Uneeda Biscuit Nourishment—fine fla vor—purity—crispness —wholesomeness. All for 5 cents, in the moisture-proofpackage. GRAHAM CRACKERS A food for every day. Crisp, delicious and strengthening. Fresh baked and fresh de livered. xo cents. SNA^4ROONS A delightful new bis cuit, with a rich and delicious cocoanut fla vor. Crisp and always fresh, xo cents. Buy biscuit baked 6y NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY Always took for that Name ramr BEGIN ON SALTS Flush your kidneys occasionally if you eat meat regularly No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by Hushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well known authority. Meat forms uric- acid which clogs the kidney pores 8" they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headache, liver trou ble, nervousness, constipation, dizzi ness, sleeplessness, bladder disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful In a glass of water be fore breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act tine. This fa mous salts Is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia and has been used for genera tions to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to activity, also to neu tralize the acids in urine so it no long er causes irritation, thus ending blad der disorders. Jad Salts Is inexpensive and can not injure: makes a delightful effer vescent lithia-water drink which all Regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avoiding eerious kidney complications.—Adver tisement. RUPTURE Appliance* uncil anil approved !»>* V. S. Government —now here. W. R. SI3ELEY. the noted expert, is returning to Harrisburg and will be at tin' Commonwealth Hotel, Tuesday and Wednesday, November 17 and 18, thoroughly equipped and prepared to t! a' with tlic most difficult cases. Ills Spermatic Shield Truss used ami hi;pro ceil by the U. s. Government and the Czar of Russia, will retain any rup ture, affording Immediate relief, ar.d frequently closes the opening In a short time. WONDERFUL RKSULTS WITH OUT SUR'JERY OH HARMFUL. INJEC TIONS. Clean an.l durable; no irritat ing leg straps or binding of hips. Examination and advice Free. Pa tients treated on former vißits invited to call for attention without charge, llome Office, 1027 Walnut St., Philadel phia, Pa. Cut and keep for reference. Herrhanta A Miner* Tran*. Cj. FLORIDA THIPS "BY SEA" B.UTIMOKE TO g VCKSONVII.I.R and return f33.R0 SAVA>\AH and return 00 Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. Fine steamers. Best service. Staterooms de luxe. Baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Steam er Tuesday and Friday. Send for book let. I \y. p. TURNER. G. P. A.. Hnltlmnre, Md. Business Local SUNSHINE OR SHADOW Fine portraits are possible in our Btudio any time of day with the aid of the powerful Tungsten light wo have Installed, ft gives us absolute control of light conditions as applied to the finest photography. If you can not come when the sun is shining, come on a cloudy day or le'j in the afternoon. It's all the same at Kell lierg'a, 302 Market street. Try Telegraph Want Ads. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 13, 1914 PETER IS THE MOST j POPULKRIHTLE He's So Much Like the Rest of Us, Explains Wil liam Ellis MAN WITH THE BARK ON Warmed Himself at the Wrong Fire, but Heart Was Right at That THE SAINT MOST KIN TO US The International Sunday School Lesson for November 15 Is, "Jesus and Peter."—Mark 14:27-31. 53 651. 68-72. (By William T. Ellis.) "There is so much bad in the best I of us. And so much good in the worst of | that we all have a friendly feeling for soaring, stumbling, salnt-and-sin ner Peter. Stained-glass saints some-1 how do not interest us, except In I church windows; but Peter is so much I like the rest of us that we are glad to | sit down with him and learn what he j has to tell us, from his ups and downs, for our cwn life. "If a vote were taken for the most 1 popular apostle," some one hna said, ! "Peter would get a majority. He t flames with contradictions, and yet j we seem to understand him best of' all. He visits very often in a little house called 'Myself which stands' hard by the dusty highway of life. | Without his enthusiasm, his candor, ! his blunders and new starts, the gos- | pel stories would have been poorer." The Raw Materials of a Saint Quarried from the same coarse j clay as the rest of us, Peter seemed i an unlikely candidate for saintship and the apostle. A rough out-of-, doors fellow, a man "with the bark | on," Peter had been to school to the hurley-burly of the Galilean water front. He could take care of him self in a fight or in a storm. What ever new was afloat, Peter was for it, with dash and daring. A man's man was he; and the sturdy Naza rene's heart leaped with gladness when this bold fellow declared him- I self ready to adventure discipleship. I No cloistered recluse was Peter. His temper was execrable, as his j judgment was impulsive. He was a man of action, rather than of delib-1 eration. He spoke lirst, and repented i afterward. But those hot impulses were the impulses of a true man. And his swift insight often saw fur ther than the colder analysis of his mates. Be it never forgotten that it i was Peter who first of the Twelve acclaimed Jesus. "Thou art the Christ, the Sbn of the living God." Somehow, the Lord does not go to the conventional schools of greatness for his notables. He calls the Mar tin Luthers, the Joan of Arcs, the Wesleys, the Moodys, the Billy Sun days, Who are strangely like the common run of us, to do his rarest work. Just as we are, everyday folk, God wants us for his service. He would not have us without our in dividuality: he would purify and sanctify and intensify that. I heard a group of converts testifying yes terday, and what some of them did tii the English language would have given Lindiey Murray hysterics: but their message punctured the indiffer ence of the crowd as polished phrases never could have done. The Repudiated Program Ardent friend of the Master that he was, Peter yet refused to accept his Lord's program. Too much Peter was what alied him: wherein again we confess ourselves in affin ity with the fisherman whose name is now borne by the largest single church building in the world. The hard "practical" sense of Peter re volted from the cross and the pas sion. Never yet was a wordly wisemen willing to build a scheme of salvation with a cross in it. When, at the Last Supper, Peter indignantly denied that he would ever forsake his Lord —he would die lirst—he really meant it. But, alas, for the arm of flesh! Without an hour or so Peter was sound asleep at his sentinel post in the Garden of Gethsemane; and ere day broke he was cursing like the old Caper naum Peter, and thereby proving that he was no friend of Jesus. In the interval between these two derelictions he had drawn his sword and cut off Maichus' ear, doing his Master no service thereby. Ah, Peter! Peter! There was too niuch of the ego in that lusty spirit of yours. You had yet to learn to let God have his own way with you. The lire That Warned Not Of course it is easy to catalogue Peter's faults: when the only proflt able exercise is to substitute our own name for his. It was a mistake for Peter to lurk outside the hall where his Lord was being tried, amid the enemies of Jesus, lie warmed him self at the wrong fire: but the blaze built by the soldier could not drive the chill from his heart. Jesus in bonds was less miserable than Peter standing by the lire of his enemies. If old Peter could come back to the friends of Christ to-day with an admonition it would surely be, "Stand with your own crowd. Culti vate the fellowship of the saints. Don't try to walk on the broad way with the crowd who are not friends to your Master. It is hard to stand true amid enemies. Keep away from the fire's that are lighted by those who would crucify the Lord. Dis loyalty to Christ follows desertion of Christ's company." For Peter, taunted by a servant maid, denied that he so much as knew Jesus. Imagine it! the brave Peter striking his flag at the taunt of a servant girl! All the worst side of the old fisherman burst forth In cursing, as, to save his own liberty, Cold in Head Relieved in one minute. Money back if it fails. Get a 25c or 50c tube of I^ONDON'S Jll. Catarrhal Jelly Use it quick. For chronic nasal ca tarrh, dry catarrh, sore nose, cough*, saeczins. nose bleed, etc. Write for free sample. The first drop used will do good. Ask druggists. Kondon Mfg. Co, Minneapolis, Minn. _ I IliYtnTTSra iMf Business is fine thank you— tabi?jpg|b Business is fine!! When it comes to pessimism, we give way to the other fellow. Having no desire to star in such a role; in I t fact having no occasion to do so. we eliminate the grouch and For it is one of the rewards of the greater I value giving, of keeping absolute faith with the public, that a store such as ours enjoys a steady business, an increasing busi ness while the other fellow merely increases his waii. You will find men turning to this store every day for £ You will find them coming here for known service, for I guaranteed sastisfaction, for real economy in their clothing. The case with which we serve so perfectly, so sastisfact orily and so economically is due in no small measure to our I The House of Kuppenheimer Theirs is an institution that takes no chances with us or with you. They have reduced good clothes making to an There are no ifs, ands or buts in the quality or tailoring of the garments which bear their lable and ours. That's the reason for the broadest guar antee a maker or a seller ever gave the Come in tomorrow and go over the recent arrivals in Suits ■ See the latest ideas in young men s suits. jj| Slip into a Kuppenheimer Klavicle, the new overcoat, cut ala militaire. It s the sensation of overcoatdom this season. Or mayhap your taste runs to a closer fitting model, if so there's the Roland, an original Kuppenheimer that has reigned I All in all you 11 find in the greater variety always evident here just the model you desire in a fabric, a pattern or a shade to fit your niche of perference to an exact nicety. Illllllliawik>ll I If □ I I —-SSSSSSU 304 Market St Han-isburg Pa. |j be repudiated the Best that had ever C come to him. Tlic Ixiok That Stabbed Then Jesus, from a distance, look ed at Peter. Not a word; only a look. In It was remembrance and reproach and tender compassion. No i bitterness or unforgiVeness, but only , melting love and sorrow. But it hurt Peter worse than a bludgeon. It broke the floodgates of memory, 1 and the impulsive penitent rushed i out and wept bitterly. His repent- , a nee was as deep as his sin. He had denied his Master, he had been false to his best friend; and by that one look he had seen the wound he had caused in that Gentlest of all spirits. Oh, for another chance! If only he could live this night over again! The spirit which must have possess ed Peter at his hour of revelation has been put into verse by Louise Fletcher Tarington: "I wish that there were some won derful place Called the land of Beginning Again, Where all our mistakes and all our heartaches And all of our poor, selfish grief Could be dropped, like a shabby old coat at the door. And never put on again. "It wouldn't be possible not to be j kind In the Land of Beginning Again;, And the ones we misjudged, and the ones whom we grudged Their moments of victory here Would find in the group of our lov ing handclasp More than penitent lips could explain. "So I wish that there were some wonderful place Called the Land of Beginning! Again Where all our mistakes and all our heartaches And all of our poor, selfish grief Could be dropped, like a shabby old coat, at the door, And never put on again." 1 <»o Toll . . . Peter In the eily of Scranton, a few days ago, I was told a beautiful story of how the Billy Sunday "trail-hit ters" stand by the comrade who has fallen. Some few of the confirmed drinkers have lapsed since "hitting the trail." Are they cast off? Ah, no; they still go to church, and their I fellow disciples surround them with friendship and protection, to keep them from stumbling. For their Gospel Is one of forgiveness. How did Jesus treat Peter early on the Resurrection morning, with his spirit filled with unutterable thoughts concerning a whole world's redemption he yet took thought to | say to the women "Go, tell my dis ciples . . . and Peter." A special word or the heart-sore penitent: that was the sort of loving Master Peter had. The story is told—l find it in "Peloubet's' Notes"—that a friend once showed Uuskin a costly hand kerchief on whit'h a blot of ink had been made. "Nothing can be done J with that." said his friend, thinking the handkerchief ruined and worth less. Uuskin made no reply, but car ried it away with him. After a time he sent it back, to the surprise of his friend, who could scarcely recognize it. In a most skilful and artistic way he had been a line design in In dian ink. using the blot as a basis, making the handkerchief more valu able than ever. A blotted life is not hopelessly a useless life. If Ruskin could make i a beautiful and valuable handlter- I chief out of a blotted one, how much more can the Master himself make a beautiful and useful life out of one that is blotted by sin. If only It is surrendered to him. NEW FIRE COMPANY Annvllle, Pa., Nov. 13. A new Are company has been organized at Cleona. two miles east of Annville, with Henry Helse> as president. At a meeting held last evening it was determined the company be named the Union Hose anil Chemli-al Company, of Cleona. Com mittees were appointed to devise ways and means for providing a building and securing equipment. The fire com pany will use the water of the Leba non Valley Supply Company. CASGARhTS FOR BOWELS, STOMACH, HEADACHE, COLOS Clean your liver and constipated bowels tonight and feel fine Get a 10-ceni box now. Are you keeping your liver, stomach and bowels clean, pure and fresh with Cascarets—or merely forcing a pass- J ageway every few days with salts, ca thartic pills or castor oil? This is im portant. Cascarets Immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested and fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system the consti pated waste matter and poison in the bowels. No odds how sick, headachy, bilious and constipated you feel, a Cascaret to-night will straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep. A 10-cent box from your druggist will keep your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months Don't forget the children — their little lnsides need a gentle cleansing, too. —Advertisement. Just a Good Cigar: Not a Mummy King Oscar 5c Cigars never stay in the boxes long enough to get dry —they don't require any special pro tection which costs something and must cheapen the | quality just that much. King Oscar 5c Cigars » are simply good cigars without any fuss or frills with ; a reputation of quality regularity covering a period of 23 years. They are always in prime condition and in i ready for the light of the match. Try Telegraph Want Ads 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers