/i Sensational Disposal t t Surplus Stocks fOf Well-Known X LL of these Garments are in this season's styles. Included in various groups are suits from Isaac Walcoff, A. Her man, Julius Herman, Light & Schlissinger, \ "J?® and several others whose clothing is of ®§l| highest quality. Prices Have Been Cut to Cest of |pP| Manufacturing in Many Instances J W $3.00 69c Wash Boys' 98c IJj I a m Straw Hats Straw Hats Hats for Pants W h J % 69c $1.50 39c 44c After this sale i Men's Fine Summer Suits f* x all our Men s . „§ . J x n ' n v, 812.50, $13.50 and .sls Suits commencing tomorrow morning fo.* $7.95 tggp^rrM;!! Wif °^ S 0t 815.00 and $16.50 Suits for $9.90 $20.00 and $22.50 Suits for $1 1.5)0 ing Department Men's SIO.OO Suits, sti.s0 —Fancy cheviots and cassimeres in neat Wjk will be on the checks, plaids, pin stripes and other popular and serviceable styles. Ml /wt second floor Men's $8.50 Blue Serge Suits for $5.90 \ and the Ladies' Men's $1.50 Frousers SI.OO ll Clothing- De- Mens «00 Blue Serge Trousers .|l !»S I \L4LJ lrousers, at $1?.4.> \t\ Wl r l partment will 84.50 Trousers, at .' $2.98 Vv W W be on the first. Boys's3.so Norfolk Suits $1.98 Boys' $8.50 All Wool Blue Serge Suits $4.98 100 Odd Dress or Knockabout Single Coats, values up to 85.00. Commencing tomorrow morning.. $2.66 We Are Going Out of the Gents' Furnishing and Shoe Business and will replace them on our first floor with Ladies' Ready-to-wear Garments, so note the ridiculous low prices. Astonishing sacrifices of Men's and Boys' Shoes —prices cut deeper than ever. Every pair of shoes, every shirt, all underwear, all leather goods, all hats are doomed to go quick. Think For . a Recent change, as you know, has made it necessary for us to dispose of our entire first floor of our three story building. ' $3.00 Silk Shirts: only 2 50c to 75c Overalls, 50c Blue Chambray I 75c Sport Shirts for to a buver, for.. . .$1.39 plain or apron, for. . .39f Shirts with 2 collars, I 42^ I Money Saving Is Simply Astonishing---1,800 Pairs of Endicott Johnson Shoes Are Doomed to Go—-Just a Few Prices Are Given 98c Union Suit Under- 82.50 Work Shoes, $1.66 82.50 Patent Colt, $1.90 $1.50 Boys' Shoes, SI.OO wear, for 42f $2.50 and S3 Work Shoes $2-50 Scout -til.(Mi Shoes, sj.«4 $2.00 Work Shoes, $1.44 $1.95 $2.00 Scout Shoes, $1.39 83.00 Men's Shoes] $1.95 "THE SPOT" J %™ No. 6 South Fourth Street—2 Doors From Market Street UKATH OF MRS MAHY K. SINUKR s fecial to The Telegrafh Mechanicsburg, Pa-. May 14.—Mrs. Mary Ellen Singer died yesterday morning after a protracted illness of a complication of diseases. She was 7S years old and the widow of the late professor Davis Singer, who organized the SlngerKand ol Mechanicsburg, and was prominently Known in musi cal circles. Mrs. Singer was a life long resident of this locality, born near Camp Hill. She was a member of the Church of God. No near rela tives survive. Her niece. Mrs. I«iura Comfort, cared for her. The funeral services will be. held on Monday morn ing at'lo.3o o'clock, the Rev. Charles K. Itaach, pastor of the Church ot God. officiating. Burial will be made in the Chestnut Hill cemetery. i. inr=irK==im im mr==inr==ini im inaas | The Cook in the Kitchen g knows what to use and how o to use it to make tasty and | b wholesome dishes. The man | ] in every step in the making | of King Oscar 5c Cigars I knows what to use and how g to use it to make that regu- [I □ 0 larly good and absolutely sat- | isfying quality that has made | 1 King Oscar 5c Cigars I y the pre-eminent nickel smoke e for 24 years. I 8 It's up to you to "know | □ how" to spend your nickel, g I ffl —ID! ) B !==!==] PI r==rinr==j'l ' "y v. • 4 % FRIDAY EVENING HARRISBURG 8SS8& TELEGRAPH MAY 14, 1915 RECITAL AT IRVING Sfecial to The Telegrafh Mechanicsburg, Pa.. May 14.—Yes terday afternoon a students' recital was given in Columbian hall. Irving College, at 4.30 o'clock, when the fol lowing enjoyable program was given: Weber, "Overture Euryant he," two pianos, four bands. Miss Keller, Miss Wolf, Miss Snyder, Miss Hush; Mozart, Sonata. No. S, Andante eon variazone. Miss Alma Weber: Menuctto, Miss Mickey; Alia Turca, Miss Snyder: Anon, "A Voice From a Far Country," reading. Miss Rinistidt; ;Haydn, Son ata in K Hat, first movement. Miss March; Chopin, Funeral March, two pianos, four hands. Miss Snyder, Miss N'ickey: Dvorak. Waltz, Op. 54. Xo. 1, Miss Culp; Goldmark, Rustique Wed ding Symphony, two pianos, four bands. Serenade, Miss Hush, Miss Munson; Dance, Miss Koser, Miss Martz. GOLDEN EAGLES' PER CAPITA INCREASED ,! Assessment Made Higher on Ac count of Growing Expenses of Grand Castle Special to The Telegrafh I Lebanon, Pa.. May 14.—After in creasing the per capital assessment from 40 cents to 54 cents a year, tho (Grand Castle of Pennsylvania, Knights I of the Golden Eagle, brought its 39th [annual session to a close here yester ! day. The increase is the greatest in | any one year in the history of the order, but was necessitated by grow ing expenses, the appropriations for the coming year being $20,530.43. The Grand Temple, Dailies of the j Skin diseases quickly yield to Resinol If you have eczema, ringworm or other itching, burning, un sightly skin-eruption, try Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and see how quickly the itching stops and the trouble disappears, even in a severe, stubborn case. Res inol Ointment is also an excellent household remedy for pimples, dandruff, sores, burns, wounds, chafings, and for a score of other uses where a soothing, healing application is needed. Resinol contain* nothing of a har*h or injurious nature and can he used freely even | j on the most irritated nurface. Every druggist ftelU Resinol Ointment and Re«innl Soap. 'l 1 Golden Eagle, brought its convention to a close yesterday after projecting a woman s home and orphanago simi lar to tiiat at Horsham, and the Eagles also appropriated SIOO for this cause. In both bodies the officers elected last December were installed and later nominations were made for new officers, as follows: Grand Castle Grand chief, J. B. Brownley, Philadelphia; vice chief, Harry A. Herhst, Bethlehem; high priest. R. .M. K. Lewis, North Wales; master of records, Louis 1,. Gallagher, Norwood; keeper of exchequer, Harry Neamand, Perkasie; sir herald, A. W. Stemme, Philadelphia; A. W. McGann, Harrisburg; F. li, Skeen, Lancaster; L. C. Bishop. Vork; Abram Reese, New Providence; George F. Bicrman Birdsboro; Miles O. Haffiy, Renovo; Oliver A. lobst. Allentown; first guar dian. H. 11. Holmes, Philadelphia; George B. Kane, West Chester; J. H. Gouch, Philadelphia; second guardian, Aaron llintz, Reading; George W. Walton, Bainbridge; Henry 1. Gise Ellzabethtown; Edwin 1,. Elv, Chal fonte; Grand trustee, Max Trankner, Philadelphia; J. R. Craumer, Carne gie; representative to Supreme Castle, | John B. Grayblll, Lancaster, i* Grand Temple Grand templar, 'Mrs. Harry Bixler, Harrisburg; vice (templar, Mrs. Cora Bostian, Milton; priestess, .Mrs. Cora V. Beatty, Pitts , burg; guardian of records, Mrs. Josie [ V. Walters, Philadelphia; guardian of exchequer. Mrs. Johanna Lissner, J Philadelphia; marshal of ceremonies, Mrs. Ida Friedly, Altoona; guardian of inner portal, Mrs. Kate R. Long. Or jwigsburg; Mrs. Emily Kerns. Mount iCarmel; Mrs. Hannah McCartney, Pittsburgh; guardian of outer portal, Mrs. Sallie Miller, Philadelphia; Mrs. Emma Douglas. Mrs. Adelaine Haley, Mrs. Emma Kama, all of Pittsburgh; guardian of music, Miss Jennie Buch, Akron grand trusstees. MVs. Sallie Erb, Philadelphia; Mrs. Elizabeth Downs and Mrs. Mary McCully, Pitts burgh. O. F. FLKISCHH.tKN HIKS Special to The Telegraph New York. May 14. Otto F. Fleisch mann, president of the Fleischmann Vehicle Company, and son of the foun der of the Fleischmann bakery busi ness and its famous bread line, died late yesterday from the revolver shot he fired into his breast ill the Holland House Wednesday after registering under an assumed name. Mr. Fleischmann's brother, Raoul. Wednesday night gave up a pint ot his blood in a transfusion operation, which ii was hoped might save his life but the sacrifice was in vain. EXONERATE: MOTORMAN FOH HIM, ACCIDENT On the testimony of nine witnesses Charles I'age. motorman of the Harris burg Railways Company car which ran down and fatally injured Mr. and Mrs. William S. Pipes. 415 South Thirteenth street. last Sunday. was exonerated from all blame by a coroner's jury last night. DAVID RECEIVED VALUABLE TRAINING King Saul Is His Teacher in Won derful University; Enemies of Some Value DEVELOPED RESOURCEFULNESS International S. S. Lesson For May 16 Is "David Spares Saul"; I Sam., Ch. 26 (By William T. Ellis) "A certain number of fleas are good for a dog;' they .keep him from thinking too much about being a dog," says David Harum. Another putting of the same principle is Mrs. Whitney's famous sentence: "The best cu.% for little worries is a real trouble.'' Still another aspect of the case is in the old epigram, "Our ene mies show us whstt we ought to be; our friends, what we may be." Evidently there is a proper place in the development of character for enemies, else there would not he so many of them provided. One is de livered from morbid self-complacency and introspection by a few vigorous enemies. They are an educational force in life. "Woe unto you when all men speak well of you." Our les son to-day has to he with the training given David by his enemies. King Saul V>eing the chief. It was a wonderful university into which David entered when he was driven out from home and l'riends and position. In the stern school of outlawry, he learned lessons that fitted him for the throne. By having to guard his own head, he was .dis ciplined for the protection of his peo ple. The qualities of leadership, re sourcefulness and coolness in danger were acquired amidst the alarms of a fugitive's life. Perhaps if more of our young men had to fend for themselves amid primitive physical perils, if they were freed for a time from the all enfolding and enervating care of our paternal civilization, we should have a sturdier type of manhood. People who prevail over pioneer privations always prove sturdy characters. Our st earn -heated, electrically-equipped, law-girt and fully-policed manner of life is not an unmixed blessing. It takes hard circumstances to develop hardy souls. Old Israel's Itohiu Hood Whoever loves a tale of adventure should know this narrative of David's experiences while a fugitive from King Saul. Many of the allusions of the New Testament and of general literature are incomprehensible with out familiarity with this romantic chapter of David's life. It was then, when hungry, that he ate of the sacred shew-brcad from the tabernacle; and obtained from the priest the sword of Goliath. Tt was then that this bril liant leader of men pretended to be crazy, in order to escape from the court of Achish, king of Gath. It was then that a host rallied to him In the cave of Adullam. an episode fre quently used as a figure of speech, for "every one that was in distress, and every one that was in debt, and every one that was discontented, \ gathered themselves unto him." Crowded with vivid episodes were these years of flight, when the madly jealous Saul, growing more petulent and suspicious and unstable every day. pursued David constantly. Even the family of Jesse were not safe In Bethlehem and David provided for them in Moab. the home of his great grandmother Ruth. We recall how he and his six hundred saved the town of Keilah, only to have its ungrateful people willing to surrender him to the pursuing king. Verily, David "learned in sorrow what he taught In song." There were brighter incidents, of course; as when Jonathan sought him out in the wood of Jiiph, and re newed their covenant of friendship. It was in these days that the loyalty of his two followers risked death to bring hini a drink from the well at Bethlehem. And beautiful Abigail, who afterward became David's wife, showed that woman is the natural mistress of the art of diplomacy, by placating David and his band when her fool husband. Nabal, had offered them a deadly affront. There was the loyalty of Abishai, who dared penetrate with David into the very center of Saul's sleeping camp, and who, for his chief's honor, would have made an end of the royal pur suer. Hard times had David, but in them all he proved himself more of a man than King Saul. That, after all. is the real success, so that sin cere spirits shun ease, and ever cry, with the poet: 'Grant me the struggle, that my soul may grow." Wliere the Songs Were Brewed I have been reading Kipling's early letters of travel, and tracing in them the originals of persons and places and scenes in his later fiction and poetry. His experiences were the stuff of which his literature is made. To understand the psalms of David one must look back Into these hard days when he was hunted as a bird In the mountain. Out of this soul bitterness grew the sweet songs that have solaced souls for centuries. In hard living he acquired a high message. The broken heart sings most sweetly. Thirst, flight, treachery, hunger, homelessness. cold, ingratitude, dis loyalty, insults, dishonor, enmities—* of such hitter herbs as these was brewed that sweet draught of poetry and inspiration which has refreshed uncounted millions of parched spir its. We have said that David was fitted for a throne by his outlaw or deals. Kar more than that. By his sufferings he was trained to be hu manity's poet-laureate. Even at the uttermost cost, the price was small that he paid for the privilege of im mortality of service. All literature and life are richer because David's soul was so sorely storm-tossed. That is the royal lesson for us all: out of our pain let us make a pean; from our sorrow a song; from our mis ery a ministry. The highest use of suffering is to learn how to sym pathise and to serve. Our own day needs interpreters of the highest ex periences of our fellows: alas that so much contemporary literature is cyn ical and shallow and "smart" and frankly materialistic. Well cries Nie hardt: "Out of the great wise silence, brood ing and latent so long, Burst on the world, O Master—sing us the big man-song! "Full of the echoes of battle—souls crying up from the dust! Hungry we cried to our singers—our singers have flung us a crust! "Choked with the smoke of the battle, staggering weary with blows, We cried for a goblet of music: they flung us the dew of a rose! 'Gewgaw goblets they gave us, jeweled OPEN SATURDAY EVENING LIVINGSTON'S 0 SOUTH MARKET SO. * HARRISBURG'S OLDEST CREDIT STORE Why not buy your clothes at the start of the season and get a whole season's wear out of them? You Don't Need the Ready Cash. jkl You Can Buy j&Fm Now and Pay Us QpsfV yy\ as You Get Paid. / ,\ fj Men's Suits in Newest Models )'■ - 'l'j ~ and latest fabrics, special for 1 1 this Saturday. One lot of 1 li\ Men's Suits in Blue Serges, \ Tartan Over-Plaid; also a few ' y Pencil Stripes; all sizes in regu- J I lars, stouts and slims; Values j range up to $22.50; will go on [l sale Saturday at |j jj $14.85 ONE LOT OF LADIES' COATS Sizes from 14 to 44; made of this season's most popular materials and cut in the new Semi-Norfolk effect; all the good colors are here. Values up to $10.00; Sale Price Let Us Solve the Clothes Question For You We'll sell you the kind of clothes you love to wear, at prices you are glad to pay. Ladies' Suits in wool )/ and silk poplins in the new shades of gabardine Xi i and all other last mo sk;} ment creations, at won fv derful reductions in ' -f price. / \ \ Special for Saturday— I ' \ ne * ot ladies' Suits ,/ > ; in that new French >1 Serge, all colors and flgfe IJI o I I sizes, regular price Wl // / J [\ Jl $22.50; will go in this , .' s .->■ i - sale at WB'm, s llß s 7 / / Ladies' Trimmed U / J\W Hats » A V-* • All the $ 5 - 50 ' $ 5 - 00 and $4.50 Hats in the house / IT on sale this Saturday, at 98c BUY WHAT YOU WANT A DOLLAR A WEEK WILL DO OPEN SATURDAY EVENING LIVINGSTONS O SOUTH MARKET SO. ' HARRISBURG'S OLDEST CREDIT STORE and polished and tine, And tilled with the teal's of a weak ling: Oh, God! for a gourd—and wine! "O bip wise Lyric Master, you who have seen us build, Moulding the mud with our tears and blood into the thing we willed— "Soon shall your brooding be over, the dream shall be ripened, and then— Thunderous out of the silence —hurl us the Song of Men!" How to Treat an Enemy While David was growing bigger and bigger, because of his adventur ous, difficult life, King Saul was dwarfing steadily into pettiness. Mean passions indulged make the soul mean. Hate's arrows are boomerangs. SmalJ ness of spirit shrivels the soul. So Saul, once great and noble, became morbid and maudlin, fierce and gusty anger alternating with cringing self abnegation and sycophancy. His word was no longer a king's word, but a slave's, and his own retainers failed to respect or obey him. No clearer il lustration can be found in all history of the truth that it is not the sceptre but the soul that makes the king. A frenzy of fear and jealousy and hate drove Saul far and wide in pur suit of David, as his spies brought him word. He held himself up to popular ridicule, as with an army of three thousand men he chased hither and yon, even into the desert fast nesses, after David and his little band of six hundred followers. The dra matic contrast between the two is well put in David's complaint, which Is al most a taunt: "After whom Is the king of Israel come out? after a dead dog? After a flea?" Really, the king CASTORIA For Infints and Children. Bears the /g . The Kind You Have Always Bought * tttre should have lien ashamed of such Ig noble vindictlveness. Twice David spared Saul's life. Once ho was in the unseen hack of a. cave (Palestine is a land of caves), when Saul lodged near the entrance. He cut off the lower part of the king's robe while Saul slept; and then, with this evidence of his mercy in his hand, he called from a neigh boring hillside and asked the king why he should hunt him as a wild animal. A coarser nature than Da vid's would have slain the enemy and ended the pursuit. But David had a fundamentally reverent spirit, and he respected the oil of anointing which hfid made Saul Jehovah's man. He would not lay hands on the Lord's anointed. This clemency made the king ashamed of himself for the moment, and he made maudlin promises to David. Rut the latter who had learned not to put his trust* in princes, still kept safely out of Saul's reach. Again, when Saul slept in the cen ter of a barricade and his army, with Abner the captain of his host by his side, and his spear stuck upright in the ground at his head, chieftain fash ion. David and Abishai drew near to him and he could have ended the fued at a blow. Doughty Abishai begged permission to strike only one blow at the king; a second would never lie needed. Despite all provocation, David would not put forth his hand upon the Lord's anointed. Whatever others might do to him he would be mag nanimous. Thus he kept his own soul safe from his enemies; for vengeance reacts upon all who indulge in it. The big man can afford to forgive and to wait: the little man strikes on the in stant. David conquered both Saul and his own soul. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers