A Spring Style Exhibit and Fashion Show of Men's Clothes Q AT THE GLOBE AU.. fMI EN who find delight in review /TVvlsfel SIS * ng smart st yl? s in great assort -11 \ TC!\ ment,our captivating assemblage /l+ \ Spring Modes will appeal to you. jjJ\ f We are showing the largest stocks j J \ j ? greatest variety of patterns i /j \4 'A ** has ever been our pleasure to place VJ ■ l'A a * your service. »t j? jl' ji I ' la * 1S sa y* n f» much—l he Globe always has been y\ noted for its large variety of style patterns, but this \\ tt : | | season we've outdone even ourselves. vV II V'! Clothes of distinction—of exclusiveness—of refine \\ 1 \ S | ment. The "outcrop" of the foremost clothing brains of \\ 1 \ fft) the present age—clothes that we alone "can sell"—no W 1 * §■■■ $' other house in town can buy them. \| j J / Fash'on-Clothes— i I i\S • Adler-Rochester Clothes— -4 r ~ ——— \ U Griffon-Ultra Clothes— <l sls to $25 Fr Showing 11 i| In Connect i°n With the ]! -° f - ' ij Spring Showing of Boys' Suits i| MANHATTAN ate Season Models CHIDTC Medium Weight Suits || j| The toppy Spring RIGHT-POSTURE HEALTH SUITS «! Our new Spring Shirts j! |! or boys arc here in smart, snappy models of many beautiful !> ii arc more beautiful than \\ «! I 1 ™ w * a Y cs - Thc y c ' s j l Patented arrangement sewn in the jj ! ! ever before Mere arc ! i! , ° f C ° at ' - ] at bu,lds a full chest and straight back «! jl cci oetuie. ucic ate « j and a good pair of lungs. Superior values at ;! ;! percale and woven madras «! j; shirts with soft or laun- jl j» $6.50 to $12.50 I j; dercd cuffs mercerized j! |! ___ !' ji and ltaen and ji I Boys' Sails, Values Boys' Suits, Values tio£ ! j: *' ff ® llk sh,rts " ,th so( ' ;; to $5.00 at ii.OS t0»7.50at J4.85 i; j; - A . |i ;! Odds and ends broken Excellent qualities—many \\ !' 3)1.50 tO S5 ! i Jl • Ut zcs —se- of these have an extra pair ![ s w yv j; |, lection to choose from. of Knickerbockers—all sizes. «! MWIWM»WMWWWMWHW v> iiutm . THE GLOBE " The Friendly Store" A ITER POSTMASTERS HIP Halifax, Pa., March 5. —Henry Tt. Shoop is getting signers on a petition, he being an aspirant for the posi tion of postmaster of Halifax. The : f| a•o oo S eoaaouoeeooe ~o~v~~S' ] il p 40 YEARS' : 11 Continuous Growth - ! || 40 YEARS' | |j: Continuous Quality Ijt . :! !| |ij)j|r "«r Sales Agents In Harrisburg are c ! I J jjljj! * J. H. Boher F. J. Althouso Cunningham's °l jjl I Huylers Cocoa, like Huylcr's Candy, is supreme M 1 ' —=— —— —i t- .'-in ■ -ji- Absolntely No Pain f MtmmWl latest tmprored appU ifiSK'iSfti'W anees. Including an oxygen- IWWWffI izM air apparatus, makes S Av extracting and all den- S '.O . PySMW work positively x kv x palnleaa and to per- S (Age BO object EXAMINATION free /•<§ ££ S a ' alloy cement SOc. X « x Gold Crowns and Ra*totere« \\r Bridge Work, SB, $«, 9ft. X a A x * a " K Gold Grown ~. .95.00 Gmdnat» Office open daily 8.30 a. A S m. to •p. m.; Mon., Wed, A * , ™ Un, • S \/ ▼ S and Sat. Till 9p. m.; Sundays, X \ X 10 a. a. to 1 p. m, S _r Beo Fhon< ' *B*2R_ S _ £ O S BAST TEKMB OW ' AEMwL S/%\ S PAYMENTS Market Street «s|sjF (Over the Hnk) / Harrisburg, Pa, t« nitat Hart a ait PAIITIfIN I When Coming to My Offloo Bo (iftU Ilull • Suro You Aro In tho Right Rlaoo. FRIDAY EVENING, HXRRISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH 5, 1915 term of the present postmaster, Har ry S. Noblet, does not expire until May, 191(5. It is said there will be a number of prominent town Demo crats out after the office. KEX IN FURNACE Had Her Feathers Scorched But Was Mot Koasted—Xot Vet Special to The Telegraph Waynesboro, Pa., March o—While Walter T. Todd was at work firing the furnace at his home yesterday, he heard a racket in one of the pipes leading therefrom. Upon investiga tion, he discovered that the strange thing, if it was alive, must have got ten in the pipe that led from beneath LklnWi i the house and through nlch cold air was forced to the fur "f C fu A . fter opening the lower door or the stove and removing the iron ater therefrom, Mr. Todd was suiprised to find back of it a large brown leghorn hen, some of the feath ers of which had been scorched oft' bv its coming in contact with the tire box*. The chicken belonged to "Doe" /Jentz, a neighbor, and had gone under the porch and had, it is supposed, been chased into the pipe by a dog. SHOE COMPANY GETS CHARTER Special lo The Telegraph » Halifax, Pa., March 6. A State charter has been granted to the livan .Shoe Company,, of Halifax. It will have a capital stock of $25,000 and the incorporators are 1,, w Rvm C. F. Still and C. Q. Ryan,' of this mn £ 1 i I i >,randon ' j augh and I H. O. Frederick, of Millersburg. . GRANGE PROGRAM Special to 7he Telegraph Halifax, Pa., March s.—The pro gram for the Halifax Grange meet ing to-morrow evening includes a re citation by Herbert Sheetz; reading Mrs. J. W. Clemson; cornet solo, Mel vin Sheetz, and a poem, 11. i; Bru bakcr. A CLEAR COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have I Sara l)r. i;«lnnr.l«, n Weii-Knoivn Ohio 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 or a few well-known vegetable Ingredient* i mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr ; Edwards Olive Tablets, you will know | them by their olive color. ! These tablets are wonder-workers on i the liver and bowels, which cause « normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter that one's system collects. If you have a pale face, sallow look dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches. a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets I nightly for a time and note the pleasing i results. I Thousands or women, as well as men take Or. Edward's Olive Tablets now and then just to keep In the pink of condition. r>r. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the suc cessful substitute for i alomel—loc and 25c per box. All druggists. I The Olive Tablet Company, Colum- I bus, O.—Advertisement. WNEN A BIG NITION CHOSE SECOND BEST Hebrews Preferred to Be Imitators When They Might Have Been Originators MISSED MANY GREAT CHANCES International S. S. Lesson For Sun day Is "Saul Anointed King," I Sam., 9: 17 to 10:1 (By William T. Ellis.) "Do you think the Chinese will ever give up their beautiful and comfort able garments for western dress" in quired a missionary of a mandarin, less than ten years ago. "No. I'm sure they will not," was the positive reply. Nevertheless, to day that mandarin, like most other progressive city Chinese, is wearing European clothes. The craze to be in fashion has seized China, even as it earlier seized Japan. Half the eco nomic and social difficulties of the Japanese nation are due to this un reasoning desire to be like other peo ple. \ There is nothing new about that, however. Old Israel was in the same case, at the time of our present lesson. Under Samuel's leadership something like national solidarity had been at tained. Far-reaching social and edu cational institutions had been estab lished. Song had been introduced into public worship. Religious schools had been founded . A simple and effective democracy, which was also a theocra cy. was in operation. Every sheep thinks the grass in the next pasture greener, and these Israel ites, quite in the spirit of our own young people who want above all things else to be in fashion and to do what "everybody does," had become Infected with the microbe of emula tion. They were tired of being pecu liar. All the other nations had kings, so they wanted a king also. With the same shallow reasoning that has mis led men and women in all ages, they decided that to be in fashion was the ultimate goal. If we were not so guilty ourselves wc should scorn these roolish, foolish old Hebrews, M"ho chose to be miserable imitators, when they might have been originators. The Chance That Was Missed Imagination reels as we contem plate what might have been the course of history had Israel under Samuel lived up to its possibilities. This was one of the most tragic of the "might have beens" with which the narrative of human progress is crowded. Instead of the world's having to wait all these centuries for democracy to come to flower, in a continent then undiscovered, Israel would have hold aloft this beacon to lighten all nations. Under Samuel the nation was a real I democracy. The people ruled. Life was simple. The kingship of the indi vidual, and his responsibility to God alone, was expressed as perhaps never before or since. Chosen men of God sought to administer justice, and to keep operative the beneflcient laws of Moses, which are still in advance of the statutes which govern the most civilized communities. This was mankind's great oppor tunity. Israel might have led all the world, ages ago, into the just and brotherly life of a true democ racy, lifting off the necks of human ity the king-curse which at this hour is drenching the world with blood. What a chance to have missed! Even the shameful failure of the Crusades seems small alongside of this. The Right to Do Wrong- Since man is not a manikin or an automaton, he enjoys the terrible privilege of making a fool of him self. Dstined for divine ends, he may yet go to the devil. . The right to do wrong, and to flout and defy God. is the price mortal pays for his godlike possibilities. A free moral agent man must be, if he is ever to conform to the image of his Maker. He can re pudiate all the most beneflcient plans of God for his welfare. The sons arc not slaves. In the exercise of this awesome right, Israel decided that it would rather follow the multitude to do evil than to follow God to do right. It re jected the divine program of a theo cratic democracy, because It wanted to b* In style. So a deputation of lead ers waited on faithful old Samuel (one of the few characters in the Old Tes tament concerning whom the record has no criticism) and told him bluntly that he was old and out-of-date, and that they wanted an eye-filling king, like the nations around them. We think of African natives trading dia monds for glass beads; of American Indians selling empires for a few yards of calico: of farmers bargaining oil lands for paltry city houses, as we contemplate the exchange that Israel asked. Let us make no mistake about it. The present meaning of the lesson— which is of greatest significance to us—ls that the mad desire to follow fashions and to be like our neighbors is responsible for many of the grav est ills of our time. National rivalry in armaments and fleets was a basic cause of the present world war. The effort to outvie one another in lux ury—automobiles, clothes of the latest mode, ostentatious homes and lavish pleasure-seeking—is the real reason for our hard times. Why do boys learn to smoke and men to drink? ITo be like others, of course. Most sinning is mere imitation. The men who are clamoring that America shall join the world's mad race after military 'and naval su premacy, and after diplomatic pres tige, are as grievously mistaken as I those old Jews who surrendered Is rael's right to be a distinctive nation, and a leader of the world. The anal ogy between conditions in Israel at this time of change and our own time, when all things seem to be in the melting pot, is suggestive and sig nificant. Hunting Asses, Finds Throne Ability to give up one's own plans sweetly, and to be willing to work well in a sec'ondary place, are signs of size and salntship. Most men, repudiated as Samuel was, would have left the people to stew in their own juice. Achilles-like, they would say. as they sulked apart, "the people don't want me-; now let them get along without me." Samuel, happily, was not of that sort. If God could let the people have their own way, so could he. Since the nation had chosen the second best course, lie would help it to make the most of the choice. In or out of office. Samuel was a patriot, and the centuries have saluted him. Whole heartedly, he went in to co-operate with God and the people in making Israel a successful kingdom. God had a man for this emergency. Of course the man himself, who was a farmer. Saul, son of Kish, knew naught of his high destiny. He was off hunting some strayed ass«js from the family place. Diligently and far he searched. No thought above live stock entered his handsome head. And he was leaving no stone unturned to find them. When his servant sug gested '.hat they consult Samuel, the FINAL | CLEAN-UP I Suit & Overcoat SALE We still have somewhere around five hundred Suits and Overcoats which ranged in price from sls to $25; not "odds and ends" as s I that term is generally used, but the balance of our present season's stock. In these five hundred Suits and 1 Overcoats there are all sizes and possibly as many as two hundred and fifty styles, all new and all 1 good. All $15.00 and SIB.OO <MA 7C | Suits and Overcoats . . plv* IJ I All $20.00 Suits and 7C I Overcoats .... All $25.00 Suits and d*lo 7C I Overcoats .... D | The great majority of these Suits I I and Overcoats are Kuppenheimer garments which is recommendation enough for any Suit or Overcoat. There's plenty of time to wear these § garments, but precious little time to sell them, and I so to make assurance doubly sure we offer them at prices which will move them at once. Goods exchanged or money refunded 1 at any time if for any reason your purchase is not satisfactory. 304 Market Street Harrisburg, Pa. seer, at Ramah, Saul agreed: for this leader of the people was a helper in tilings small and great. Thus it a ? that all unwittingly,. Saul stumbled up to the steps of a throne; for ere he left Samuel's company the sacred oil of anointing had been poured on his head. Is Saul Anions: the Prophets? The marks of favor shown Saul by the prophet—the seat of honor at the feast, and the choicest portion of the food—arc a familiar tale, of which the race never tires. Signal had been given to Samuel by Jeho vah that Saul was the man to be crowned king. In the mornlmr, the wondering youth was told his future, and set apart and instructed for his high office. Thrilling, overwhelming, crushing, was the great news to the young man. Like every other epochal ex perience that comes to a true man, it tilled him with a. sense of his own undeserving. Never did the youth ful giant feel so small as on that solemn day of anointing. When he met a company of proph- ets, as Samuel had predicted, an ac cess of spiritual emotion swept him from his olu moorings. New im pulses. new aspirations, llroil him, and he joined his voice with theirs. Of course, the shallow, cynical crowd sneered, "Is Saul also among the prophets?" But in that great hour of exaltation Saul was the spiritual being that he might become. Formal choice by the people was necessary to make Saul king. Tho nation was In a transition state, without a capital or stated assembly, so Samuel called Israel tc rally once more to Mizpah, there to choose by lot their llrst ruler, after the fashion of the world. Of course, the choice fell upon Saul. Then an unexpected emergency arose. The elected nominee could not be found! He had hidden him self among the baggage. The honor covered him with diffidence. When CASTORIA For Inf-jnts and Children. Bears the The Klr.d You Have Always Bought blgn o a f ture haled forth, however, it was seen that "When he stood among the peo ple, he was higher than any of the people from his shoulders anil rfp ward. .tyid Samuel said to all the people: see ye him whom Jehovah hath chosen, that there no" ' him among all the people? And all tho people shouted, and said, 'LOHK live the king.' " -So tho desire of the eyes of Israel was fulfilled. They had a kingc« good-looking giant, Because "ruan looketh on the outward appearance," this blushing big fellow satislitnl them. They were yet to learn Hint "God looketh on the heart." As »*e shall later sec, Saul, like the nation itself, failed finally to rise to his pgur sibilities. Israel was sorely punislfcd in this splendid appearing leade by Be ing given its own way. Saul and ilie monarchy proved a poor substitute fot Samuel und the theocracy. 9
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers