ctrr-oxTTk cTrrTTHM ~ FRIDAY EVENING, SECOND SECTION , , _ . u - A I PAGES 9TO 16 HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH SEPTEMBER 25.1914. | Q A# LOW, PLAIN PRICES Q J Terms I Q □□ □□ 2 X □□ □□ x 2 —What does it mean? Simply this: A X you " may buy all the clothing you Q Q need for fall and winter; then pay © S us while wearing. No security re- g Q quired. We positively guarantee Q Q the quality and fit of every garment, Q 'X and our big chain of stores enables X Q us to sell you the season's best styles O Q at the lowest prices. 2 O —Two complete departments —one Q Q for men's clothing, the other for 2 Q women's ready -to - wear apparel. 5 O Open a charge account and pay us Q 2 in convenient weekly or monthly * Q payments. You'll find it the most Q O sensible and satisfactory plan of all. © Q No Charge For Alterations Q Q We Fit Every Garment Properly Q laskin & marine! 1- — CO. § X 36 N. Second Street X 5? CORNER OF WALNUT V nft*n lira in thff brassirre. Hundreds of thou«and« of women I wear the Bien-Jolie Brassiere for the reason that they rwrd I it as necessary as ft corset. It supports the bust and buck KUbUtfß v anf l f ivrs the figure the youthful outline fashion decrees. W *re the daintiest, most serviceable I *-/OLIE * nr [ n, * n '' i ininirinable. Only the ■ stance, ' \Valnhn", a flrx ihle bon- I I W will'show them to you on requMtVlie them'. fl ■ «#*•*■ he can easily get them for you by writing to us. Send for H an Illustrated booklet showing styles that are in high favor. I Absolutely No Pain / jPfctipOfe™! My latest Improved appll i} Including an oxygen- S alp apparatus, makes JS?* »<#■' J extracting and all den- '.O • Gr\ jr PfflgSjr J tal work positively painless and la per- O ** EXAMINATION / / "sr>.*' I PDrG I F Gold fllUnga SI.OO r KUiHi S \ 1 S Fillings In silver ' alloy cement 60c. Gold Crowns and Registered S S Bridge Work, $3, $4, $5. . VX ▼" 22-K Gold Crown ... .*5.00 Graduate Office open dolly 8.30 a. X V' X m. to «p. m.! Mon., Wed. Assistants \ 7 and Sat. Till 0 p. m.; Sundays, X 10_a. m. to 1 p. m, Bell Phone 8322H S hP • S EASY* TERMS OF S PAYMENTS AMMM /VtiS Market Street wjiy '(Over the Hub) X Harrisburg, Pa. it mia<t Hurt a Bit PAIITinUI When Coming to My Offioo Be unll I lUn « Sure You Are In the Right Piaoe. JESUS IS JUDGE OF ALL THE UNIVERSE Day of Perfect Revelation Coming Despite Deceit of the Present MAKE FRIENDS WITH SAVIOUR Ellis Discusses Social Problems of Day in Sunday School Lesson Brief THF IjAST GREAT ARRTTRA AfENT The International Sunday School Ijes son For September 27 Is "Jesus the •ludge of Men," John 3:14-21; a Quarterly Review (By William T. Ellis) "There is a reckoning yet to pay." So cry the opposing nations In the great war. Each looks forward to a. judgment day, when the nations will sit in conclave and apportion out penalties and rewards. Now, blinded by the red rage of war, none of the warring peoples can see clearly or judge fairly; some day the Inevit able .iust verdict of history will be written. As with nations, so with human lives. For three months past the] Sunday Schools have been studying ! the majestic truth, so difficult to' grasp, that the day of reckoning and I of clear Judgments is coming. Jesus stressed this teaching of judgment I above all others during the closing I days of His ministry. His utterances | were those of a judge, and this pres ent Review Lesson is entitled by the International Lesson Committee, "Jesus, the Judge of Men." Like all other truths with which He dealt, Jesus made this one per- i sonal to the conduct of men and women. He offered it as an argu ment for repentance. "Why not" — so in effect, ran His reasoning—"an- ticipate the inescapable judgment | day by amending your conduct now? i Then it. wll be too late to change | your course: now Is your opportun- j lty, revealed by the awful light which streams from the Judgment Seat." After the War Is Over The dispatches are filled with con flicting stories concerning the armies and their conduct. No one can be certain of the full truth now. But after the war is over, It will all be revealed. Then the glory or shame —or both commingled—of the con ! testants will stand clear for all men's ; reading. That truth, also, lies in these les sons on the judgment. However j much we may deceive ourselves or ' one another, in the present life, the I j day of perfect revelation is coming: ] j wherein for an endless eternity our j j true nature will stand revealed, to j ■ bless or to ban us. "There is noth ! ing hidden that shall not be revealed." | For a time sin may seem to pros ! per: but in the end it is the one | sure failure of the universe. "There I is a way that seemeth right to a man, but the end thereof are the i ways of death." Life may not be j judged, from this philosophy, by an . uncompleted portion; we must see the whole before we can pass a ver- | diet. That is why the light of the | judgment day is best for testing. It ( is as absurd to measure a life by a short period of prosperity as it was ! for the allies to exult over the re- j sistance of the forts of Liege as though that were the last word in the great war. When Pooh-Poohcd Principles Prevail j One spectacular phase of the clos* ing days of earthly ministry of Jesus was the way in which tbe crowd, from the temple officials down to the street rabble, thought they were I I judging this radical Rabbi from I | Nazareth; whereas, as all the world I ! now knows, they were being judged by him. Similarly, principles long flouted! j eventually judge all men. For mil- I j leniums world peace was thought the \ fad of fanatics, the dream of mystics | who heard angels singing in the i skies; now, the most materialistic historian or philosopher would not dream of writing down a scheme of | | government for the world which did : not postulate universal peace. Like ' wise, equal rights for all men and women, the abolition of slavery, the triumph of temperance, the emancl - pation of child labor—all these prin ciples were derided for long years aft er their possibility came to be recog nized. In this our own day all men clearly see that society is being Judged by these advanced social conceptions which are the ideals of Jesus. Poli tics and business must stand or fall according as they conform to these standards. Jesus and Social I "nrest Crowding still closer home to our twentieth century, in this connection is the tremendous truth that the final utterances of Jesus were con cerned largely with what our own day calls, comprehensively, "the so cial problem." Questions of social Justice, of employer and employed, of charity, of a corrupted church, of personal ambition in relation to group fellowship, of loyalty to the State, and of the nianward side of godliness—all these bulked big in the farewell ut ! terances of JPSUS. Anybody who thinks that the so " BABY CURED " Of Eczema by Saxo Salve Maspeth, L. I. "My dear little baby's face was covered with eczema and the constant itching was so great It kept him awake most of the time. I tried different remedies without re liaf until I tried Saxo Salve, and now my baby's face is well."—Mrs. H. COFFRE, Maspeth, L. I. If we can't cure your skin trouble with our Saxo Salve and Saxo Soap we will buy back the empty tube. Geo. A. Gorgas. Druggist. Harrla* burg. Pa.—Advertlseir.snt ! A YOUR j SSI KODAK w It FILMS |P>3 II A rr nnfe In otir II DfvrloplnK and ||mmß I|R Printing for the Ia! J. A. Kepple figpr nim Room 10, gl ZD N. Second St. j fHERE at The Live Store I we go about affecting a desired alliance with SUC CESS by the simple ex pedient of embodying in every transaction the twin virtues of SERVICE and I SATISFACTION. I It took courage, when we first I igan buying clothes to sell to you, 9 • turn from the cheap and shoddy, I ith their promises of a quick re- I irn and a fancy profit, and to stock 9 lis store with those dependable I dues which have ever since been I closely associated with our name. I It is an easy matter to sell a man R the clothing fence a cheap suit; fl )t knowing just what he wants you win him ith the smaller dollar mark but when I ch men come here we talk QUALITY to em, we show how quality means SERVICE id how STYLE properly expressed in quality akes for SATISFACTION. • COPYRIGHT 1914 I THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEf MEft We demonstrate, with some We don't ask SSO or S6O for score or more models why these clothes either; they're worth v i . pi ,i it we'll admit but when we ask Kuppenheimer Clothes djitc (ton (Dok are the sort of clothes they've been q>wvr OX looking for... You see we have we are playing fair all around and a stock that allows of this kind of demonstrating how much a store salesmanship, this kind of service, like ours; with a line like ours can and the mirror is always aiding do for the men who make it their and abetting us in our work. clothing home 30.PA. cial aspects of Christianity are a modern notion has but to read the utterances of our Lord during the two weeks immediately preceding his crucifixion for all the social pro grams which the great ecclesiasti cal gatherings have formulated, and which the prophets of our day have teo powerfully championed. The leaven of the day's social unrest may be found in the Gospel of Christ. A single word is to fly on the white flag of the Christmas ship that will bear the gifts and greetings of American children to a million or phans made by the cruel war; and that word will be "Inasmuch." The newspaper editor who conceived the plan is no preacher, but he knows thfe tremendous import of that word of Jesus, "Inasmuch as ye have done it unto one of the least of these ray brethren ye have done it unto me." There is no more wonderful truth in Scripture than this one that the Lord of heaven and earth makes Himself one with all the needy, suffering and oppressed of earth. The corollary of thft Is that to be united with Christ is to be like Him, a fellow-sufferer with the world's humblest and most helpless ones. Making Friends With the Judge This truth of the judgeship of the Son of Man need not be a terrible one. I have a friend who is a county Judge, and a terror to evtl-doers; but to his own little daughter he is not a fearsome judge, but an indulgent father. His seat of justice is at times her playground, when she visits him at the courthouse. To the Christian, Chirst is less a judge than a Saviour, a friend, a brother. ' Here, too, it is possible to antici pate the judgment day. "There is Bully Fine! Corns Go For All Time. All that blistering pain will go. all your toe-pinched suffering will end, every sign of a foot lump, callous or corn will disappear once you paint on that reliable old remedy, Putnam's Corn Extractor. It's simply a marvel, the wonder of the day, the surprise of every thinking man the way it pain lessl• lifts out a corn. You can't beat Putnam's—that's sure Sold by deal ers everywhere In 25c bottles and by C. M. Forney.—^Advertisement. nortr no condemnation for them that are in Christ Jesus." The friends of Christ on earth, (who are likewise the friends of man), are also the friends of Christ in the Great-Day of the hereafter. Which implies that the one fact of supreme importance concerning any person or nation is his present relation to Jesus the cru cified. Great Paintings in Famous Art Galleries of the World Reproduced In Full I'age Half-Tones For Larned's Wonderful History Larned's History of the World, now on distribution by this paper, contains sixteen full-page half-tone illustrations, which are reproductions of some of the most famous paintings In the world. They furnish marvelous embellish ments of the text and are themselves of an intrinsic value equal to the small distribution cost required in addition to the coupons. No history, so far pub lished, has ever been illustrated with so many worthy illustrations, over 150 , in number, every one of which is en . tirely authentic and expository of the ■ inimitable text. Lamed Is one of the ' t few born historians and his works are L standard wherever the English t language is spoken. • His History for . Readv Reference is already a classic among reference works, and his His -1 torv of the World grew out of that • monumental labor of research and is , the onlv history adapted for the masses which Is at once reliable and interest . Ing. This paper's coupon offer, printed . In to-day's paper, puts it in reach of every one .and is really a great educa . tlonal campaign in behalf of the peo " pie. Await Mannings' Arrival October 15 to Complete 1 Parkway Land Negotiation Delinite steps toward acquiring the i land desired to complete the parkway i in the vicinity of Derry street will be taken, it is expected, when Warren H. Manning, park architectural expert, returns to Harrisburg October 15. For some months Park Commission er M. Harvey Taylor has been try ing to close the deal, but up until to day the land is still ui.owned by Har risburg. TO REDUCE PRICE OF CERTIFIED MILK TO 12 CENTS A reduction of two cents per quart on the price of certified milk will be made October 1, according to a re port of the milk commission of the Harrisburg Academy of Medicine. The present price is 14 cents. It will be reduced to 12 to give the milk a wider field for usefulness. Seventy-five quarts are being used daily in addition to the amount sup piled to the Harrisburg Hospital. RURAL CARRIER DIES Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., Sept. 25. —James S. Ourrens. rural mail carrier from Virginia Mills. whlle> traveling his route a short distance above Maria Among MOJA "M" Why •jl smokers are Don't men who can You afford cigars of # J Smoke y any price. So they must buy jiff All MOJA CI- w lfl \/ J I\. G sZSJZ the %J CIGARS and Delight ». they get out of them. Made by All Havana Tobacco lOc John C. Herman & Co. |_____ CIGARS Kurnace Rbout 12.30 on Wednesday, was the victim of a sunstroke. He was discovered by two women who were passing; lying In his hugyy In an un conscious condition, and was taken, to the residence of William Watson., A physician was summoned but rens died shortly after his arrival. BAYLY-BAKER WEDDING Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., Sept. 28.—1n the presence of their parents and imme diate friends. Miss Mary Baker, of this place and Joseph T. Bayly, Jr., of Westfleld, N. J., were married Thursday morning by the Rev. T. J. Barkley, pastor of the Trinity Reform er! Church. Mr. Bayly was formerly agent of the United States Express Company In this place.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers