f To-morrow, Saturday, the Last Day of Kaufman's Big Clean Sweep sf?/p-- s/ofe Qpens af BJQ A.M.,aoses9P.M. Last Chance to Secure Your Share of Kgy Wonderful Bargains j Women's, Misses'& Extra Sizej WOMEN'S, MISSES' & EXTRA SIZE Women's and Misses' Cloth DreSS Coats J Summer Washable Dresses Wash Dress Skirts -• n's and Misses' Beautiful Dresses in materials of White Em- and good for Fall wear. Voiles, Awning Stripe Voiles, White Crepes, Dolly Varden, This season's accepted wash materials, including Ratine, Ramie FORMERLY SOLD UP TO $6.50, $9.75 and SIB.OO pes and fine Ratines, in enormous collection of the prettiest Linen, Bedford Cord and Cordeline. Numerous styles, including the rA 1 le season, including the tier, long and iian tunics and plain tailored models. regular and extra size waist bands up to 38 inches. L ' Misses 16 to 20 years; for Women, 34 gjjirifi* 1 uT > o **• «r ———————————————— For Stout Women, 46 to 56 bust. Women s & Misses Women s & Misses nr j t jr< , c: c*al n & Misses' Wnmpn's Sr Mi....' mWmSs wash d RESS SKIRTS WASH DRESS SKIRTS Women s, Misses and Extra Size Silk Dresses & Misses Women S & IVllsses k Stunning Silk Dresses, all this season's styles and ma i uklsses dresses ' osc $1.95 ¥«\ I I terials; handsomely trimmed Dresses for street, evening or I , 85c $2.00 m Worth Up to $2.00 Worth Up to $3.50 f A FORMERLY SOLD UP TO $7.50, $15.00 and $25.00. Former Price to $3.00 Former Price to $5.00 \ Women's & Misses' Women's'& Mjsses' V |j tl| M nw «OfiQ 00 a nH $8 7'? Women's & Misses' Women's & Misses' £>fVR 11 WASH DRESS SKIRTS WASH DRESS SKIRTS ft i 3 1 " W .J>U.W dllU DRESSES DRESSES lllllßV. /Jk ta d?i «£ Oeo 13 !a ' 1 i sl-39 $2.89 wfl $3 - 5 ° II J EXTRA SPECIAL] r*. to s4* Hl® Worth Up to $2.50 Worth Up to $4.00 Rapffain( , Women's & Misses' Women's & Misses' H|2lS Women ' S & Misses ' 7Cnw , , , c r, 1 DRESSES DRESSES fcsMfßfcj WASH DRESS SKIRTS WASH DRESS SKIRTS 750 Women sLovely Summer Blouses $1.69 $3.89 UST $1.25 $2.95 23 to 36 Waist I Less Than Irlalf Price r n • » ft r-n r n- » fo ta iir .i it , nn ... ,», nn 500 women's white organ- 250 Women's Summer Former Price to $4.50 Former Price to $8.50 % Worth Up to $3.00 Worth Up to $5.00 d over 40 patterns to choose Blouses, made of white and v y v / * colored China Silk. Over *■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■« *•——————————— f roni- All sizes, but not all patterns to choose from ;in all MEN'S SUMMER Girls'Wash Dresses mm n, rt 1 • r np summer style. Your choice for Reduced Almost One-Half Mx More Big RedudionsForTo-morrow $1.39 Never since good clothing has been made and sold if f/ \ fl ro Come Ear. y , Please I have such marvelous values been offered—Comeearly. ll' : I ors; values to sl. OQ Choice 11Q e ~ : _ - i _ . L choke for o»c for \ Women's Silk Cloves p i einnn . n J 11 9 nn d._,i , tic no j *l/; en 1 Al I Vv* ) GIRLS' WASH DRESSES, GIRLS' WASH DRESSES, 200 pairs of 16-button lenghs all pure thread Silk Gloves, Regular SIOOO and $12.00 Regular SISOO and $16.50 i/ / sizes 6to 14; all colors . white and colors; values to double finger tip black and white; all sizes; $1.25 value. £Q 51,118 * ult * I Wu\ values to $1.50. r*Q _ $5.00. Choice tf»o Sale price Ot?C mai AA mCA I (lilt Choice for Oi/C for V ■' AT. «pk.UU Eack AT Eacb i 1 , > , 1 A List of F*fra Snpcial Bi<r Bar Men 1 , and Young Men', J Men's and Young Men". j Wo'rw" OTCKWEAR. TrUnks & Suit CaSeS gaiDS in MenS aild Boys' FumishingS 100 Men's $22.50 Suits at $11.50 I j Choice for J.oc I | for" 45c I I handkerch efs, for silk hose for.. 1 *.^o nr KS 9 ni c C I nr Women's NECKWEAR, $1.25 matting AO Men ' s 25c summer 1C _ , Men's and boys' $1 wool 75 Men s Blue aerge ouits at 2)6.75 -i - to 7 sc . * q suit cases for i)6c b. th »g .mt. yg P ~ | Choice for li/t Mens 50c Balbrig- no ior • v-w 1* f\ H/V J n 1 n 10*1 ■ If rH $3.00 suit d»1 Oft S an suits, for JOC Men's and boys'2sc 1 7 50 Men s Palm Beach Suits at SOT e t $2 - 39 n BOYS' NORFOLK AND WASH ( 500 Pain of ' : n a ;f dr iVc r v D :3sc d 3;>ita c r mcsh u ""lsc SUITS GREATLY REDUCED MEN'S PANTS Women's Gowns | $3.98 dr^°^ crca ! c 50c 83c Boys' Norfolk Suits Boys'sl&sl.2soliver L€SS Thsn otl6- 200 Women's Muslin and ?60 0 and $7.00 trunks, * < $3.50 Values Twist wash Suits Half To-morrow for" $4.95 Women's Fancy Silk Parasols $1.95 250 PAIRS—B9c I trimmed; all sizes; value to I I I I . _ _ _ _ _ , I ** uc 250 PAIRS— SI.39 SIOO. Special /fl q $lO trunks, qq Less I nan Half Price D » W fIL ! « 7 - " ~ I for TtJ/G well made, for «PU««7O «*< cnv'l.,:. Boys 75c wash Sults I -1 ; L ' $2.00 Women's Parasols, Choice For . 79 r s ' f ° r39C^ $3.00 & FAITHFUL EMPLOYES BREEFFICIEIiCK Mr. Ellis Discusses the Workers and the Whiners in Sunday School Lesson THE POINT OF THE PARABLE What Trusting the Helpers Mean— The Tale of the "Down- And-Outer THE WORKERS AXP WH7NERB The International Sunday School Les son For July 26 Is "The Pounds and the Talents"—Luke 10:11-27. (By William T. Ellis) An Industrial commission has of late been hearing evidence on a wide range of problems affecting work and wages. Incidentally, both em ployers and workmen seem to have rejected the new schemes of "scien- CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years 'zszzc&tfisaz : FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JULY 24, 1914. tiflc efficiency" as being unprofitable to both. The head of one great cor poration declared that there is no system of efficiency like having faithful employes, each of whom is doing his best and expecting a just reward for his labors. That same man remarked that "one trouble of our times is that I most men are thinking how they may get rich quickly, while few are thinking about sheer fidelity and | personal efficiency." He pointed out j what the warp and woof of our na- I tlonal life needs just now. We can I get along handsomely without any | more "captains of industry" or "high financiers"; but lack of the faithful doers of life's daily tasks spells ruin for the nation itseif. The 1 ominous verdict that the "man fac tor" has been responsible for many ! recent railway wrecks should set us i all thinking. The present need is the old one which Kipling voices: "Creation's cry goes up on high, From age to cheated age. God send the man who does the work For which he draws the wage." When Even Becomes Odd All this is gathered up in one of the peerless stories of cameo clear ness told by Jesus. He drew a pic ture of a ruler going afar for a long time. To each of ten assistants, or agents, or stewards, or servants, he gave one pound (about sixteen dol lars in present currency.) They were to trade therewith until their master should return, and then ren der him an accounting. These men were left with a large degree of in dependence and to their own Initia tive. Come to think of it, the parable represents something like an experi ment in socialism. All the men were equipped alike. They were started on equal terms. All had the same general obligation. But as in every other similar experience since the beginning of time, the human factor prevailed. What started even ended odd. One man returned to his master a tenfold increase: one a fivefold in crease, and a third no increase at all. In another place Jesus told a sim ilar story of the three men who were given the custody of various sums of money in talents; one had five talents, one two, and another one. The first two doubled their capital, and the third buried his talent in the earth. It was the man with the one pound who wrapped it up in a napkin, although a common saying speaks of hiding one's talent In a napkin, based on a misapprehension on this parable. The two stories are illustrations of the same essential principle of fidelity and efficiency. Like every other alert public speaker, Jesus varied His illustrations from time to time. Trusting Our Helpers Of the ten servants to whom a pound each had been given, two re ported themselves as successful. They were a good proportion. Seven remain entire unaccounted for in the story. Perhaps they absconded with their pounds. The parabje faithfully mirrors life. It is a rare helper who can accept a commission and then do it well, without the presence of an overseer's eye. An employer of thousands of men told an Industrial commission the other day that there are more ten-thou sand-dollar Jobs waiting for men than there are men fit for ten-thou sand dollar Jobs. In this story efficiency follows faithfulness. They who succeed are they who are true; and they who fall are lacking in character qualifica tions. The master employer did not get, nor expect, the same returns from all. But to both the successful servants his approbation was, "Well done, thou good servant," and each was rewarded according to his abil ity. If anybody gets anything elße out of this parable than a primary lesson in faithfulness, he has missed the first purpose of the telling of the story. It was fidelity, always fidel ity, that Jesus sought. The Two Classes The man who made ten pounds was given the oversight of ten cities. The man who gained five pounds was appointed over five cities. Those ten men started even, but the faithful ones had acquired capacity in serv ice, for faithfulness begets fruitful ness. There is no school for success equal to service. The craven who would take no chances —he was so engrossed In en tertaining his fears that he had no time to do his master's appointed work—wrapped his pound in a nap kin and then laid his nonproductive ness on his lord. He had been so busy thinking about himself that he had forgotten the one essential thing; namely, that he himself was worth thinking about only as he did his work in the world. By a strange inversion of logic, they who think most about them selves are commonly the ones least worth thinking about. It is the no accounts who are ever taking ac count of themselves. Of course, this inefficient servant was voluble with his excuses; ability to coin excuses seems to be the one craft in which the ineffective excel. This servant's failure was by no means his own fault, he declared. Of course not; the times were out of Joint; the so cial system was wrong; employers were high-handed and unjust! There you have them as they have existed from time immemorial, and as they will be to the end; the two great classes of men: the workers and the whiners. One class does things, and offers for the world's in spection a finished task; the others whine because the thing simply cannot be dona. In one of these two categories each of us surely has a place. There is not a "down-and-out" begging on the highways who can not tell a plausible hard-luck story. He is sure that fate is against him; that the industrial system is all wrong; that- h« never had a chance; that he is a victim of cruel capital; that the world owes him a living and does not want to pay its debts, and so on, ad nauseum. Without ignoring the Injustices which abound in the world, let us : deal frankly with this cvraven spirit, which is worse than any of the other evils of life. We need often to tell ourselves the old story of the coward whose sword war broken and who fled from the battle in despair. A prince picked up the broken blade and with it won a glorious victory in that same battle. Some think that the master in this story dealt too sharply with the derelict servant. Our mood nowa days is one of sentimentality, which would rather send flowers to con victed murderers than to send them to the gallows. Joseph Parker has a wise word on this theme: "When Jesus spoke a severe word, the severity came out of the truth of its' application. Is it not a harsh thing to call a man a liar? Not if he be false. Is It not very unsocial to describe any man as a hypocrite? Not\ if he be untrue. "Wheerin, then, is this wickedness of calling men names? In the misapplication of the plethets. It is wicked to call a man true if we know him to be untrue. There is an Immoral cour tesy; there is a righteous reproach. We do not use harsh words when we tell men what they really are." Wanted: More Great Men Observers not a few are bewailing the lack of great men in our time. One clpar answer to this is that not enough are in the school of great ness, which is called fidelity. Great ness is not an accolade, lpid on by the stroke of fortune. Greatness is a growth, and more persons have potentalitles for it than ever they realize. Most of us could do great things if we were in the habit of growing in our present tasks; but we prefer to do little things in a lit-/ tie way. We covet safety rather than strength. The average man is look ing for a sure salary rather than for a worthy task. Besides, we too often want to go Ashing or to go to the "movies," or to the baseball game; when the spirit of greatness wouid bid us 6tlck to the taks. The re ward of work well done Is more work to do; and whoever gets In the clas sification of greatness finds himself the servant of his work. Underlying this picture is the great truth that the king was de pendent on his stewards; even as Christ lets the welfare of His king dom rest on the faithfulness of His friends. All good causes, even the I growth of the gospel itself, depend on the fidelity of those who stand as stewards. And that puts the parable squarely up to all of us in the every day of life. PRESIDENT SAYS HE IS NEUTRAL LN ALL STATE POLITICAL FIGHTS Special to The Telegraph Washington, July 24. Declaring that Representative Fitzgerald had an erroneous impression when he stated that the Administration regarded him and his Congressional colleagues from New York c'ty as "political buca neers," President Wilson to-day told his visitors that his policy in all the Democratic State fights was one of neutrality. The President expressed his willingness to receive Mr. Fitz gerald and other New York Demo crats in Congress, who are to meet Monday to consider the lack of recog nition they contend they have receiv ed from the Administration in ques tions of patronage. Secretary of State Bryan's indorse ment of Lawrence B. Stringer in the Illinois senatorial fight was entirely individual. COUNTRY BOYS BF.TTER STUUKNTS THAN CITY BOYSr In the current issue of Farm and Flresidf appears the following report: "The students from the rural dis tricts In the Indiana University have made an average in mathematics of 84.4 per cent., while the town and city students scored only 74.6 per cent. Only 7 per cent, of the farm boys failed to pass, while of the urban youth al most 14 ner cant, failed." HAND TO BE ORGANIZED j Special to The Telegraph Sunbury. Pa,, July 2 4. J. Daniel Mull, of Milton, is In Sunbury this] week on a tour in tho interest of thai Central Pennsylvania Odd Fellows' j Orphans' Home Association. He iaj raising a fund for buying musical in struments for the children of the or-, phanage. near Sunbury. A full cornetl band will be formed and a. competent! Instructor employed. - - =q lesinol heals itching skins RESINOL OINTMENT, with Resinol Soap, stops itching inßta..tly,quickly and easily heals the most distressing cases of ec zema, rash or other tormenting skin or scalp eruption, and clears away pimples, blackheads, red nesfc, roughness and dandruff, when other treatments hava proven only a waste of time and money. Beware of imitations. Resinol It sold by practically every draff" grist In tho United States, but yon can test It at our expense. Write today to Dept. 20-S, Rosinol, Baltimore, Md. # fot • liberal trial of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers