Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, August 21, 1914, Page 5, Image 5

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    ——i—»—M«tTim..a.. ■ ■■———— H
COATS
To-morrow, (Saturday,) Every Section I
BIG WIND-UP SALE OF ALL SUMMER MERCHANDISE AT KAUFMAN'S. I
mrSTORE OPENS AT 8:30 A. M., CLOSES QP. M. I
(New Fall Suits! C!loice of the House Sale|S"("S| I
/CoaU, Dresses, Skirt, and Waists i® *" I |! I
For Women, Misses and Juniors '1 ENTIRE STOCK DIVIDED INTO 3 LOTS jj rhat ,o>du P to $1.50, NOW I
J They are ready for inspection here and now. LOT NO. 1 LOT NO. 2 jj I
I I Included are the different versions of fashion's au- ' I Dresses That Sold Up DrCSSeS That Sold Up DreSSeS That Sold Up WASH DRESS SKIRTS
thorities of what is going to win popular favor as the ! to $3.00, Now to $6.50, Now to $lO, Now That sold up to $2.00, NOW
season advances. - _g m mt £ZZ P^*
One thing is certain, namely, that another season I | J? CZ vL W J
of variety approaches. |, H|"«3L (DLIJ WLd*L*%J WASH DRESS SKIRTS
For the benefit of early buyers, as well | That sold up to $5.00, NOW
r 1.1 • . . r I. | I Majority of these beautiful summer dresses have been here only a month, I_l s~y
as tor tne interest Of eariy gookers, we are the latest models and can be worn late into the Fall. Desirable wash ma- j|
j ..« til * I I terials including the awning stripe voiles, handsome white embroidered voiles i> p ,, o • . T~. — —r. -= —, - _— jj
prepared with remarkable early values. f I and pure linens. Probably the dress you have admired is still here at this espe- :! xx/u:.. r> or ed and tiered models, I\\
~~ ) daily low price. ' - \> Ratine, Bedford Cord and pure Linen ma- jj j
- m\\vwvvw m n U t j
Only a Few of the Unusual Values] rCL nll u Akn.if [Showing of New Falf Children's N*w 1
From Our Gent'. Furnkhim De- S'r . , „ .c, ? ?*• r,|, n I
n5 . mflnf - .1 D- W- J ci This Great Sale °f Newest Style and Misses rail Dresses
partmgnMn tlgjh, Wind-up Sab $l O . 5 12 and sls Suits at £ f-» 98c 98c I
Men's Summer Un- Men's Silk KnJt Men's Gordon it„i, A I / J \I
denvear: 50c value; T1 „. v _ lllM I Jl
.. , _ Ties; values to 50c. her Collar: 25r yalha - #l# I If A m
Sale Drtce ' rn " f>rK snle price, s u i P . ir)( „ VC Hll f TTI 21 f"l' Q CQ V f"Vlf*V HT*4* I ( W \.« Made of fine quality Voiles and r beautiful Styles In Imported
sal.prtce, "«« >*<><"«*.tiauiman s say tney are T ■w\ 1 I. fVA <**-<>*•<*-*.**«,***«. .
31c 17c 15c the best values ever of- vj# X^ : S*''jrz | v "'"" __J «....< J
Men's Men's Wash"TleTP
fered-They are all Mohair pfPj /|( Silk Petticoats 11 Women's House Dresses 1
drawers: 25c value. 2 ° C a,uc - Sale SoJ. rt va d iue Dra "slTe I I and fine serge lined-They are all wool j i /»/ 1 <gl QO crq p
Sale price, price, price 1 /* /> i 1 • . j> Jl V/
Si,- and periect fitting and every suit l value $ 3 .00 VALUES SI.OO
1 fS(* /lyv*f QQ . 1 1 0 . , 1 I U 1 F,ne 80,1 Mre*sallne silk rettl- _
v '/Z 1 " OjC brand new tniS season S Style- , ~ , 10tS 11 |I J coats In pretty styles and deslral.le rercales and Lawns in desirable
of them heavy enough for Fall \\l j lp= , s
vaiue'Tsa?; Drpss sh,p,fl: 8,00 Ta, work si.irts; Wear. Only 200 in this lot, SO please J|: n Women's Long Kimonos Women's Dressing Sacques
P 191/ s " ,Pprice ' 50c value, sale price, come early«you will get a suit you \fA A 79c 59c
Iv / 2C 49c 29c like. All sizes. 1\! I I Stunning Lawns pretty I I VALUES UP TO $ .00
i ,■ I 1 Crepes. Ncflt styles in pretty Lawns.
Men s < otton Hose. Men's Men's B. V. ~7T| J Here's Another Lot of Men's {t*A I ill " 111 1111 J
,j PH :: sr r;:;... ,sc :r. »»<• Yo U „ g Men's sie.so and Jk|f L! i
6y 2 c 10c 79c $lB Suits. Black and Bine Serges^
f~ "" Men's Pr.re A Special Saturday Will Save Money By Buying
Mens Silk Hose; Silk Hose; all colors: - Pn s -pe<e col- Yoiir BoVS ScllOol ClotHeS NoW
25c value. Sale price, 50 ° value. Sale l»r button set; 10c Salf* n l *->Oyb iJCIIUUI VIUUICS lIOW
priw - ialue. sale
15c 33c 2c a Set MEN'S PANTS Bay*' Norfolk Suits Boy's Norfolk Suits
v —* y —' . Sold All Over at $3 $4 Values . $2.50
■ This Lot' price sl. B«y's Norfolk Suits
sPants $ Pants 00 s°| 7 / , N ° r [° lk Su ' U Knkke«! h B 2 elt P and
W.bo fants Sold elsewhere at Watch Fob. A $6.50
Men'ss3and $1 50 Sf.® . N „ value sizes Bto 18.
$3.50 Pants 'l°" MANS $2.50 $4.95
LESS SOMBER VIEW
OF RELIGION NOW
More Social Conception of Chris
tianity H*s Driven Out
Rigid Puritanism
The International Sunday School Ives
son For August 23 Is "The Wedding
Feast."—Matt. 22:1-14
(By William T. Ellis)
To stop a boat on Niagara's crest, |
to stay the avalanche in its course,
to check a nation in mid-career of I
its folly, to halt a drunkard In the 1
ITCHING ECZEMA
Cured by our Saxo Salve
Bagdad, Fla. "To all people suffer
ing from eczema of any form I want
to recommend Saxo Salve. I tried
everything my friends would suggest
for itching eczema on my hands, but
nothing helped it at all until an old
lady told me about Saxo Salve and one
tube has entirely cured me."—CALVIN
WILSON, Bagdad, Fla.
If we can t cure your skin trouble
with our Saxo Salve and Saxo Soap w«
will buy back the empty tube.
Geo. A. Gorgaa, Druggist. Harrla
burg. Pa.—Advertisement
FRIDAY HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH AUGUST 21, 1914
midst of his carousing, to preach re
pentance to Ninevah in the hevdav
of its prideful wickedness, to turn
Israel to righteousness and spiritual
ity in the day of its religious arro
gance and hardened heart—all these
attempts are of a kind. There is
something sublimely futile about the
efforts of Jesus, on tho last dav
or His appearance to His nation, as
He strove by picture and story and
appeal to call His beloved nation to
a realization of its fast-disappearincr
day of opportunity.
The national aspect of the situa
tion stirs a patriot s heart. He is set
to wondering whether we, too, are
equally deaf to the words of our own
prophets. s our land in peril of
spiritual blindness? May she, too.
miss her day of visitation? God
gives us listening ears for all our
prophets—even when they come in a
*>H! se w^'c h offends all our preju
dges and misconceptions. Let us
'<? v ® 0 "r land so fervently that we
shall welcome the truth about her
from any source whatsoever. Only
by conserving our spiritual sensitive
ness, and by cherishing our ethical
and religious standards, may we in
sure our nation's truest welfare.
"America! America!
God shed His grace on thee.
And crown thy good with brother
hood. From sea to shipping sea."
THE Story-Sermon
The particular last-day appeal
which the Sunday Schools study to
day portrays the kingdom-call to
Israel in the parable of the wedding
feast. It is a sermon story, sketched
in strong lines, and leaving imagina
tion. Everybody could see the Jew
ish cation in the guests who had
spurned their opportunity; and the
turning to the whole Gentile world
CASTORIA
For Infants and Children
In Use For Over 30 Years
3 CT.C£»MBZ
in the carrying of the gracious invi
tation out into the highways.
Obviously, the first aspect of this
parable which strikes the reade ris
the portrayal of the kingdom of heav
en as a feast. Somehow, that idea
has never gripped humanity, even
though it was at a wedding that
Jesus wrought His first great work.
The ascetic, monastic, rigorous con
ception of the Christian life long
held sway. Men esteemed religion a
thing of fasting, rather than of feast
ing. It meant, in their mistaken
view, rather a subtraction from the
joys of life than an addition to them.
That Jesus came to bring a more
abundant life was an overlooked
truth.
A change is being witnessed in our
own day. A less somber view of re
ligion prevails. A more social con
ception of Christianity has driven
out much of our rigid Puritanism.
The time-honored injunctions against
life's pleasures are heard less 'and
less. A vital church problem is how
to provide a brighter and happier
social life for people under the shel
tering wing of the church. For it
is to a feast that the gospel invita
tion calls.
k
Spurning love's Offer
A mother stooped to kiss her petu
lent child—and the child slapped the
mother in the face. That, like the
lesson parable, is a picture of the way
love is often requited. The king
who Invited his friends to a feast
found that they spurned his prof
fered hospitality.
"Incredible?" "Not true to life?"
Look around. See the thousands of
youths rejecting education. Behold
the boys who forsake loving homes
for the pool rooms and street corners.
Consider the men who turn their
backs on wives and children and re
fined surroundings, to consort with
gamblers and drunkards and still
baser associates. Alas, it is only
too true that human nature is capable
of rejecting the best for the base.
Still more to the point, and truer
to the parable, is the way the
gracious invitations of God are re
jected. There is no warrant in rea
son for the amazing indifference of
Myriads to the fatherly goodness of
God. That a kind creator should be
flouted by his handiwork is more
astounding than that a king should
be insulted by his subjects. The
Jews were, sad to say, but true to
the human type in turning their
backs upon God's proffered goodness.
Opening a Wide Poop
A New York rich man built a home
In a_ fashionable section of the city;
but his neighbors refused to receive
him as a friend. In anger he moved
from his house, and filled it with the
poorest and least desirable of occu
pants. Not from pique such as this,
but because the friends entitled to
the first invitation were unworthy,
the king in the parable extended his
hospitality broadcast. The Jews
spurned the proffered privilege, to
the outside Gentile world it was given.
The kingdom that was to have come
through the Jewish nation is now com
ing aside from them.
The universality of religion's call,
Is the dominant note in to-day's
thinking. To all men everywhere
the invitation is due. Woe unto us
if we, like the Jews of old, fail to
carry to all men the summons to
lifes' royal feast of heavenly love.
Some other way, in such a case,
would be found by the king for fill
ing his house; but what of those
who fail him ? To-day the chief work
of the church is to convey her Lord's
hospitality into the world's utter
most highway.
The Disdainful Guest
What of the man who went to the
king's feast without a wedding gar
ment, and was therefore cast into
outer darkness? Is the king fastidi
ous about clothes? The entire point
of this incident in the story will be
missed unless we remember the orien
tal character of it, and the usage
which led the host to provide the
wedding garment. A guest was at
no expense for this. He had only
to put on what was furnished hlni.
To fail to do so meant to hold aloof
from the festivities, and to flout the
hospitality of the host. Such a
breach of etiquette was this that it
meant insult and enmity; where de
ference, gratitude and friendship
were due.
Wherein is the parallel and mes
sage for us? No part of the story
fits our day more closely. A con
temptuous treatment of religion is
common. Men speak patronislngly
of the Lord Almighty. In thought
less profanity and In open defiance,
they jibe at the holy name of the
Highest. Irreverence is a twentieth
century sin. Now God Is —necessar-
ily—jealous of His own honor.
During King George's durbar at
Delhi, In India, two years ago, one
of the native princes after greeting
the emperor on his throne, turned,
and, in defiance of all the usages of
etiquette, deference and loyalty, in
stead of retiring backwards from the
royal presence, turned his back upon
his emperor and stalked away—pre
sumably in a spirit of bravado. The
incident was regarded as so serious
that the offending prince was at once
compelled to make a complete and
unqualified and abject apology. Such
conduct, unrebuketi, threatened the
very loyalty of tho Indian people to
the British raj. So God must be
king, and receive His kingly due.
"He will not be king at all, unless
he can be king in all." To esteem
God lightly is to sin greatly.
A "your' "k
"SI KODAK w
S FILMS |M
IB re onr lljifji
H Developing and
IV I'rlnllni; fur the
■1 J. A. Kepple
3!fli2 Room 10,
21) Second St,
GREAT LAKES
13-DAY TOUR
September 1, 1014
Niagara Falls; steamer trip Buf-
I falo to ITuluth and back; with
stops at Cleveland, Detroit,
Mackinac Island, and a day and
a half at Duluth:
$85.65
from IlnrrlDburg, I
Ask Ticket Agents or A E. Buch
anan, D. P. A.. P. R. R„ 300 Tel
egraph Building, Harrlsburg, Pa.
ANCHOR LINE
PENNSYLVANIA R. R.
l
EDCCATIIWAt
FALL TERM
Begins Tuesday, September 1
Write for Illustrated Catalogue.
SCHOOL OF COMMERCE
15 S. MARK ET SQUARE,
11ARR1SBURG, PA.
Harrisburg Business College
Day and Night. Business,
Shorthand and Civil Service. In
dividual Instruction. 28th year.
329 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa.
Business Locals 4 l
CARELESS SHEPHERDS
Make a feast for wolf. Likewise tha
spendthrift makejh another's bank ac
count large while he hps none of hla
own. Keeping the money in circula
tion make prosperity— for others
hut self-preservation is the first lawl
of nature. Therefore a few dollars
every week at threo per cent Interest
will soon build a bank account of your*
own. East End Bank. Thirteenth andl
Howard streets.
EVERY SHOE FITS
Not every foot, but Jerauld shoes ar»
fitted to the feet regardless of num
ber, and foot comfort plus style Is th»
result. Our comprehensive assortment
of summer shoes includes a wide range
of lasts and quality materials, from
which selections can now be made at|
exceptional price reductions during;
our semiannual clearance sale. Jerv
auld Shoe Co., 310 Market street.
FALL PAINTING
September will soon be here and
the ideal weather for exterior paint-,
ing. And then you will want to get!
the inside of the house touched up so
as to be presentable for the social
season of the long winter months. Us«
R. & B. Wayne paints, the best for all
purposes. In small cans ready to ua«
or in paste form for those who need!
large quantities. William W. Zeidera
& Son, 3 43« Derry street.
JAPANESE TOYS
The little Japs usually make a lot
of things of especial interest to chil
dren. We have a splendid assortment
of the quaint toys from the Orient
including Jackstraws, tea sets, nests of
balls, puzzlers, snake kodaks, doll
bouses, furniture, as well as toys of
other makes In large variety and al
ways of the unusual kind. Marianne
Kinder Markt. 220 Locust street.
THE NEXT BEST TIIIXG
To a personal call Is a good business
letter direct to the owner of the pock
etbook. Every letter that comes to
tho home or office Is opened by tha
person you wish to reach. You taka
no chances of a hit and miss. Your
proposition Is before him. He can't
miss it. Multigraph letters look likq
the original. Weaver Typewriter Com
pany, 25 North Third street.
DON'T GET "MAD"
If your watch doesn't keep good time.
It may need cleaning or adjusting.
When your system Is out of order you
go to a physician. When the mechan
ism of your watch Is out of plumb you
should send it to a reliable watch
maker. It it's past redemption, wa
have the leading standard makes. W.
R. Atkinson, 1423 % North Third
street.
5