6 Allthe Popular Styles Are Here, Men And Particularly Interesting Is Our Showing of Balmacaans The Balmacaan is the most popular overcoat style this season, and we have outfitted hundreds of men and young men. Buying larger quantities than ever has brought us price advantages from the manufacturers and for to-morrow we nave planned an interesting sale in our Men's and Young Mens Clothing Section. Here are the styles: Plain and fancy weaves and double-faced fabrics in over-plaid Scotch mixtures, 1 A } f~ oxfords and blue grey cheviots. I I J g Full cut skirt, broad convertible collar, vertical pockets, split sleoves. *|l ■ g i^l Sizes 33 to 38, Rainproof, SIB.OO Values at J $12.50 Balmacaans at $8.50 S3O Chinchilla Overcoats, $22.50 Stylish Suits From America's T \ c . . • . , c . , • 1c Finest qualities of blue chinchilla, brown chinchilla and grey _ _ . n+is\ ti+s^r\ Brown Scotch mixtures and grey Scotch mixtures, models chinc h„ la; / hree . quarte r length; shawl collar, belted and pleated ' foremOSt MakerS, $lO tO S2O that button to the neck, 40 to 4r> inches long", lainproof. back; blanket or fancy plaid lined; single or double $15.00 and $16.50 Balmacaans | breasted. JQ 1 C C Of) theSC m ° derate prices ' The y will CIO Cid Doys Dalmacaans ar 4)0.V/vJ a reve i at i on t 0 y OU j n what wecan furnish at this popular price. Si Boys' Balmacaans in grev and tan Scotch mixtures, blue and . JU . u , . J grey chinchillas and .fancy grey cheviot; sizes 2/ 2 to 10 years; Stylish? Why, they fairly radiate this season s newness and Dark grey heavy worsted and cheviot, brown and grey mixed or full lined; convertible or military collar, $5.00. individuality. Not one style, but many-all new, and all mighty worsted and grey Scotch mixture Balmacaans, rainproof, converti- Boys' $7.50 Balmacaans in grey, tan and brown Scotch mix ble collars; sizes 33 to 38. tures and cheviots; sizes 11 to 18 years; convertible collar; yoke attractive. $20.00 and $22.50 Balmacaans a " d nt <K 500 B,ueserges ' pi " s,ripedb ' uew ° rsteds and cas ™ ; Wack : DOyS iNOriUliv OUllo Cll or white checks; tartan checks in rich combinations; hairline, sha at $15.00 brow^mix^d^assimeres^ dow and herringbone stripes; overplaid cassimeres; latest English Grey chinchilla, brown worsted and cheviot, blue chinchilla Scotch tweeds; fancy shadow striped worsteds; Norfolk style, t wo and three-button sacks, and dark grev Scotch overplaids; broad collar and lapels, vertical patch pockets, extra pair trousers, full lined, coats serge lined, and patch pockets: plaid backs. $5.00. Many styles at SIO.OO, $12.50 and $15.00. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Clothing, Second Floor, Rear LIFE AFTER DEATH? BIBLE GIVES LIGHT 123 References to Resurrection Can Be Found in New Testament The International Sunday School Ijcsson For December (I Is "Clirist Risen From tlie Dead"—Mark 10: 1-8; Matt. 28:11-15 By William T. Kill* To-days newspaper contains a spe cial mention of those who have solved the problem of immortality; and of those who are deeply, immediately and supremely concerned In it. They will be found in the death notice column, and the first group are those w T ho have died, and the second group are the families and near friends of the dead. No question is more ancient, more insistent, or more profound and im portant than this one, "If a man die, Khali he live again?" To some degree It is certain at some time or other to engage the thought of every mature mind. With the daily dispatches from abroad fairly reeking with news of bloody deaths by the myriad, the problem Is one that thrusts Itself in exorably into the consideration of even the frivolous minded and the heedless. Every poet, every philosopher, has There la Only One "Bromo Quinine " To Got Tho GENUINE, Oall For Tho Full Name Laxative Brom Usod Tho World Over to Ouro a Oold in One Day # Whenever you feel a cold coming on #» />» think of the full name LAXATIVE Of BROMO QUININE. Look for this #>% 7/C^ ■ia nature on. the. box. Price 25 cents, w * €r ' r T : " ■' * • •- '' • ". •" *• - ' 1 : FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH DECEMBER 4, 1914. 4 speculated upon the theme. The human mind has always experienced "intimations of immortality." The conviction that this supreme flower and fruit of the universe, the human soul, was not born to fall and perish utterly, and that this earth life is, by many signs, only the preparation for some higher form of existence, lies deep down in the thinking of every normal person. How Crep<l Affects Conduct There is surer ground for a con viction of Immortality than any I have yet cited; and we shall consider It a few paragraphs later. First, though, we need to remind ourselves of some practical consequences of our belief upon this subject. If man dies as the dog dies, then the greatest of all inspirations and inhibitions are removed from the realm of morals. It is because man is to live forever that he should live like an Immortal here and now. Onco grant that this life is all and then we must admit the wisdom of the injunc tion, "Eat, drink and bo merry, for to T inorrow we die." The chrism of earth's friendships is the hope of the resurrection, which sacredly anoints (them for two worlds. All our highest conceptions of love are bound up with the expectation of ! a life beyond the grave. Grounded in the resurrection teach ing is the Christian's hope of Christly character and of future glory. "If ye then be risen together with Christ, I seek those things which are above." "Now is Christ risen from the dead, I and become the first-fruits of them that slept," "If-Christ hath not been I raised, then is our preaching vain; I your faith also is vain." "If wo have I only hoped in Christ in this life, we are of ail men most miserable." Light Front tho Book Every day, in every section of the I world, there rage arguments about re- j ligion. Men cannot be restrained from i speculating about this supreme theine. No aspect of these discussions strikes 1 an observer as more significant than the fact that so often men debate as if there were no authority above their own reason to which appeal might be made. They talij as though historical facts were to be decided by "horse sense"; and as if one man's opinion were as good as another. In other words, they leave the Bible entirely out of their discussion, and airily put forth their own immature opinions as if they were the last word on the subject. Every reader of these lines has probably heard controversies on the resurrection, without a single ap peal to the Bible as historical evi dence. That makes only one of two courses possible. Either the Bible must be discarded utterly, or else it must be accepted as the only scientific and valid evidence available up to the present time upon the subject of the resurrection. To reject the teaching of the resurrection is to reject the New Testament; for it is full of the fact and of the implications' of the resurrection of Jesus Christ. And apart rfom this Book we have abso lutely no other historical evidence of the raising of the dead to life. I take a concordance and follow through tho words "raised," "risen," "resur rection," and fine 123 separate refer ences given to resurrection. When the sorrow of death enters a circle of love, it is not to the barren philisophy of the ancients that we turn for comfort, but to this Book of the immortal hope, whose words of sweet assurance are repeated daily over thousands of biers, imparting the light ! of eternal sunrise to the dark day of grief. ' Facing tlie Facts ' As a bit of reporting, or historical writing, the four evangelists did first class work. They wore mindful of the facts, first of all. We see this I clearly in the resurrection story. First, ] they present the evidence that He I really died—the Jewish usage that the .condemned criminal must not re main on the cross over a high sab bath: the spear-thrust of the soldier which brought both water and blood gushing from the Victim's side is sure proof of death; the report of the vet eran centurion; the tomb sealed with the seal of Rome and guarded by her lafflonariea: the tomb was a new one. with no other body in It, so no room for mistakes remained there. Then, in all their native natural ness, the historians relate the appear ances of the Lord to the various dis ciples, the first 6f whom had come to the tomb expecting to ilnd a dead body, and not a risen Christ. The verlslinulltude of the report that Jesus was three days buried,when He really was only In the tomb from Friday- night to Sunday morning, is evidence of the trustworthiness of the narrative. That is the Eastern way of writing to this day—to count a part of a day or a year as si whole. So it is on the Assyrian tablets; so it is in the Christian Koreans' account of the length of time they spent in Jail. In the light of modern scholarship, with Its full knowledge of Oriental usages, any other form of expression on the part of the New Testament writers would have been counted suspicious; they were true to their time and to :the facts. Of the ten appearances of tho risen Christ —eleven, counting His appear ance to Saul on tho Damascus road — tho first two were to women. Mrs. Browning wro\e, in a compact quatrain: "Not she with traitorous kiss her Master stung; Not she denied Him with unfaithful tongue; She when apostles fled could danger brave. Last at His cross and earliest at His grave." The first six appearance were in or near Jerusalem, In this order: To Mary Magdelene,* at the sepul chre; To the women on the way from the sepulchre; To Simon Peter alone, near Jeru salem; To two disciples on the way to Emaus. near Jerusalem; To the apostles, except Thomas, at Jerusalem; To the apostles, with Thomas, a week later, at Jerusalem. The next three appearances were in Galilee, lirst to seven ilshertnen; then to the eleven on a mountain; thei> to about 500 brethren at once. The final appearance was at the Ascension, on Mt. Olivet. Assuming the historical validity of tho Bible, and we find that the resur rection Is established by many wit nesses, and that it is as completly buttressed a fact as any event in an cient history. There remains one final proof of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, which, in the caße of millions of person*, 1 makes all the other evidence unnec essary. That is the fact of personal, present relationship with the living Christ, to whom a long line of mar tyrs and saints bear testimony, say ing with St. Paul, "I know whom T have .believed," That relationship is for multitudes more real than any transaction with merchant or friend. "Closer is He than breathing, Nearer than hands or feet." ■ A Canadian in the tropics might be jeered at for his talk of ice and snow; and the black philosopher might conclusively prove that such a phenomenon Is impossible. But the Canadian can confound them all with "I know, for I have experienced Ice and snow." A Greek sophist might haVe caught Peter In the market place at Antioch and argued the im possibility of the resurrection; but Peter could crush Him with a sim ple, "I saw Him dead; and then I saw Him alive.' A personal experi ence of the risen Christ is the final argument for the resurrection; and .the one moat sufficient proof of im mortality. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Buys IJr. Eilntrda, a Well-Known Olilo Physician Dr. F. M. Edwards for 17 years treat ed scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of ' a few well-known vegetable Ingredients mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets are wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter that one's system collects. , , If you have a pale face, sallow look, I dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head niches, a listless, no-good feeling, all I out of sorts, Inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleasing results. ~ Thousands of women, as well as men, take Dr. Edward's Olive Tablets now and then Just to keep in the pink of condition. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the suc cessful substitute for calomel—loc and 25c per bo*. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus. O.—Advertisement. IT'S SAFE To give any smoker a box of King Oscar 5c Cigars AT CHRISTMAS BECAUSE— they arc just as good during the holidays as at any other time of the year. BECAUSE— they have been regularly good for 23 years. That should assure any gift seeker that this brand is safe to give. t Box of 25, $1.15 Box of 50, $2.25 Box of 100, $4.50 I j ||lf to °P en a ' account in the First wSm National Bank, and just try the con -1(5 • I r4 vcn ' encc °f paying your household c^ y° u ' iaven t already venience for the ladies and welcome L their accounts, and every considi 1 '■Pi ' erat . ion ' s s ' lown them at the First I|J>L tiLl 224 Market Street
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers