RULES $25.00 to Be Given Away as Prizes; Can You Figure Out Who Is Who? _4>-n Interesting puzzle is presented In'this Issue of the Telegraph, on op posite Page. No. 6. Ther4 are 56 ad vertisements of businessmen of Har rlsburg and vicinity being represented. No names are mentioned in any of the advertisements, but in each one will be found suggestions that will aid one in seeking whether individual, firm or corporation. To figure out "Who is Who will necessitate careful reading of adver tisements. This puzzle will prove a splendid form of entertainment, in vite your friends and see which one knows Harrlsburg the best, figuring out the correct names of each adver tiser. After you have completed the list, make a copy of it, send the orig inal in to the Telegraph office no later than Thursday noon, September 3, aad file the copy away, and wait for the correct names to be published in the Telegraph next Friday. Then compare the list as published with the one you have and see how near you came to solving the Who is Who Puzzle. TWO CASH REWARDS To the person furnishing the most correct and neatest manuscript a cash prize of sls will be paid. For the second best manuscript a cash prize of 10 will be paid. In the event that two or more peo ple tie for the first prize, the second will be annulled, and the total amount of $25 will be divided equally among the tielng contestants. Bear In mind that the awards are based largely upon the skill displayed in the preparation, of the neatest manuscript, cleanliness of paper, pen manship, spelling, and the manner in which the manuscript is folded. All will count The puzzle Is open to everybody ex cept the employee of the Telegraph and members of their family. Remember that all lists should be submitted to this office no later than Thursday noon. All answers should be addressed to "Ad Contest Editor, Harrlsburg Telegraph. Harrlsburg, Pa." The Judges' names will be an nounced later. German Paper Tells of Army Mobilization Mall Is received in this country from the European warring countries at In tervals that are few and' far between, and among the more Interesting packets that reach this city from time to time are the French and German newspapers that have been published under the stress of war times. The first foreign newspapers received here, perhaps, were sent to John !>. Huston from his friend, Frederick Crouse, of Karlsruhe, Bavaria. The papers are half as wide as American papers, and contain a single sheet. Regular editions are printed on one side: "war editions" on one side only. Practically all the space Is taken up with accounts of army mobilization. Friends here are a bit anxious about Crouse, who. though an American citi zen. has been unheard of since August 2, when he mailed the papers. ANCIENT MEXICAN SACRIFICES With all his diplomacy, and his great need of powerful allies, Cortes could not endure the daily horrors of that idolatry which at Zempoalla, as in nearly all the cities of Mexico, de voted human to the horrible living torments of the Stone to Sacri fice. Stretched naked upon a sacrifi cial ctone, which appears in most cases to have been somewhat convex upon its surface, a yoke across the neck held the victim utterly helpless; •while the attendants confined his arms and legs, straining the spine over the central ridge of the altar; and the chief priest, with a sharp flake of obsi dian, laid upon the heaving chest and tore out the heart of the 6..fferer. Curiously enough, a similar method of human sacrifice was practiced by the early Norsemen, as late as the tenth century, except that the victim's back was broken across the ridge of the sacrificial stone, before the knife of the priest finished the horrible ceremony. Not only captives taken In war, but criminals and slaves, and in times of great public calamity, the children of great nobles, and even princes r.nd kinds, were sacrificed thus to Thor and Freya, by the Norse and Iceland people, as late as A. D. 1000; and even some centuries later among the Wends, Esthonians.and other half eavages of Western Russia. Many a "doom-ring" and "doom-stone" are Etill shown by Norse antiquarians, ■where in not remote centuries, the sacrificial knife finished the torture of fractured spine and deeply-cut runes, of dedication to the gods, in the presence of silent and worshipping ldolators- ECZEMA OF SCALP Yields to Saxo Salve Alliance, 0.—"I have hud a good deal to do with skin troubles for the past 40 years, but Saxo Salve beats anything I ever saw. In a bad case of eczema of the scalp where the man had scratched eo much it had become calloused and cracked open, thanka to Saxo Salve It is all healed up now.JOSEPH R. WILLIAMS, Alliance, Ohio. If we £ an 't cure your skin trouble Wtn our Saxo Salve and Saxo Soap wo tvill buy back the empty tube. Geo. A. Gorgaa. Druggist. Harris 'burg. Pa.—Advertlseuiast Ouch! Corns! Throw a way the razor and knife and use the modern, safe, easy, effeetlvo MAGIC CORN LIQUID An ay* Inflammation, stop* the ache and Anally takes out the corn Itself. 15c the Bottle Forney's Drug Store 426 MARKET STREET J| TOUR KB KODAK hg& m jm 111 Scnfl«plßg nil Ilia 118 Mattnc far the !!! J. A. Kepple Ifelr 111 Room 10, Q: 20 N. Second St. V FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 5 AUGUST 28. 1914. THRIFTY BUYERS THESE BARGAINS SHOULD BRIINO YOU HERE fQTORF OPFN<S MAY BUY FOR THE SATURDAY AND 330 A. MAT COMING SEASON-- _ _ __ CLOSES SAT IT'S SOUND JUDGMENT \J A II TED ST A URDAY BP. M. Sale at 9 North Market Square, Near Strawberry Ave. To-morrow (Saturday) and Monday, will be great days for those who look ahead, this sale has great values—any one who can judge values will readily see that every article in this store is sold at one-tenth of its value. Every article is staple and can be bought and laid aside for future use if not a necessity now. For instance: Underwear Pet>t»icoat»s Waists Coat*s Suits BESIDES WE PLACE ON SALE BEGINNING TO-MORROW Furs Muffs Scarfs 500 Fall & Winter Coats 500 Ladies' Suits 500 Dresses . 100 Evening Coats & Wraps Children's Coats & Dresses Muslin Underwear No. 9 North Market Square, Near Strawberry Avenue Every Article Has Been Remarked—Schleisner's Astounding Values. One Lot Children's Hats. Schleisner's Middy Blouses; all white. Schleisner's Dinner Gowns; marked up to $27.50, 100 Black Wolf Large Muffs; $15.00; price 50 price 190 $6.95 priced $4.95 One Lot Linen Dickies, with collars, 30 Taupe Persian Lamb Cloth Coat; $39.50. One Lot Ladies' Hats. Schleisner's One Lot Ladies' Hats. Schleisner's Velvet Dress, elaborate style; marked Schleisners price ....• $9.50 price 90 price 190 $37.50. Schleisner's price $9.90 Ladies' Long Serge Coats; medium Imp. Persian Lamb Cloth Suit, fur trim- Velvet Dinner Gown. Schleisner's Girls' Coats; marked as high as $12.50, weight $3.95 med ; Klein's price $75.00. Schleisner's price $10.90 95# White Lingerie Dresses; ladies' sizes. 950 price $12.50 _ . n ,Jr ' w i> t» * *» nn AM Ladies Dresses; marked up to $9.50, 900 A few Raincoats $1.95 Beautiful Dresses; marked up to $18.50, Messaline Petticoats; $4.00 now $1.50 cat ajj Q ffc mr n m < , I M t J • OlllC vQQ UOitS ) UD tO A Small Lot Muslin Underwear 390 $2.95 Broadcloth Capes; marked up to SI 5 00 SI 95 $37.50 Suits $6.95 Ladies ' E " ni "e marked $55.00 sl6.K> $1.95 $5 . 00 Waists".sl!l9 Black Fur Muffs; marked up to $12.50, „ . , #10.50 All Waists up to $15.00 $1.95 Lot Ladies' Suits-marked UD to $1.95 Black Fur Scarfs; marked up to $12.50, $2.00 Waists 790 S3OOO marKea up to Red Fox Muffs; marked $15.00, .. $4.50 , $1,95 FaU Coats; marked U P to $ 22 - 50 - • $ 2 - 95 ' Winter Coats'- marked uo to Dinner Gowns; marked up to $35.00, BlaCk Fur Muffs; marked U P to ci«-n Ck " P t0 o~ *27.50 '. $4.95 _ . _ ,__ Red Fox Scarfs; marked $15.00 .. $4.50 Raccoon Muffs; marked $30.00. . .$10.50 Raccoon Scarfs; marked $30.00, $10.50 One Lot Ladies Hats. Schleisner s price. One Lot Coat Sweaters, marked $395 Lot Ostrich Neck Pieces, marked $3.00 One Lot Chinchilla Coats; marked up to 50 to $5.00 950 and $4.00 290 $15.00 $.3.95 Strictly Cash Nothing Charged None C. O. D. 9 North Second Street Special Notice Dressmakers { » ff 4 ° o°o 0 ° 0 Caesar-Law Laid Down by Lord of Life Grips Modern Man in His Citizenship (By William T. Ellis.) Every close reader of history, whether it be written in books or in the daily newspaper, has been struck by the pitiableness of the spectacle of the opposition which great statesmen and leaders have met that was not sincere and disinterested. It interposed parti san, personal and petty objections to •public programs, merely to harass a foe. The trick is one of the oldest and most modern in public affairs; and it is still as contemptible as it was when the shrewd politicans of Jesus' day used in an attempt to be confound and discredit him. The crafty bosses of the Pharisee party sent their underlings to the Teacher for whose feet they were lay ing snares of death with a set of ques tions. In truth, so eager were these hounds in pursuit of the Quarry that the Pharisee pack joined numbers with the Herodian pack; although, except when some great common hunt at every meeting. But every crime like the present was afoot, these two packs howled at each other and fought requires compromise: and if the Naza rene was to be caught, both Pharisees and Heredians had to swallow their scruples against each other. The pre sent war in Europe illustrates how a common foe makes strange bed fellows. The hostile questions—so smooth, so plausible, so religious, so appropri ate!—which these emissaries pro pounded to Jesus were not sincere. An honest doubter, beset by perplexities, has sympathy In heaven; but a crafty, ; pettifogging, insincere twister of truth # has fellowship only with the lower regions. These false Beekers after light were children of darkness. Their ends were evil, and they de served the approbrium whlph the gen tle Galilean heaped upon tnem. "Diplomacy" Or Plain Lying? Displaying all the outward signs of respect, these enemies drew near the Teacher, saying, "Master, we know that thou art true, and teachest the way of God in truth, and c&rest not for any man: for thou regardest not the person of any man. "Tell us therefore, What thlnkest CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Thou? Is it lawful to give tribute to Caesar or not?" Sometimes that sort of thing is called "diplomacy," or "jollying" or "tact"; but in the vocabulary of truth it is plain lying. These men were say ing what they did not believe, and sayiner it for a low, selfish purpose. How they must have jumped—and how we would Jump, too, if our du plicity were uncovered with the same directness and candor—when Jesus in the straight-flung words of the fearless and sincere soul, came back at the obsequious questioners on the instant with, "Ye hyprocrites!" That was victory number one: a blow from truth that sent the pre tenders staggering. Nothing Is so hard to stand as the plain word of integrity. Truth triumphs. That is why the so-called "shirt-sleeves di plomacy" of America, which means telling the simple truth, has won such notable achievements in recent inter nationalism. A Great Answer to a Clever Question Of course the question was a poser. Not in vain had the shrewdest law yers of Jerusalem framed it. If Jesus said, categorically, "Pay tribute to Caesar," all the Jewish patriots would turn against him; that great multitude of followers whom his enemies feared. If, on the other hand, he made the people refuse tribute to Caesar, then Rome would make short shift of him, as a rebel and a traitor. An object-teacher and a picture teacher to the last, Jesus asked his questioners to show him a denarius. They procured the familiar small coin, worth about sixteen cents. Again Jesus spoke: "Whose in this image and superscription?" "Caesar's," "Render therefore unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's, and unto God the things that are God." Silence. Crestallen looks. A con fused retreat, while the crowd grin ned. The sharp lawyers had been caught in their own trap. The ruse had failed. By lifting up his answer to the plane of a great principle, and Illustrating it, Jesus had put the case where even these hair-splitters could not gainsay it. Defining Our Loyalties Everybody is a debtor. We speak of "paying our social obligations'" when we mean observing the petty punctilios of cards and calls and din ners and receptions. Our real social obligations are vastly larger. They Involve the paying of our debts to our fellowmen, in organized society, in the State, and in the individual con tacts of life. These square perfectly with the Jarger loyaltle/i to God and to his will. Often we prove that we are true to God by being true to man. Caesar's name and image is on many of our possessions. We owe civil society a debt for the protection it affords us; for the roads it builds, the mails it carries, for the sewers and schools and fire protection it pro vides; and for the countless ordered usages of our organized life. No hon est man can be an individualist deny ing the claims of the State upon him, in this twentieth century. "The strength of the <volf is the pack." The Caesar-law laid down by the Lord of life grips modern men in their citizenship. The man who does not vote at every election, and vote in the fear of God, has violated the injunc tion to "render unto Caesar the things that are Caesar's." A new vision of Christian citizenship has been caught by people in their own day. Old sla vish party allegiances have been cast off, ns unworthy of independent man hood. "Bosses" find it increasingly hard to control the voters: they are taking their obligation to Caesar more sacredly nowadays. The truth is being squarely faced, that the person who is not definitely doing some form of public service, whether it be helping to get out care less voters on election day, or put ting all the power he possesses into opposition to office-seekers who are unworthy, or else working in some non-political way for the help of the people, Is not measuring up to Christ's specifications of a true man. To serve Caesar is to serve God. The good citizen is God's citizen. When once a life comes under the sway of the sanctities human society nor the kingdom will lack for faithful servants. Loyal is little, loyal Is large. BABY'S BIRTHDAY PARTY Special to The Telegraph Newport, Pa., Aug. 28.—0n the an niversary of her second birthday, Au gust 26, Mary Margaret Wright, baby daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Norman R. Wright, of Bellefonte, entertained five of her little friends from 2 until 4 at the home of her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Wright. The guests were Anna Sharon. Josephine Sharon, Helen Eby, Janet Milligan and Betty Hanley. PHOTOPLAY THEATER "The Wheat and the Tares," in two parts. In a game of cards. Stillwell, a young Southerner, Incurs the hatred of Collins, an unscrupulous scoundrel. See ing a chance for a double revenge. Col lins goes to LaVinge, father of Edith, with whom Stillwell Is in love, and de mands payment of an old gambling debt.—Advertisement. VICTORIA THEATER Motion pictures fans will be delighted with to-day's strong headliner at the Victoria, entitled "All Love Excelling," a drama in three reels. A story of compelling realism about love, par ental objection, war and self-sacrifice. A powerful drama well acted by the Path* players,—Advertisement. TALK ON ENEMIES OF DINNER PHIL Stevens Men's Club Layipg Plans For Fall and Winter Work / At a meeting of the executive committee ' of the Men's Club of Stevens Memorial Methodist Episcopal .'-a Church, Thirteenth L' (AdJ and Vernon streets, JS .JESS Monday night plans ■ I ,siff " for t* l6 Fa " and win i . ter work will be dis - cussed. An attractive fcfcjdl Wal' program has been outlined by the pas- KThl'"■ ■■Hfllfnj tor, the Rev. Clayton jESK*-—Albert Smucker, D. D. frwwv/V'fix'l The first special ■it "TT service under the di rection of the club will be held Sunday night, September 6, at 7.30 o'clock. An address by Dr. Smucker on "The Enemies of the Poor Man's Dinner Pall" will be the big feature. The meeting will be presided over by James W. Barker, president of the club. Special music will be offered by a male chorus. The front half of the church will be reserved for men and a half hour of social fellowship will follow the services. On Monday night, September 7, Labor Day, a special meeting for men only will be held in the church par lors. The reception will be from 8 to 8.30 o'clock. George L Reed will deliver an address and the president, James W. Barker, will also speak. There will be singing by the male chorus. To Compose Requiem.—T. Howard Davies, choirmaster of Derry Street United Brethren Church, has been afked to compose a musical requiem In memory of one of the members of the Port Talbot Musical Association who died recently. The requiem will be sung at the next festival, which will be held in November. ( iWiIi'iUIIIH NoD-greasy Toilet Cream —keep* ltie ekln soft and velvety la rough weather. An exquisite toilet prep aration. 250. GOKGA3 DRUG STORES 10 H. Third It, wad F. R. H. ktatlM WORRY—ITS CAUSE Worry, like hate, anger, envy and all other depressing emotions, Is a poison. It is a short circuit which burns out the mental batteries and destroys the power for useful activity. It is of little use, however, to tell the neurasthenic not to worry. He suff ers from worry Just as he suffers from headache and cold hands and feet and other miseries. The neurasthenic' wor ries not because he wishes to but be cause his mind operates in this dis ordered fashion in spite of his desire to the contrary. He can no more help worrying by voluntary effort than he can stop the smarting of a burn or the Itching of a mosquito bite by a men tal effort. Nevertheless, the patient can do much to help himself out of the worry habit, by an effort to cultivate an optimistic view of life In general and in each particular situation that presents Itself. Worry, like "the blues" is generally due to chronic poisoning, the cure of which changes the color of the Mental sky, and lifts the patient Into a sunny and peaceful atmosphere.—The Bat tle Creek Idea. Resorts BEDFORD SPRINGS, PA. 1 ON THE HISTORIC PIKE Bedford Springs Hotel Four flne gravel tennis courts. Sporty golf course. Dally open air concerts and dancing. I.arse. White Tile Swim ming Pool | alio Hot and Cold Mineral Water Ilatba and Curative Sprlnga. Our own riding stables, livery, garage. Instructors in all sports. H. E. BEMIS, Manager, —and— M. C. SWEENY, Asst. Mgr. Winters Hotel Royal Folncisna, Palm Beach. IDEAL. FAMILY RESORT ATLANTIC CITY. N. J. ®arlborougf|f||l I 'ißUnbeim' ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Capacity 1100 «00 Private Hnth* ExqulMtn refined music *rery nUrht throughout the year. Two block* of Ocean front, KOIIIUK C tin Irs. Hone-back rldlnf, Golf. Theatre* tnd countless amusement*. Ownership Management JO&IAB WHITE A SONS COMPANY Wear \ Custom jp Tailored Why should you buy high priced ready-to-wear out-of town clothing and then pay a tailor to make the alterations? For the same money, or less, you may as well have garments tailored to your measure. New materials In splendid patterns now on display for Fall an I Winter Suits $lO and np with your mate rial. S2O and up with oar mate rial. Our list includes the most prominent ladles of city. Re modeling and repairing of fur coats. Satisfaction guaranteed. /-TAILOR-TO -WOMEN-* > 205 Walnut St. Second Floor. Bell Phone IBBM. —i^ Business Locals FOOD COST INVESTIGATION Whether the war is responsible for the high price of food or the spec ulator remains to be proved, but th« fact remains that the best 25-cent noonday luncheon In the city remains the same in quality and price at the Court Dairy Lunch. John H. Menger, proprietor. Court and Strawberry 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers