12 HRKtBLE SOKE OF MMI'S LOVE A new song in New York which is the latest craze with the fair sex is a love ballad called "For Every Smile, You Gave Me You Caused a Thousand Tears," the story of which tells of woman's loyalty throughout every ad versity, even at the cost of a breaking heart. Here is part of the chorus: ' For Ev'ry Smile Tou Gave Me "J You Caused A Thousand Tears CHORUS. , ffijij ;-r .31 For ev - 'ry smile you gave to me, You caused a thou-sand tears,.. For ev - 'ry ii 'ii iir'T'TTi * day of hap -pi -ness I've lived a thousand ycarsT I played the game of love and € lost, You cheated and I paid the cost, For ev - 'ry smile you gave to me, Yoa Cvroriaht HU Monro U, RoleaftM Although the song has only been out a few days it is said to be one of the most realistic songs New York has known in many years. Stough Committee Eager to Settle All Bills Persons who still have bills against the executive committee of the Stough evangelistic campaign are requested by the secretary, E. F. Weaver, to present them at once. Two hundred and thirty-four Dills have already been paid and there are about six or eight more outstanding. As son as these bills are satisfied the official statment of the finance committee will be made public. Records have been kept of all trans actions. A treasurer's order, signed by the chairmen of the executive and teh financial committees, is attached to every bill that has been presented and paid, and is kept on file to ac count for every cent expended. Academy of Medicine to Elect New Officers Tonight Officers will be elected and tho an .iiual address of tho retiring president, J)r. Clarence R. Phillips, made at a meeting of the Harrisburg Academy of Medicine to-night. Candidates are as follows: Presi dent, Dr. Harvey F. Smith: first vice-i president, Dr. IT. llersfiey Fnrnsler: j second vice-president. Dr. Allen 55. i KI toman; secretary-treasurer, Dr. John M. ,T. Raunick: trustee. Dr. Clar-1 ence R. Phillips; librarian, Dr. Carson Coovor; social and scientific commit tee, Dr. (Jeorge W. Bauder: commit tee on admission, Dr. Norman E. | Kliepler. PIvANS FOR CANAL OPENING j Bv Associated Press Washington, D. C., Jan. B.—Admin istration. officials were going ahead i 10-day with plans for the oetebratiou I incident to the formal opening of the I Panama Canal next March, virtually! certain that funds necessary there-! fore would be forthcomng from Con-) gress. Assurances to this effect have i been given to President Wilson by Democratic and Republican leaders In Congress. WHAMXG PAPER QUITS New Bedford. Mass., Jan. B. —Tho decline in the whaling industry 1 Everybody Is Going to KAUFMAN'S CLEAN SWEEP SALE TO-MORROW, SATURDAY See Announcement on Pages 4 and 5 When You Buy a Piano There's infinitely more to be con sidered than just the price and terms. And too, there is more than the case which covers that which determines the quality of the instrument you are examining. A beautiful case is alright, but without the inner quality, the case is worth only what the wood is worth. Piano quality lies inside; in the tonal production, the ability to "stand up" under strain, and tone quality. This store; the agency for Steinway, Mehlin and C. M. Sigler pianos knows that in selling any one of these instru ments they are selling instruments that will live up to every requirement of the best piano quality. C. AY. Si&l&r, Inc. Pianos Victrolas mj o ICI Mjaantuac • w Ilu.oL >v-va*v. FRIDAY EVENING. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH JANUARY S. 1915 Doctrinal Duel Between Dr. Eliet and "Billy" Sunday Harvard's ex-President Opens Concerted Unitarian Effort to Combat Evangelist; of Nation-wide Importance (By The Religious Rambler.) The most dramatic religious contro versy that this continent lias seen for more than a generation is that between the Rev. Dr. Charles W. Eliot, presi dent emeritus of Harvard University, arid the Itev. "Hilly" Sunday, the ex baseball star, who is now the world s most famous revivalist. The discus sion centers about the theme which has ensnared theologians for nineteen cen turies, the nature and mission of Jesus Christ. Dr. Eliot unsparingly aralgns the orthodox conception of Jesus, while "Billy" Sunday defends the diety, the vicarious atonement, and the resurrec tion and the divine sovereignty of the Nazarene. This controversy is vastly more sig nificant than most Philadelphians. who are nearest to it, have as yet perceiv ed. Unless all portents fail, it means a nation-wide revival of doctrinal de bate, The battle which the Unitarian leaders have set in array in William Penn's city of religious tolerance may easily become a world-wide religious war. Hon the Kraeas Started I.est any reader should think this a mere chance clash of opinion, the story needs to be retold of how the situation developed; and of liow formal and of ficial it all is. at least,on the side of the Unitarians. "Billy" Sunday, be it known, is as theo logically "orthodox" as Jonathan Ed wards. He not only preaches hell-fire, but he does not hesitate to say that hell is the destination of certain per sons, the Unitarians chief among them. Report says that in times past he has even consigned the distinguished presi dent emeritus of Harvard by name to this destination. Never, in all the cen turies of bitter debate over the nature of Jesus, has anybody used such pic turesque. excoriating, sizzling, slangy speech in defense of the diety of Jesus as Billy Sunday employs. Hitherto, Unitarians have received this in silence, and, it is said, their churches have even benefited by the accession of persons who have reacted from the "Billy" Sunday teaching. When, however, the preparations for the evan gelist's Philadelphia campaign, which opened last Sunday, began to attract widespread attention. Unitarian leaders ] got together and decided upon an or- ] ganized, systematic counter-campaign. Their method was fourfold. They in vited President Eliot to speak in Phila delphia under their auspices a few evenings prior to Sunday's advent. They opened a Unitarian bookstore near the big Sundav tabernacle. They planned a series of nightly meetings in one of the three Philadelphia churches, to be addressed by leading Unitarian minis ters, to begin the middle of this month, and to run concurrently with the Sun day campaign. And they have begun a publicity campaign in the daily news papers, through the advertising and news columns. A strong local commit tee was formed to have charge of this formal conflict with orthodoxy's most spectacular and uncompromising cham pion. The Spread of aiiib of God was sacrificed for the sins of the world, and so some small proportion of the human race was rescued from eternal torment to justify by their eternal happiness, so far as they might, the original crea tion of a feeble, race, tricked Into sin. ' The creeds of the great churches dif fer as to the proportion of the race really rescued by the vicarious atone ment through Jesus Christ, but tliev all agree in making this vicarious atone ment necessary to the salvation of any proportion of the hu*"in race * * * Any human father would lie outraged by the suggestion that he had ever dealt, or could so deal, with his chil dren; and yet. every member or the great Christian churches is supposed to believe that God deals in that i:av with the human race, and that Ihe vic tim offered up for the redemption of a portion of the human race was, in a peculiar sense, the Son of God." As for "Billy" Sunday's answer to all this, apart from a hair-raising string of adjectives, lie points to what ho claims to be the results of the ortho dox dogma concerning a Saviour— whole communities made "drv," prisons emptied, business bettered, divided families reunited, homes made happy, cities sweetened and morally bettered and quarter of a million definite con verts. What the issue of this spectacular and spectacular and significant contro versy is to be. only time can tell. The wise man will watch Tor the deeper signs of Its progress. W. C. T. C. BRANCH ORGANIZED Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg, p a „ Jan. S.—Yes terday afternoon a branch of the Women's Christian Temperance Un ion was organized in Enola by Mrs. Alice Starr ITauck, of Mechanicsburg, president of the Cumberland County I nion. The following officers were elected: President, Mrs. Lizzie Stouf fcr; vice-presidents, Mrs. Morris, Mrs Lucretia Anderson, Mrs. Baseliore and Mrs. Sarah Horton; secretary, Mrs. C. Poff; treasurer, Mrs. H. F. bmiley. The organization was launched with twenty-five members. CHURCH COUNCIL, ELECTED Special to The Telegraph Mechanicsburg. P a „ Jan. B.—At the annual congregational meeting of the Trinity Lutheran Church on Wednes day evening these members of the church council were elected: Elder Harry G. Heyd; deacons, Louis A! Oilier and F. P. Hall. The other members are: Elders, Adam Orris and Henry Pentz; deacons, J. L. Shel ly, George B. Hoover, A. C. Rich and George M. Wertz. The reports of the year were heard and the business of the past year finished. KILLED IN FALL 0!V CURB Special to The Telegraph Lancaster, Pa., Jan. B.—Falling In a faint in Centre Square yesterday, Nowton C. Stewart, 55 years old, a tobacco worker, fractured his skull by striking a pavement curbing and died in a few minutes in the pres ence of a crowd of people. ELECT HOSE DIRECTORS Six hose directors were elected at the regular meeting last night of the Relly Hose Company, No. 10. They were James Cahill, James McFadden Oscar Waltz, Charles Yost, John Barr and Ernest Diechart. THE TRUTH ABOUT CATARRH A