16 1 SOMETHING TO GIVE EXPENSE OP A lirVTIXG TRIP IX THE TROPICS Allowing for some Inexperience, and no Spanish spoken, two men hunting and fishing;, camping out most of the time, should travel in splendid shape for Ave dollars a day each. To the expense of the island journey add the steamship fare to and from the point of entry, make the usual allowances for tips and incidentals, and you will find that the total cost for a two months' trip to the wilds of Honduras will be about $460, or«a.v about seven or eight dollars a day each from New BOOTH—S7 HENRY GILBERT & SON Harrisburg, Pa. 219 MARKET STREET Builders' Hardware > Mil! Supplies, Tools, Cutlery, Pipe and Pipe Fittings, Packing, Paints and Oils. I i«!;ii:i:{!!!;««^»sa«g::tai};Kg};y4nm»im»}»i«i«w«08{n«»« ( , The Pennsylvania Steel Co. Steel Products in Small & Large Quantities! MANUFACTURED UNDER SAFE AND SANITARY CONDITIONS See Exhibit and Consult Representatives in Booth 33 CHESTNUT STREET HALL HARRISBURG PIPE &1 PIPE BENDING CO. Booth 23 BENT PIPE P FOR ALL PURPOSES SEAMLESS CYLINDERS for carbon dioxide, hy- i; drogen, nitrogen, oxygen, chlorine and other gases. ;i Shrapnel Shells Made For U. S. Government !| SAFETY ami Welfare 1 £ I Efficiency EXHIBIT SHOW RUNS COMPLETE UP TO 10 O'CLOCK TO-NIGHT. LAST OP PORTUNITY. DON'T MISS IT. Chestnut St. Auditorium November 16-20 10 a. m.— lo p. m. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH > NOVEMBER 20, 1914. r York to New York. A three month's trip made some [ years ago to Central America, using ! public conveyances, steamers from ! port to port, etc., cost, from New York ; to New York, just a trifle over eight i dollars a day. This allowance for a i hunting trip should, therefore, be : ample, hiring the packing outfit In the i country by the day. I Don't lease on a hunting trip be i fore the beginning of September or i after the middle of February. Then i take a vessel direct to the port of • entrr SNAKES TO HAISE UP THEIR HEADS AT TECH Noted Ophiologut Will Lecture Upon Crawling Creatures and Their Habits at Tech M. B. FOSTEK A writhing, squirming, wriggling menagerie of snakes arrived in Har risburg this afternoon and were de livered at once to the Technical high school. They were not the kind that mock ingly iift their heads from a jug of the nasty stuff which dethrones the reason and whose traffic is confident ly expected to be driven out of Har risburg by the Stough campaign, but real, live denizens of the woods and fields, collected from all parts of the United States by M. B. Foster, the noted opliiologist, who will give a lecture upon "Snakes and Their Hab its" under the auspices of the Harris burg Natural History Society to-niKht at 8 o'clock in the Tech auditorium. Colored lantern slides and living specimens in ttie hands of the lecturer will be used by way of illustration. This is the society's monthly, free lec ture for November. KXPKDITIOX MEMBERS WELL New York, Nov. 20.—A1l the mem bers of the Crocker Land Expedition, headed by Dr. Donald B. Mac.Mlllan, were well on August 29, according to a letter written on that date by Elmer Ekblaw. geologist of the party. Part of Ekblaw's letter was made public to day by Edmund Otis Hovey, chairman of the committee in charge of the expedition. The letter was written aboard K. Rasmussen's motorboat in a raging sea just south of Cape Alex ander. RESINOL HEALS RAW ITCHING . SCALY SIS No matter how long you have been tortured and disfigured by itching, burning, raw or scaly skin humors, just put a little of that soothing, an tiseptic Resinol Ointment on the sores and the suffering stops right there! Healing begins that very minute, and in almost every case your skin gets well so quickly you feel ashamed of the money you threw away on te dious, useless treatments. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap clear away pimples, blackheads, and dandruff. Prescribed by doctors for 19 years and sold by all druggists. For trial size of each free, write to Resinol, Dept. 40-R, Baltimore, Md. —Advertisement. STOUGH RECEIPTS A THIRD (^EXPENSES [Continued From First Pnge] _ \ Revival Summary Yesterday's Attendance Afternoon 3,000 Evening 7.500 Total 10,500 ' Wednesday's Collection Evening $204.28 CAMPAIGN TOTALS (Attendance Estimated) Afternoons, (tabernacle) two weeks 40,000 Evenings. (tabernacle), two weeks 75,000 ! First Sunday, November 1, (tabernacle) IS.OOO First Sunday. November 1, (outside meetings) 3,000 Second Sunday, November 8, (tabernacle), 20,000 Second Sunday, November 8, (outside meetings), 5,000 j Total, ending last Sunday inclusive 161,000 j Cost of Campaign, estimated. »ll»,(HK» OFFERINGS Collection, total to date, (Wednesday) $5,413.05 Conversions 2,000 | Last night . 71 | Total 2,671 rectly at the young people and he will j exhort thom to lead lives of righteous- j ness and to hit the trail in public con fession of their decision to follow the cross of the Christ. (llrls and boys from the two schools have been active in the campaign from its inception and many of these will help in the personal work this evening. | "Hell Uncovered" Sunday night Dr. Stough will preach I on "Booze and Booze Hoisters; Or, Hell Uncovered." This is the sermon which culminated in the "Elmira out rase" a couple of years ago and which resulted in four $50,000 slander suits being brought against Dr. Stough by Luzerne county liquor men. "We're going to throw down the 1 gauntlet to the gang that's been run- 1 ning Harrisburg to hell," Dr. Stough I said when he announced the sermon. "I think maybe some of you had bet- ] ter wear your esbestos suits. And you I reporters," turning to the press table, "had better have a pail of water handv to dip your pencils in. I expect, too, though I'm not quite sure, to give the chiff of police a little more informa tion than he has now." Railroaders Hit Trail With many more humorous inter ruptions and side thrusts than he has used recently. Dr. Stough preached another strong evangelistic sermon last night with an appeal for confes sion that had especially in view the hundreds of railroad men who occu pied reserved seat a in the tabernacle. Many of these men were among the nearly one hundred trailhitters who answered the call for lost souls. Engineers, tiremen and trainmen, clerks, shopmen and yard laborers were included in the number of heroes of the rail who made themselves still more heroic on the sawdust trail by a public confession of their final obedience to the danger signals of life displayed by the evangelist. A delegation of more than 000 men from the Rutherford and Harrisburg shops and yards of the Philadelphia and Reading railroad marched trom the Reading station in a body headed by two men with a large locomotive bell which they rang joyously as they entered the tabernacle. As they bore the bell to the platform the entire body sang in chorus a song prepared for the occasion: "Dr. Stough is the man, is the man, the Reading needs him, the Reading loves him; that's why we're here to-night." Railroaders Bring Wives Another delegation of several hun dred Pennsylvania railroad Enola men with their wives occupied seats at the opposite side of the tabernacle; the Mothers' Association of the Pine Street Presbyterian Church and the Bethany chapel were in a third group of reserved seats. An immense basket of white lilies and red roses were sent to the plat form with compliments from the Reading men as they sang their chorus. Dr. Stough was perceptibly moved and in his speech of thanks told the men how deeply he appre ciated the gift. "Gentlemen," he said, "these flow ers that you send to me are an un conscious tribute to the Saviour whom I serve and preach. The only differ ence between me and a sinner is that I am only a sinner saved by the grace of Christ. There are two great classes of everyday heroes. In my opinion—the firemen who protect our homes and pro|>erty in the cities, and the railroad men who make It safe for us to travel all over the coun try and who risk their lives daily, never knowing what may happen to them at any time to plunge them into eternity." Pays Tribute to Mothers He also paid a tribute to the Beth any and Pine street mothers and re-1 ferred to his own wife. "The standby and helpmate in the work of my life, who stay at home while I am trav eling and cares for the six birds of our nest." He said there is no higher or nobler cause than to be a mother and that nothing this side of heaven compares with it. , Dr. Stough's sermon was on the "New Birth," from the text, "Marvel not that I said unto you, ye must be. born again." And he defined it as a regeneration of heart coming only through a faith in Jesus Christ and not through any religious ceremony or profession of creed. In beginning, he said, "you can not walk very far along your Market street with the world and with your city. You must agree with me that men are somewhat out of relation with each other and with God. The old Book says that the world has gone wrong and it is very evident that she is still going wrong to-day. Men are dead in their trespasses and sins. "Churchlanity" "Man cannot be made over again by church membership and pretended Christianity. Churcliianity is the worst enemy that Christianity has. Some of you are going to liell with the church label on you. "Man cannot be born again by con firmation alone. I do not decry the ceremony, but I say it is not enough and never can change the heart. The new birth does not come through en vironment, nor is it prevented by any form of environment. Some of you men say that you cannot be Christians on the railroad, or In the shop or in places where rough men congregate, but thid has nothing to do with it— it Is a matter of the heart. All ma terial circumstances are merely sec ondary to this vital matter. Eve Went Wrong "I wish that all men had only eight hours' work every day—if only they knew how to spend the other sixteen properly. I would like to see every man with a good home, with baths and every convenience, including a good mother-in-law, also better wages J You Have Seen the Rest | I Now Come See the Best I Si ■ We have not only the latest styles and newest materials in clothing for Women, Men | and Boys for the coming holiday, but we permit the most convenient and confidential I method of payments, which' makes it possible to b,e dressed as good as the best while you g are paying. Ky Stylish Suits, Overcoats, Furs, Dresses, Hats, Waists h • Q 0 Easy to Pay the Q a <Tk National Way 0 LADIES' SUITS in serges, poplins and MEN'S OVERCOATS in Balmacaans, O fancy mixtures, $22 values for $12.90 M ue chinchillas and the more conservative pa LADIES' DRESSES in serges, silks and I poplins at $4.98 and up . SADIES' RAINCOATS, $lO values. Spe | Clal at $2.98 | If, FU *f«" a " f f Sh rf ade \ a n " d 9l,apes ' LADIES'HATS $5 to sl2 values. Spe irom »1Q up, for muff and neckpiece. dal tQ close out lot * MEN'S SUITS in tartan plaids, serges SHIRT WAISTS, values up to $1.50. | and fancy mixtures $lO to $25 Special at 79^ | National Supply Co. | 8 SOUTH FOURTH STREET * Open Evenings Alterations Free 111111 l sl-00 to Week Fays tk BUI ||B|||| —if only he knew how to spend his money. These environments are good but they are not enough. Adam and Eve had the best of environments but they went crooked; Eve did not need to attend any cooking school, all she had to do was to pick pies off the trees, and she didn't have any dishes to wash either, but still she went wrong." At this point Dr. Stough came down to modern times and local conditions and said, "Who are the crookedest people in this town? Why, among them are some of the people who live along the river, the old boys who have more money than they have re ligion, those who can write a SI,OOO check without noticing it. Money is the quickest thing to damn a man when he has no religion. The Baptism Some Need In regard to the rite of baptism, he said, he did not want to criticise or knock this ceremony, but that "you cannot put a little water on the outside and clean up the heart. Some people need to be baptised with a stable mop and then scrubbed with a curry comb. We don't need any old commentaries on this, because some of the commentators were 'bug house.' "You can not be born again fcy edu cation. Colleges don't make for faith. President Eliot, of Marvard once spilled such a theory that more education was all that is required to make better men. But why then is it true that whenever the Harvard foot ball teams go to New York a special squadron of police is needed to look after the college boys who get lost in the saloons, ambling dens and broth els of the city? "If you just put brains into a man who is bad at heart, you only make him more cussed. The worst crooks in the country arc (lie college and university bred lawyers who practice In the large cities and show men and corporations how to evade the laws; they are refined crooks." Preachers Jump His Neck He spoke of the harsh criticisms made about him and said he hoped that what some people are saying about him will not get into his biog raphy. "I recently told some of the preachers they needed cleaning up and they nearly jumped a-straddle my neck." He apologized to the Bethany moth ers and asked if their pastor ever preached to them in such a manner. He then cracked a joke at an elderly couple in the seat near him, address ing them as Grandma and Grandpa. He spoke of how Christ goes to the Devil's garbage cans and reconstructs the drunkards into sober, industrious men and changes the vilest sinners into the holiest saints. The conclu sion of his sermon leading up to the call for confession was a picture of the Saviour on the cross of Calvary and an appeal to thq sinners to look and live. Joins Church on a Wager Among the experiences given by trailhitters was one by a young man who said he had joined a church two years ago on a wager but he said he was sincere last night and meant business. When Dr. Stough asked Idin about smoking the boy pulled out a pack of cigarcts and promised never to use them again. The evangelist said he usually no ticed that when a convert gave up drinking but persisted in the use of tobacco, he usually slid back into his old ways. Tobacco, he explained, U an irritant to the throat and weakens a man's resistance power to booze and tempts him back into the habit of drinking. "Tobacco, booze and fast women are nearly always associated together. 11 never heard of a sporting woman .but that she used clgarets." Among tli© Trailers ' ;T; Among other trallhitters was a young man who lost his job two weeks ago on account of drinking. Another man stayed away from his work last night to come to hit the trail at the request of his mother. A third said he had been induced to come forward by the preaching of his pastor In Elizabethtown, and he advised the lo cal preachers to preach sermons that would get men to thinking. The ser mon that had particularly moved him, he said jvas on the ten command ments. A Bethany mother said she had hit the trail to help her son and husband to follow. The Hammerer Dr. Stough's afternoon sermon was on "The Power of the Word of God." He said in part, "As I told your min isters the other day, all the knock ing and crticism of my work and methods and the opposition thrown at me is undoubtedly the first indic tion of the working of the spirit on the consciences of the community. But do not be worried, the preaching that touches all the ministers, church members and Sunday School officials is the hammer that crushe a the rocks of indifference. "Do you know why X prod the min isters? I am one myself and I know what they need, —a little knocking and prodding once in awhile. There is too much lee water in preaching instead of the warm milk of the word of God." STOUGH PROGRAM To-day—Booster chorus meets for reliea rsal under Professor Spooner lit tabernaele at I o'clock. To-night at tabernacle, 7.30 o'clock, sermon to high school students by Dr. Stough. To-morrow, mass meeting for women only at 2 o'clock, address by Dr. Stough, "Is Marriage a Failure?" Soon meeting at the car Imrn of the Harrisburg Hall ways Company. Tabernacle serv ice by Dr. Stough, 7.H0. / STOUGH CAMPAIGN NOTES The Rev. A. W. Spooner, pastor of the Presbyterian Church of Mount Carmel, offered the opening prayer at the tabernacle services last evening. The Rev. Mr. Spooner is the father of Professor Spooner, chorister of the big campaign chorus. The Rev. William P. Nicholson, of the Nicholson-Hemming campaign, who have closed a successful cam paign at Columbia, was in the meeting Wednesday night. Interesting and well-attended shop meetings were held yesterday noon. At the bridge shop 200 men were present. H. K. W. Patterson spoke. At Enola car shaps "Billy" Shannon and "Big Dick" Branston conducted a great meeting with 225 men present and much enthusiasm prevailed. At the packing and storage company Fred Cartwright and wife held a meeting wjth 100 men. High school night, frog and switch department of the Pennsylvania St«el Company, Steelton, and a delegation from Duncannon will be at the taber nacle to-night. "Booze and Boose Holsters," one of Dr. Stough's smashers, the address that stirred the southern tier and re sulted In the "Elmlra Outrage," will be delivered on Sunday afternoon at 2.15 o'clock. Professor Spooner and the male chorus will sing: during the meeting. The "booster" chorus will sing several selections. A big women's meeting will be held In the Kidge Avenue Methodist Epis copal Church on Sunday afternoon. Miss Palmer will speak on the subject "The Decision of a Court." On Sunday morning Dr. Stough will preach on "The Fight in the Air." W. W. Wallower and Ed. M. Nelfl linger carried the large engine bell last night which was sounded during the march of the Reading Hallway men. C. E. Chamberlin and E. B. Luigard were also prominent men at the head of the procession. Professor J. Raymond Hemmlnprer, chorister, and Professor Gordon John son. pianist, of the Nlcholson-Hem minger campaign party, were on the platform last night. H. H. Baish. chairman of the ex ecutive committee of the Altoona Stough evangelistic campaign, was on the ministers' platform last night. The offering on Wednesday amount* ed to $204.28. There were 2,983 pen nies and 2,120 nickels In the collect tion. Among the visiting ministers on the platform last night were the Rev. I. N. Seidomridge, United Brethren, Eliz abethtown; the Rev. I. F. Berstresser, Evangelical Association, Lebanon; tho Rev. C. D. Dreher, Evangelical Asso ciation, presiding elder Reading dis trict, Allentown; the Rev. William R. Ridlngton, Methodist Episcopal, Mid dletown; the Rev. I. K. Stratton, D. D., United Brethren, Hagerstown, Md.; the Rev. A. W. Spooner, Presbyterian, Mount Carmel, and the Rev. S. P. Remer, Hanover. LIVE WIRE WORKERS Professor Charles F. chairman of the music committee, is one of the live wires of the campaign. He has been hustling the big chorus together with a membership of 1,750 voices. John C. Fraim, of the Fifth Street Methodist Episcopal Church, a mem ber of the popular Sunday school or chestra, knows how to bring out music on his cornet in the campaign orchestra. Ho has been playing in many shop meetings at the noon and midnight hours. A. W. Bushman, of the State Street United Brethren Church, is a live wire in church circles. He is ono of the general stewards of his church. Mrs. George W. Harrier, of the Ridge Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church, is a prominent Sunday school teacher of the Junior department. She is secretary of the ladies' sewing school and a soprano singer of the campaign chorus. Mrs. Theo. B. Stouffer, of the Pourtl.; Street Church of God. is a live wire in Sunday school work. She is tho pianist of the Sunday school and a •soprano singer in the campaign chorus. Ladies: A Perfect Com plexion is Your Birthright Shiny Skin a Tiling of the Past Any woman who desires a beautN ful, clear complexion that will attract,' yes; that will compel the admiration of everyone, should go to any llva druggist or department store to-day; and ask for a bottle of Cream Veo. Cream Veo is not expensive and 19 simply delightful. It is made of pure, rich, heavy, olive oil as a base and besides giving to the skin that clear, healthy color it causes all irritation to disappear; removes all blackheads and presents and removes Iwrlnkles. It's line for sunburn, too, and for crow's feet, enlarged pores, scales, shiny skin and red liquid cream, easy to work and being a flesh builder It fills out the hollow places and unlike many other creams will not produce hair growths. Golden Seal Drug Store can supply you.—A4a vertlsement-
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers