8 ■ Hou) Will You Decide the I | Xmas Piano or Player- I I Piano Qu I Will you buy an instrument with reputation and standing, or will someone n rlQ§v,r* Imously known for many years jj lj Now's the Time to Start Finding Out I Which Piano the Xmas Piano Is to Be I / / £S = 3 = a =*"'-- i \ And Christmas is not too far off to olf der your Victrola or Edison- Diamond Disc NOW; and who I; LpSfeo ! one of these instruments without first ===s= ==^i ; hearing them demonstrated side-by- H I This is the only store in the city displaying all models of both the || I Victrola and Edison Diamond Disc. |L j !| Either may NOW be acquired on our liberal Xmas Club Offer. Edison Diamond Di.c Pa y Castl On V F ° r Y ° Ur Records $250 NoFurtherPaymeitsUntil3o Days Later Special complimentary demonstrations will be given all day to-morrow and during the evening. You are cordially invited to visit the st©re. THE J. H. TROUP MUSIC HOUSE 1 Troup Building 15 South Market Square CAN'T IDENTIFY MAN KILLED Neatly Dreused Pedestrian Struck By Engine at Enola An unidentified man died at the Jlarrisburg hospital yesterday after noon. He was brought to the hospital from »the Enola yards where it is thought that he was struck by an en gine. Coroner Eckinger up to a late hour to-day lias heard nothing from any one about the man. He was of slen der build, neatly dressed, gold tilled teeth and had only a small sum of money on him. || Seasonable Groceries ![ Granulated Sugar, lb., 5 1 /# New Brazil Nuts, lb. 15$ jj New Muir Peaches ... 12$ New Asparagus in tall tins, ! j New Seeded Raisins .. 12$ 2 for 25$ ;j New Currants, .12^2$, 15$ Country Gentleman Corn, 3 ;; New Citron, lb 25$ cans 25$ ;! Orange and Lemon Peel, lb., Fancy Tomatoes, 3 cans, . 25$ 25$ |j Silverchurn Oleomargarine, Genuine Maine Corn, doz., !> 5 lb., $1.15; Eastlake $1.05 ;! Oleomargarine, 5 lb., Milwaukee Frankfurts,'lb., !; #I.OO 25$ jj Creamery Butter, lb., Mettwurst, lb 25$ 375, 40$, 40$ Dillsburg Country Sausage, !| Aunt Jemima's Pancake and lb. 20$ |; Buckwheat Flour, pack- Jones' Dairy Farm Sausage, !! age 10$ lb 32$ jj New Corn Meal, 3 lb., 10$ Shredded Wheat, pack, 11$ j; New Hominy, 3 lb. ... 10$ Grape Nuts, pack 12$ ;! New Marrowfat Beans, 3 lb., Marvel Coffee, lb 150$ ! j 25$ Yt lb. tea free with each j; New Pea Beans, 4 lb., 25$ pound to induce you to j; New California Walnuts, lb., test its fine drinking qual ! j 25$ ity. jj New Paper Shell Almonds, White House and Golden 11 lb 29$ Dome Coffees, lb. .. 38$ ~ S. S. POMEROY Market Square Grocer FRIDAY EVENING, . HJtRRISBURG sSISu TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 6,1914. AN KPITAFH. Here lies a man of honest worth, Beneath this simple stone; Pull sixty years he dwelt on earth And oft would telephone, But never once his temper lost, Nor called "Miss Central" down; So earned, though poor and tempest tossed, A just claim to renown.—Ex. To be trusted is a greater com pliment than to be loved. George Mac Donald. MISS DAISY EGGLESTON All you need to do to see that Miss Eggleston, head of the children's work department, is admirably fitted for her work is to take a look at her kindly eyes and her good-natured face. Tho children love her dearly wherever sh» goes, and when she leaves a town many a little heart Just can't help but cry at the loss of one It knew to be a true friend. Her duties are many, but her chief job is to see that the young sters are brought under Christian in fluences In the Sunday school, church and the home. God Understands It is sweet to know. When we are tired, and when the the hand of pain Lies on our hearts, and when we look in vain For human comfort, that the Heart Divine Still understands these cares of yours and mine. Not only understands, but day by day Lives with us while we tread the earthly way. Bears with us all weariness, and feels The shadow of the faintest cloud that, steals Across our sunshine, ever learns again The depth and bitterness of human pain. There is no sorrow that ho will not share, No cross, no burden, for our hearts to bear Without his help, no care of ours too small To cast on Jesus; let us tell him all — Lay at his feet the story of our woes, And in his sympathy And sweet repose. —ln the Church Advocate. STOUGH HI GETTING DOWN TO BED ROCK [Continued From First Page] i I week services, the tabernacle was fill- i led to the doors last night with an i audience that closely followed the ' most serious sermon yet preached by j Dr. Stough. The heavy applause given .on previous nights was missing be-1 I cause there were fewer remarks that • ■ called for applause. | At the opening of his sermon he j 1 spoke of unjust criticism that is being circulated In many quarters about him. He said he is willing to stand : for anything he says but that he will i not stand for everything "you say I i say." i "The biggest bang of knockers is i the gang that never hears me preach," ' he declared. What Is a Christian ? The subject last night was, "What Is 1 a Christian?" and the evangelist de fined the direct and forceful language, j the qualities and lack of qualities in | Christians, hypocrites and reprobates. | He showed that to be a true Christian requires ability to mingle with the world and yet to keep unspotted from the world. "We must make a radical distinc tion between Christians and church members," he said, "for, although almost every Christian is a church member, every church member Is not a Christian. Many of them are just veneered, they are whitewashed but not washed white within. There Is a difference between Christianity and Churchanity." The Greatest Sinner I "The greatest sin is the breaking 'of the first commandment, and the greatest sinner is not the drunkard or the harlot or the thief, it is the man who refuses to put God foremost in his life. The true Christian is he who worships the Lord with all his heart, and soul and strength. | "No one except the Idiot or the in nocent who has not reached age of accountability, is without one of two Gods; every man is worshipping either the true and living God or he is bow ing down to the god of self, the god of the lusts of the flesh, or the eye, or the vain glory of life. The man with the last named god has the altar of his shrine In his selfish desire for money, pleasure, power, passion, appetite or ! dress. Discusses True Character "I am talking to-night not of church membership, but of the things of character, of the things that you are in realty. A man cannot be righteous inside and unholy outside; and a man who says he is a Christian on Sunday and skins his neighbor on Monday is not a Christian —he's a liar. Every thought and act of a Christian must be brought Into captivity to the spirit of Christ. "Heading the Bible is no indication of Christianity, neither is confirma tion nor baptism, nor the taking of the Holy Sacrament. There are lots of people in hell who have been bap tized. and no doubt there are churches of all denominations in hell. If some of you people have no more to show for your Christianity than the things I have mentioned, you are going straight there 1 fear. There are all too many in Harrisburg who can show only these qualitieations." Why Some Won't Kiss Their Husbands He showed that there is little dif ferance between many church mem bers and nonchurch members. "Some of you old ehureh members smoke to bacco like a chimney and some smell like a garbage can. I )cnow this is the reason why so few wives will kiss their husbands. Then there are some church members who can cuss a blue streak; they are eussers from Cussersville. There are church members who serve liquor in their homes, in fact they keep a private saloon; there are those who play cards, attend the theater and the dance, read trashy novels, and as sociate with unbelievers without any reserve. "Ther*; are lots of hard-headed business men I know who would join church as a matter of common sense if they could see any difference be tween church members and outsiders. The Christianity of many is like a i". ess of changeable silk whose color depends on the angle of light. They can use It for Sunday school or for a Wednesday card party. Need Antiseptic Christians "Just give me time; I can't preach Mall my sermons in one night; but I'll i! promise you that I'm going to skin some of you till there isn't any hide on your old carcasses. "What we need are antiseptic Chris tians, who first will not ho contami nated by the world and second who will not contaminate the world." As a test of a true Christian he laid down the following catechism: "Am I less sellish, less censorious, less critical, ill-tempered, jealous, passion ate, grasping and avaricious than I used to be before I professed Chris tianity? Am 1 more forgiving, gentle, loving, kind, humble, spiritual and Christ-like than I used to be. Am X less conlirmed to the world in any home, in business and in the world at large?" Are You Sure ? "If on bended knee you can answer to these personal ouestions positively, I then yon can be reasonably assured you are a real Christian. The reality of being in Christ consists in a vital, personal relation and fellowship with Christ. "Christians do not follow a crucifix, but they follow the living Christ who said, "Wherever two or three are gath ered together in my home, there am X.' " At the afternoon service Dr. Stough preached on the "Valley of the Vision of Dry Hones," taken from the book of Ezekiel. He sai*l in part: "No man • can look out on the world as it Is to day without .becoming discouraged. This war seems"to show that civiliza tion is a thorough failure. The fact that Germany and other nations that have been considered the most cul tured and engaged In a struggle em ploying the highest products of civili zation for the destruction of life is most discouraging unless it is viewed through the eyes of God. "The church should have a vision not only of the needs of the city in its physical life, but more still, it 'should have the vision of the needs of j the heart and the spiritual life. The church should have a vision of lost souls." He showed that improvement in material surroundings Is not enough, but that the church should lead with a change in the heart. "When you clean the heart, you clean up the sur roundings." "The church is primarily responsible for evil conditions and has failed to hold the people in its grasp. Two thirds of the Sunday school attend ants never Join the church, because lit has not attracted them. Practically every prostitute has attended Sunday school at one time or another. "Tlje reason the saloon forces hatf me as the devil hates Holy Water Is that my preaching is going to hurt their business. In Hazleton where over 5,000 persons hit the trail—more than 2,000 of them being men—7s per cent, of these converts were users of alcohol and entirely stopped it. And of course this materially reduced the sale of liquor." Campaign Sidelights page 10, Get Your Wife One of Our BASE BURNERS Every woman likes a warm, cheery, comfortable home. That's why your wife wants a beautiful Base Burner Heater, and when you stop to think that four-fifths of her life is spent in the house, isn't she entitled to it? Jk Garland Base Burners for Service, Durability and Economy cannot be excelled. Their large syphon flues afford a maximum heating ca pacity and increase the Heat Radiation. The Revolving* ig-' **—^Firepot which will withstand the most intense heat and greatly assists in removing the ashes and clinkers is a Bright Lehigh Base Burners I Made in the new Colonial design. The nickel through out is of smooth finish and easy to keep clean, "sk Cold air from the floor is drawn up through flues, is in tensely heated and expelled into the room. You get every particle of heat possible.- Double Heating attach ments for direct heat to upper rooms. Round Oak Heaters. Priced d*Q CA k from SO.DU Up Iff Square Single and Double W Heaters from .... Up Come in and see our Stoves we have them in many styles and prices. If you don't buy there's no harm done'. We're willing to put our time against yours just to have you see our line of stoves. Don't forget that we deliver and set up stoves com plete. Not necessary to have the ready cash either. We are giving plenty of time to pay. Furniture, VI j?, Sewing Machines, Carpets Vacuum Cleaners and Stoves 312 Market Street , and Fu " A,*l . MISS OLIVE M. ROGERS Miss Rogers is secretary and re corder of the Stough evangelistic party, and, as can be readily imagined, she is a mighty busy woman from the moment she arrives in a town until the party goes to another in iis cam paign work. It is Miss Rogers who keeps a record of the trall-liitters, turns their names over to the various co-operating churches and in general looks atfer the details of keeping the church both on the "trail" of the new "men of God" after the Stough cam paign is over and gone. She keeps the records of all the business trans actions and is in complete charge of the party's secretarial work. What We Say It Is, IT IS You Buy Service When you buy a watch you buy service —valuable serv ice—for time is money in the business world and the mun who has no watch handicaps. himself unjustly. The service a good watch renders you gains for you in actual dollars and cents many times the cost of the watch. If that were not a fact, watches would still bo lux uries and only the wealthy would buy them. A watch is necessary to men, and women who make the most of their time. If you are not an idlor, you need a good watch. Here are two Dlener Specials in good watches: A 16-slzo, 7-jewel Elgin movemen/ in an open face gold tilled case, guaranteed for 20 years #B.OO A 17-Jewel Hamilton move ment, cased as above, $17.00 P, G. Diener JEWELER 408 Market Street How Slip Used ffor Eyes. Mr. Briggs received a note from a farmer living: back quite a ways in the country, requesting him to come as quickly as possible to see his child who was very sick with "a very bad cold." The doctor examined the tihlld and then turned to the mother. "Don't you known," he asked, "that your little girl is coming down with the measles?" "Yes, doctor," was the woman's re- Sugar Special \ A purchase of SI.OO worth of groceries entitles you to purchase a 25 lh. bag of Granulated Sugar for $1.25. Soft white, granulated and brown sugar in any quantity, lb 60 Dill pickles, 150, 2 doz., Strained honey in 16-oz. 250 bottles 230 • 1 it 10c glass honey 90 Dried corn, lb 100 v , j. , - , • „ . . _ , , Kellogg s cornflakes, 3 for Self-raising Buckwheat, 250 100, 3 pack s for . .2501 Puffed rice 130 Log Cabin Maple syrup— Shredded wheat 100 quart cans 380 Puffed wheat 00 Dint cans *2O Navy Beans ' ' Marrowfat beans 80 10c bottles '0 Lenox Soap, 3 cakes.. 100 lioney in comb 230 Uneeda Biscuit 40 Saturday Special in LUNCH GOODS Dried beef sliced any thick- Lebanon bologna, lb., 250 ness you wish, lb., 350 Lard, lb 130 t on , Bacon, lb 250 Minced ham, lb 200 S]iced ham> ]b 270 Boiled ham, lb 350 3 10c cans tomatoes. .250 Our stores are located as follows: 1903 Derry Street BeU » >hono 895 L Cor 13th and Swatara Sts Bu " P none 3673W 1518 N. Sixth St Bcll ~honc 1718 L Cor 3rd and Chestnut Sts Bcll P llono "csr Cor. 14tb and Regina Sts Bcll Phon « 2394J The 2 in 1 Stores Co. SCHMIDT'S SATURDAY SPECIAL 49c Fresh Cut ROSES 49<f* DOZ. ALL COLORS. SATURDAY ONLY. DO*. SCHMIDT 313 Market Street Ffl Harrisburg, Pa. A JLf JL\JLw M and Pennsylvania Station. ply, "I knew she was." "Then why in the world," asked tlio doctor, "did you write me that slie had a very l\a<l cold?' The woman hesitated for a mo ment; then looking at her husband she said, with sullen frankness: "Neither him nor me knew how to spell measles.—National Monthly. Truth, like the sun, submits to be obscured, but, like the sun, only for a time.—Bovee.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers