4 Men's Percale Dr...] Read < SH IRT , F KAUFMANS „ T AT , NMINR(MW ON 1 59c ;i to TWin\/fc MnpT} Qa i p t i Coat models. laundered cuff,. [ ('] , Jlj || *3PM,n'. Perrale Dre,,l '' pjMdflllfciCtUrCrS , Women', Kid Gloves Shirt. ; , C 7 V ~ f Made to sell for SI.OO. gg,. *** YTheGreatestClothes Value Ever Offered to the Menofl 1 .Hanisbutg«sl2,soo "OF™ NEW Fall & Winter Suits! --- - - : Men's Newest Fall I {Overcoats & Trousers—"Nearly the Regular Price* HWSE w DRESSES Neckwear f 15® ff Men's and Young Mens Overcoats tpf AQ Men's and Young Men's Overcoats 48,» Ow^ieVScV". $ !'°°' Made to sell for 50c. 27c lißraiilj Libh ifflSJlL Suits, Made to Sell up to |* 1 an d Suits, Made to Sell up to j ? I Made of percales and ging- I O An S ™w P p«t«rns. '' sl2 - 00;all SizeS | $'5.00; all Sizes & For Stout Men ■ | to: Fall styles; all sizes; fast . v f Men', and Young Men'. [a*. „„j V ~„ ®■«4 AO Men', and Young Men'.! , . __ , nLK ~ I Mru/I7CT n4i MAP A Men S and Young tar Men', Cotton Hose BAIMACAANS, SUITS & OVERCOATS. 1 Em to Sell at $22.50, i9^r d o„r%Jv Price 7 J /2C I C£L 7 C Made to Sell up to $20.00 / V Tbe Best Linen Cord, Lined Our Sale Price Tn black and colors, double I ! ' «/uSf AboUL COME EARLY. L New Fall shapes .with 4 hose . , , I ! supporters, lace trimmed, all THi Boys' Norfolk Suits and Boys' Norfoik Suits and Boys' Mackinaw Coats sizes, only 150 to sen. V t {Hi ij iilllll _ ... _ /lyM C Flrwl Floor, Rear, > 11 Winter Overcoats Winter Overcoats The Best coat for winter wear. I v — / B@T Men's Work Shirts TJi ll|v\\ W flft Made to sell up to $3.00. Sizes Made to sell up to $4.00. Sizes M a d e to sell up to ssm Sizes 7 Made to sell for 50c. OQ r } I Our Sale Price f |J| K Sale Price 3> I.W Sale Price Sale Pnce MTTIJi f Made to sell for 20c. Made of fast colors, blue 1 I |j|W|\\ /||||jV " / fiSP Our Sale Price OC chambray with col ars. 11l i|\\ lilt I Boys' Blouse Waists Norfolk SlllfS Boys' Long Winter \ Made of fast color stripe Jti il\\ Jill | ° ur . Sa ! n i"C With two pairs of pants. Made (J V LKLUA I b AgL Qnly 150 pairs to sdl . Men's Fleeced and ill j I \\\\wNvw\ t0 Ribbed Undershirts f\ 1 Boys' Corduroy Pants years. Our Sale (to AO 12,0 ißyears. °™ «.<>»'«»■• J9c ' ' ' A t > PIU II Boys' Odd Pants With 2 Pairs of Pants NORFOLK MJL. f 0 . . 10c Men's Roxford Ribbed T SL SI.OO. Our Sale '° 49c I I 'I I Imported Swiss embroidery Union Suits 1 |,r,<,e '*' fl 17 years. Mado to sell u> s7.no: Bto 18 years. Made to Sell at SO.OO Handkerchiefs; all neat new Made to sell for $1 ,25. 95 JS=K K Our Sale Price j f v——^_ Women's Silk Hose ' FOT £[|ade I $S 'Madc^T!"'\,p All pure silk, double heel | broidery, all sizes; new models, and toe, in black and white; all gp B jju Only 100 to sell. War in Bible Lands Presents Problems Religious Factor Assumes New Importance in Region of Many Faiths. By the Religious Rambler As ouUlned in this column many ■weeks ago, Turkey has become em broiled in the war, and a whole train of religious complications have en sued. Once more the blood-stained soii of the Holy Land will send to •Jieaven the cries of the desolated and the dying. The ears of Christendom are keenly alert to news of the places about which wo all loarned from the Bible. One of tho earliest dispatches re ported fighting- at Gaza, where Sam eon carried oft the gates of tho city. Turkish troops have mobilized around the Gulf of Akaba and the Sinai Peninsula, and they are quite likely to have trouble with their commissariat as did the children of Israel when Moses led tliom over the same ground, 'more than three thousand years ago. Turkish troops have been concentrated t e.t Mosul on the Tigris—which Is across the river from ancient Ninevah • —say the same day's dispatches, and ,ere moving from there toward Egypt. 0 • • • o O 9 • o o e eieooooo o m oooooowooo u V • • • In the candies where cream • 1 and butter are necessary for • • smoothness and richness— : : cream and butter are used in • o „ Our Sales Agents in Harrisburg are • • J. H. Boher W. P. Cunningham * • F. J. Althouse ° Huyler's Cocoa, like Huyler's Candy," is supreme ■ . i . ™ . . ™ r FRIDAY EVENING, ~ HAKRISBURG TELEGRAPH Fi/VEMSER 6,1914. The average reader lias no concep tion of the hundreds of miles of desert travel involved in this, and by troops inadequately equipped and provision ed. All of Palestine proper Is astir with the movement of Turkish troops. How Jews are Involved. Private advices which I have been receiving from the Holy Land Indi cate widespread distress and devasta tion caused by the wholesale conscrip tion of all men, Christians and Moslems alike, between the ages of eighteen and forty-two. It appears that the Jewish colonists In Palestine are espe cial sufferers, and there have beon actual deaths from starvation among those In the holy city itself. Tho reason for this is clear. Most of the more than sixty thousand Jews In Jerusalem are from Russia, Rou manla and Germany, countries af fected by the war. Their source of livelihood has besm tho "portion' which they have received through the malls. War, and Europe's financial paralysis, has summary stopped this. Very many of the colonists are old folk, who have gone to the Land of Promise to spend their declining ! years and they are unequal to the ! special exertions necessary to secure funds or to leave the country. Com paratively few of these ■dewish set- I tiers are Americans; but if relief j goes to them it will have to be sent I chiefly from this country. ' One bright prospect appears on the \ horizon for those Zionists who may survive to realize It. Defeat for Tur ! key means disintegration. Palestine | would then pass from Moslem control, I probably Into the hands of a commis sion of the powers with considerable self-rule for the inhabitants. Thus the vexatious burden of Turkish au thority and exactions would be lifted from the Jews in the Holy Land. They would be free to colonize to the full extent of their ability. It might even be that at least a part of Pale stine would become a Christian-Jewish 1 democracy, with full religious toler ' ance. The site of David's temple, which is now the Moslem Mosque of Omar, may pass once more into the 1 hands of the Chosen People, and | worship be re-established there ac cording to the laws of Moses. The Crusaders' bream Still more significant as a possible religious consequence of the war— assuming Turkey's ultimate defeat would be really realization of the dream of the Crusaders. The Church of the Holy Sepulchre, where now sits a Turkish guard, day and night, would become wholly a Christian possession, and the scepter of the Moslem would pass from the land which we call holy. Russia's dream of restoring the cross to the Mosque of St. Sophia at Constantinople is likely to be realized. Time brings dramatic changes, but the fulfillment of the magnlficlent enterprise of the Crusaders of the Middle Ages, after these many centuries, would thrill the Imagination of Chrlstensom. Meantime, though, tho Christians In Turkey are destined to suffer sever ely because of the war. With Turkey in conflict with most of the great powers which have hitherto protected Christians from Moslem fanaticism, the Mohammedan population will, feel free to wreak their hatred upon de- Catholics, the Greek Catholics, the Armenians, the Chaldeans, Jacobites, Copts, Nestorlans, Maronltos and pro testants (such are some of the many varitles of Christian faiths In the Holy Land), will all feel the bloody repri sals of fanatical Moslems. Added to the doadly blight of poverty will be the worse horror of persecutions and massacres. Americans Affected No nation outside of the Levant haa citizens and property more widely dis tributed over the Turkish Empire than the United States. The American Board and Presbyterian missionaries are found dotted over large parts of the extensive territory of the Turk, from Mardln to Constantinople.. Wherever there Is a mission there are native Christians and American property to be protected. And the missionaries traditionally stay by their posts. Now that the capitulations have been cancelled by Turkey, who can tell what will befall? Along the Mediterranean, in unfor tified cities, are the great American | mission schools, with Syrian Protes-. tant College, of Beirut, at their head. In Sldon and Tripoli and Alcxandretta and Meyßina and Tarsus (a few miles in from the coast), and Smyrna there are Important mission stations of tho Americans. In most of these places there are also German missions. Both Haifa and Jaffa have German reli gious colonies; while on both ends of Mount Carmel are monastarles of tho French Carmelites. The great Ameri can colleges at Constantinople are out side the reach of the foreign warships, so long as the Dardenelles is held by Turkey. There Is possibility that a deliberate effort may be hade to embroil the United States in the present strife by attacks upon its citizens and vested interests in Turkey. Certainly the complexity of tho situation for this country Is vastly increased. What of a "Holy Yl'nr" As 1 have more than one pointed out, the possibility of a general "Holy War" —the uprising «f all Moslems everywhere against all Christians —-Is so remote as to be almost negligible. The knowledge is general among Mos lems that the Sultan Is not a true Cal iph, for though he is the keeper of the green flag of the prophet, yet in his veins runs none of the blood of Mo hammed or of his tribe of Koreish. Morever, the solidarity and sim plicity of Islam has been broken by modern civilization. Every Moslem in Egypt knows that life and property are safer under British rule than under Turkish; and that religious freedom Is complete, while prosperity is greater. Over ten thousand cara van fires on the road to Mecca the Indian and Egyptian pilgrims have contrasted tho protection and assis tance given them by Britain with the tyranny and exortlon which they suf fer in Turkey. So, while Turkish Moslems may massacre Christians, and cry alo\id for a "jehad", or holy war, yet the Mos lems of other nationalities lndians, Egyptians, Arabs and Malays will be slow to jeopardize both their civil and religious liberty by attempting to make war against their own national rulers. With enhanced interest and anxiety, the people of America will rend the war news from the land which em braces the oldest empires of history. Central Juniors Out For Junior Oratorical Contest Preliminaries of the annual Samuel Kunkel junior oratorical contest will bo held in thft Chapel of the Central High school this evening at 7.30 o'clock. This contest is open to all boys of the Junior class. About fifteen have already entered. Miss Annabelle Swartz, Instructor of elocution at fho school, Is training the boys. A fow weeks ago tho boys and girls of the school in the junior class were barred from the chemical laboratory because of the Inability to get sup plies on account of the war. The en tire class is now working in the room, the necessary supplies having been received. Mummers to Hold Big Genera! Meet Tonight Interesting reports are being pre pared for the general meeting In the J interest of the Mummers' parade to- |j night. At the meeting delegates | from all local organizations will j report, and details will be taken up j for the big time. letters were sent 1 out this week to organizations in sur rounding towns. Everybody has been invited to join with Harrlsburg in the big parade. The committee on prizes will meet early next week. The asso ciation will distribute SI,OOO in cash prizes. A Hint for Coming Maternity In a little book designed for expectant lhothers more complete instruction is Elven In the use of "Mother's Friend." This Is on externrrl embrocation applied to the abdominal muscles for the purpose of reducing tho strain on ligaments, cords and tendons. In thus bringing relief and avoiding: pain great good Is accomplished. It ■ervos to ease tho mind. Indirectly has a most beneficial effect upon the nervous system and thousands of women have delightedly told how they were tree of nausea, had no morning sickness and went through tho ordeal with most re markablo succes.i. "Mother's Friend" has i been growing In popular favor for mora | than forty years. In almost every com munity aro grandmothers who used it ! themselves, their daughters have used it and they certainly must know what a blessing it Is when they recommend It HO wnrmlv. Ktrlctly an external application It has no other effect than to ease tho muscles, cords, tendons and ligaments Involved hence Is perfectly safe to use by all women. It Is used very successfully to prevent caking of breasts. "Mother's Friend" Is prepared In tho i laboratory of Bradfleld Regulator Co., [ 401 Lamar Bide.. Atlanta, Ua. Pennsy Will Fumigate All Cattle Cars Here As a prevention of the spreading of diseases among cattle shipi%d over the Pennsylvania Railroad lines, spe cial orders were issued to-day to fumi- SB 3-Is-One hns been for 18 years the Old Reliable, larf est«clHnsr home and office on. SB «Sj It is light enouuh to oil a vratch; heavy enoujth to oil a lawn ni°wer. On a soft Cloth It m H becomes an i