To-morrow,Saturday,aßig Rummage Sale at Kaufman's The Biggest Kind of a Bargain Feast—Store Opens at 8.30 A. M.; Closes at 9 P. M. R| Rummage Sale of j | Hundreds of Women's & Misses' Summer Dresses I A CLOTHING SALE I K U Stunning styles, mostly the new long Russian tunics, in elegant materials, such as the new awning stripe voiles, French | UT A. P _ H Linens, Floral Crepes and Ratines. Never have we shown such a group of pretty dresses at these ridiculously low prices, f i-/v/v ■■ » lAI » r% • , I jj Many will be shown for the first time. New, crisp and fresh, and can be worn late into the Fall. Every figure can be fitted, | 500 II S 1914 OpFlU^ na 1 -A d* d* nr I aadSummcrSuiu yKe .« MIH«PI !p J «K#.758 At HALF and LESS M on ■ |U tmmmmm ■ jSfr ■■■■■ 00 | All new, present-season styles and pat- \\ VA \ / M Display mmmmm ■■■■■ Display | terns. The smartest clothing of the day. I/ Vt JOT in Our in Our I Plenty of all sizes in the lot. Just look \ \C >Ji I |W#I Window j = [Wmdowj ij a t these values. /\ L \ IVI A Jill. JllSjpS&y j $lO, sl2 and sls Values 1 a | For Women's and Misses' DRESSES! For Women's and Misses' DRESSESI For Women's and Misses' DRESSES | Every Suit in This Lot Marked /nl T* j Formerly Sold Up to $4.00 J Formerly Sold Up to $6.50 | 'Formerly Sold Up to $8.50 J AT " |ll\ \ q JttL Handsome New Crepe De Chine (fo WJF* EXTRA SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY $lO, sl2 d* $lO, sl2 / fill £ K15 S J? $ 9.Z§ "CAPE"coats 13.= r sr, \n r §4 T •. ~ . r 04-J * »" oc kt c „ Regular $7.50 to SIO.OO Coats For Values VaIUCS I * \\ I I , ij uP* Just received in time for Saturdays selling, 25 New Silk . , , .... _,, _ _ I j 1\ 1 I J _ ... ~ ~ A manufacturers sample line of new Fall Cape Coats, .... . . K J y""I\ Dresses-made of a fine quality crepe de chine. Newest Fall made of fine all . wool mate rials, in neat stripes, checks and All-wool cassimeres, pm-striped vel- MmA model, with a long box plaited Russian tunic. The colors are plaids. A good range of colors and assorted sizes. Just the ours, neat checks, black thibets. They black, navy, Copenhagen, white, lavender and Russian green. coat you need now and will surely need later. (See coats on all go at $5.00 Assorted sizes in the lot. display in our windows.) ———————————————— ————— v I , J ON SALE TO-MORROW Rummage Sale of All Women's and Misses' WASH DRESS SKIRTS *° ° S "oo S Women's and Misses' Wash Dress SKIRTS Women's and Miss e s' Wash Dress SKIRTS Women's and Misses' Wash Dress SKIRTS f- <fc F? C 1 Gfi All the season's wanted styles, Splendid styles, mostly long Rus- Made of plain white linon, white Bed- , ° T * *"*** * tpi.Ol/ including the Russian tunics, in materials sian tunics in the the favorite Ratines, ford cords; mostly all with long Russian Values tO $4.00 For . . . .&2.00 kS3 of Linens, Reps and Bedford cords. Keg- . tunic. There are all sizes for women, ~ Aular and extra size waist bands. Sold all repes an Loic c ines. bo d all season misses and extra large women. Sold up Fine cassimeres and worsteds, for men and young men. Just from season up to $2.00. fA U P to $4-00- Rummage <f» 1 to $2.50. Rummasre 17H the shops of New York's best trousers manufacturers. A Rummage Price OUC Price V t tUU Price #OC Women's & Misses' New Fall DRESS SKIRTS eo AC Big Reductions in BOYS' CLOTHING Ltj, ,„ j (fin /-> .r- ' $3.50 Value; Special For Boys' Cloth Norfolk d» 1Q C I Boys' Cloth Norfolk (tO AA j tplO and Coats rOV sllH , , „ Suits, values to $3.50, Suits, values to $4.50, «PO.W r "*• V Skirl* moilr of nil-wool Serpen, in l.laok find blue. New lonx Rui- SQO pairs of Boys' Wool Knick ft* _ »"n tunics with either .ci-kc or Itoman ntripi-M under tunic. All alaes. Boys' Cloth Norfolk Q [-r| ers, Values tO SI.OO. Cf\ MA • Suit8 ' values to S4OO, A « siz « 50c E Medium weight coats for early Fall. Some unlined, some J' BoyS WEsh 3.ncl Oloth SllltS A.ll RcdllCcd silk lined. The materials are crepes and serges. All assorted ITaOSL eLXIICiOi Ullicla V* I One Lot of 75c Wash SUITS 25c One Lot of $1 Wash SUITS 50c colors. Also white chinchillas. Assorted sizes in the lot. Values in I ONE LOT OF 2 * oo WASH SUITS SI.OO \ If/ J f|l LOOK AT THIS! TV OlUcn S DIOUScS || girls' WASH DRESSES A TREMENDOUS LOT OF /> Q Women's Blouses 3 Women's Blouse, Le „ Than * I-i y Q a UCS ° C -I i 150 Girls' Wash Dresses, 100 Girls' Wash Dresses; 200 Girls' Wash Dressea; Values SI.OO and $1.25, Now .... - Women's Blouses A A W Rl tl in S^ZCB ® to va^ues to sizes 6to 14, values to $3.00. sizes 2to 14 years, values to Tub silk fronts, back of fine Madras to match, cuffs attached; 1 «r' -i Omens OUSeS R umm age Sale Rummage I A SI.OO Rummage QQ soft French turnback style; sizes 14 to 17. V allies to $1 Values to $3. .. . ji p r i ce o*/C Sale Price, .. V*• A*7 Sale Price OOC I I Made of organdies and voiles. Made of China silk. ] | *■ • _* mm»w%%%MWim%%MiwiMW><wwv>wwwnwwwwwwwwMMww>\wiiivwmm Men's B'ue Chambray SHIRTS I Men's AINSilk Hose at I I | Ladies' White Longcloth 1 f Odd Lots of Ladies' Silk BES E h L d MANY LIVES BEAR EEIIVKNOT FRUIT Ellis Raps Attention Paid in Our Day to Dress and Toilet XJIVKS WITH LEAVES BCT X© FKUIT The International Sunday School Les son For August 9 Is "The Hurren Fie Tree and the Defiled Temple." (Temperance Lesson).— Mark 11: 12-33. (By William T. Ellis) Some persons live to be looked at —but they are not the ones best worth seeing. The attention paid by large classes, In our day, to dress and toilet makes the thoughtful ob server recall effete Homo In the hour of her decline. The merely orna mental bulks too large with us. Out ward appearance gives us more con corn than Inward worth, or thorough efTlciency. Leaves, rather than fruit, are our criterion of success. We are planting too many ornamental ■hritbs In the garden of our modern life, and too few fruit trees. It Is hiflth time that we should study over agnln the Incident of the barren fig tr£e, blasted by our Lord. ,'Tli)s puzzling miracle of Jesus ap- FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH AUGUST 7, 1914 pears to deal with those who seem to be more than they are: who are not fulfilling their promises. On the road to Jerusalem He saw a AR tree abundant with leaves, but with no fruit. Now a characteristic of the fig tree is that it commonly puts out its fruit before its leaves. Jesus was deceived by the appearance of this unseasonably forward tree, as He saw it by the roadside, but \Vhen He found that it bore nothing but leaves. He condemned it to fruitlessness forever. The Slie<>p DOR That Pointed If one Is an ornamental tree and nothing more, then, of course, leaves are a satisfactory output. If, how ever, the world has a right to expect fruit, then no amount of foliage can be accepted as a substitute. In the matter of human lives. It is not how you appear, but what you produce that really tests your worthwhile ness. All the tailors and masseurs and barbers and manicurists and haber dashers and jewelers cannot offer any acceptable substitute for doing a man-sized task in the service of the tvorld. The gilded youth of both sexes who adorn our city highways, and who have never done a useful stroke of work in their lives, are the objects of all men's scorn. Bar ren fig trees and barren lives merit nothing but condemnation. Down in VirgTnia, on a plantation where I have gone hunting, there is an old sheep dog who will follow to the field the man with a gun. He will go through all the motions of a fine bird dog; he points perfectly, but there are never any birds where he points. He is a hypocrite dog, for he consciously tries to appear to be what he really is not. That is what makes the hypocrite. This lesson is the Bible's own picture of all such. The Lives That Produce The central idea of both parts of to-day's lesson passage accords well with the temperance theme; for the International Sunday School Lesson Committee has marked this as a tem perance lesson. The first incident carries the moral, that lives should bear fruit; each in its own kind, and all the fruit of which It is capable. Pew of us have to go outside of our own neighborhoods to find an Illus tration for this proposition. Many a promising fig tree has been shorn of its expected fruit by the blasting power of strong drink. The editor of the most widely cir culated periodical in the world, told me, a few weeks ago, that he was convinced that in his business a man could not so much as drink a single cocktail with his luncheon, without Impairing his efficiency. With real fervor he went on to argue fof tem perance on the basis of economic ef ficiency. He is making the temper ance fight his own; for the arch enemy of the fruit of civilization is the traffic In alcohol. The withering judgment of an en lightened social conscience has been turned against strong drink within our own time. The forms of activity against It are many and varied. Here is a, working temperance pledge, which the Pennsylvania Anti-Saloon League has put out: "As a matter of conscience, I purpose to stand by all men, movements and newspapers that stand against the liquor traffic." When the Church Is Corrupted The contrast seems sharp between the blasting of a single fig tree and the cleansing of the great tcmnle of Herod: yet both were in the day's work of Jesus, and both were of a piece with his one ministry. He who dirt the great things, was not above doing the small things also. If a Christian cannot be a missionary to China, at least he can help to a higher level the shiftless, ignorant and irreligious folk around the cor ner. The work is one work, whether in America or in Africa. Great evils do not spring full-pro portioned into being. They are of slow growth, and, at the base of all of them, there is usually so- ething oommendable. The abuse of the privilege of trading In the Temple at Jerusalem had quite naturally devel oped. The need for sacrifices made it plausible that merchandising should be carired on for the benefit of the pilgrims near the Temple courts; even as to-day, in the very courtyard of the Church of the Holy Sepulcher in Jerusalem, pilgrims may buy trinkets. In heathen temples this si not at all uncommon. I have bought Mecca beads in the court yard at the Mosque of St. Sophia in Constantinople, and Chinese antiqui ties in a Peking temple. The closest parallel to the Jerusalem scene, known to me is the merchandising In the great Tenoji temple in Osaka, Japan, where scores of merchants display a variety of wares. On the basis of the pilgrims' needs for foreign money changed into Jeru salem currency, and for doves and sheep for sacrifice, there had grown up the reign of graft which domi nated the Temple area. When Jesus, the reformer, came, with His clear-seeing eye, and His fearless advocacy of purity and altru ism, He overturned tljia order of greed. Ry the sheer weight of His personality, and by His own con sciousness of His divine mission, Jesus scattered the merchandisers in every direction, night and religion were on His side, and when a brave man identifies himself with these two causes, nothing can withstand him. Of course; the discomfited Scribes and priests did not tarry to say, "Is this man right? Have we really become polluters of the Temple, the sanctity of which should be our chief concern?" Not so. Their first thought was how they might "get even" with this man, who was inter fering with their revenues. In lesser degree, the same condition obtains in every age, and it is to be confessed that there is a dull monotony about the way in which the church has dealt with her reformers and crtiics, quite after this ancient Jerusalem fashion. The man who shows the church wherein she is wrong is her best friend, and to be heard and heeded. It is altogether likely that abuses have crept up In parts and phases of the Christian church. With the prop erty interests and salary solicitude involved, this is almost inevitable. Most men begin to see red as soon as their pocketbooks are touched. Presi dent Wilson has candidly pointed out how this factor has entered into the Mexican situation. Concern for the welfare of the millions of oppressed, ignorant and destitute people has been overshadowed by the clamor of thou sands whose dividends have been ef fected. In like fashion, the recent sudden outcry over "hurting bulsness" at tained a volume which the temper ance crusade—a moral question—is not able to match after decades of education. In the light of our own times, it is quite understandable that these shrewd Jerusalem ecclesiastics should howl and plot when Jesus began to "hurt business." The Passion Play at Ober Am mergau makes clear the connection between this scene and the cruci fixion. One of the episodes of the Passion Play is the cleansing of the Temple. Shortly afterward we find the same merchants, who have been driven from their sfands in the Tem ple enclosure by the stern and regal Christ, foremost in the clamor of those why cry, "Crucify Him! Cru cify Him!" The cleansing of the Temple area reacted directly upon the condemna tion and crucifixion of Jesuß and had "interfered with business"; over against that crime of crimes, the fact that Jesus was obeying God, purify ing the church and exercising the highest office of a prophet, counted as nothing. This is a good time to declare once more that "Judgment must begin at the House of God." The church must be clean. Whenever she has any complicity with oppression of crime, she is denying her Lord. If any lo cal congregation, or any denor tlna tion, puts the favor of the rich and the mighty over against her loyalty to clear truth and righteousness, she is betraying once again the former who died on Calvary. Business Lbcait A PERSONAL APPEAL There Is nothing better for pro ducing business results than a direct appeal to the individual. The cost is prohibitive to do this In person for most kinds o; business but a Multi graph facsimile letter will reach as many as you like by mall. Phone the Weaver Typewriting Company, 25 Nortb Third street. Business cecals THE NEXT PAY DAY may mean the selection of another piece of furniture or the furnishing of a room according to plana cherished for some time. If so, we would sug gest that you compare our automatic price methods with so-called "spe cials" found elsewhere during the month of August. Goldsmith's, :03 Walnut and 209 Locust street. CLEAN AND WHITE LINEN You will take great pride in your house linen If they are done up in the Arcade way. Table and other linens are sweet smelling and fresh, looking clean and white, without any lint drop ping on your carpets that mean wear and tear. Send for the Arcade laundry wagon. Both phones, D. E. Glazier, proprietor. ONE FOR EACH HAND, LADIES! A handbag In your left hand and a new parasol in your right. You can not afford to miss the opportunity of securing one of our handsome para sols at our one-half price sale. And our splendid assortment of handbags is yours to choose from at exceptional reductions. Regal Umbrella Co., Sec ond and Walnut streets. AL.VAT'S ON TIME Is the man who buys one of our stand ard makes of watches. This Jewelry store has established a reputation for havine the most reliable watches rr-c.de, arid years of experience wher® the utmost accuracy in watches is de manded qualifies us to know what a good watch is and how to repair and adjust it to your satisfaction. W. R. Atkinson, 1423 North Third atr«et. 5
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers