and Sure Don't let the little ones suffer from constipation, as serious Ills are apt to result. Very often they will become 1 constipated by overeating. Castor oil, rhubarb or other medicines relieve tem j porarlly, and unless tho greatest caro Is exercised, will often do more harm than good. Lax Links, those delightful ; candy laxatives, exquisitely flavored . with the oil of spearmint, and which do not contain any habit-forming or dan gerous drug are what the children like and need. They are not violent in their action; neither will they gripe or cause pains few tablets will ti» all that is necessary. Recommended by physicians ami void by druggist* everywhere. 10>- ~111.1 2:,.' boxes. Write for free sample, Boro b'alicinu At the mercy of a savage king, almost naked and wicked of eye, "LUCILLE LOVE, the Girl of Mystery" Is saved for the time being by the amazement and astonishment of the savages who note with wonder the pearly whiteness of her skin. "LUCILLE LOVE, the Girl of Mystery" Now being published exclusively In this newspaper. No story of recent years has created the. lnteftst and sensation wnich has attended this production of " LUCILLE LOVE," and in order to add still further to the interest surrounding same, it has been dramatized by the UNIVERSAL FILM MFG. CO. and is | being produced at all moving picture theaters supplied by their service.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers