Resmol < will make your sick skin well That itching, burning skin can be healed! The first use of Resinol Ointment seldom fails to give instant relief. With the helt> of Resinol Soap, this soothing, nealing oint ment usually clears away all trace of eczema, ringworm, rash or sim ilar tormenting, sleep-preventing skin-diseases quickly and at little cost. Phvsicians have prescribed Resinol Ointment regularly for 20 years, so you need not hesitate to use it freely. Sold by all druggists. WHAT DYSPEPTICS SHOULD EAT A PHYSICIAN'S ADVICE 'lndigestion and practically all forms of stomach trouble are, nine times out of ten. due to acidity; therefore stom ach sufferers should, whenever pos sible. avoid eating food that is aetd in its nature, or which by chemical action in the stomach develops acidity. Un fortunately, such a rule eliminates most foods which are pleasant to the taste as well as those which are rich in blood, flesh and nerve building prop erties. This Is the renson why dys peptics and stomach sufferers are usu ally so thin, emaciated and lacking In that vital energy which can only come from a well fed body. For the benefit of those sufferers who have been obliged to exclude from their diet all starchy, sweet or fatty food, and are trying to keep up a miserable exist ence on gluten products, I would sug gest that you should try a meal of any food or foods which you may like, in moderate amount, taking immediately afterwards a teaspoonful of bisurated magnesia in a little hot or cold water. This will neutralize any acid which may be present, or which may be form ed. and Instead of the usual feeling of uneasiness and fullness, you will find that your food agrees with you per fectly. Bisurated magnesia is doubt less the best food corrective and ant add known. It has no direct action on the stomach: but by neutralizing the acidity of the food contents, and thus removing the source of the acid irritation which inflames the delicate stomach lining, it does more than could possibly be done by any drug or medi cine. As a physician, I believe in the use of medicine whenever necessary, hut I must admit that T cannot see the sense of dosing an Inflamed and Irri tated stomach with drugs Instead of getting rid of the acid—the cause of all the trouble. Get a little bisurated magnesia from your druggist, eat what you want at your next meal, take some of the bisurated magnesia as directed above, and see if I'm jiot right." Ad vertisement. • Once in a Lifetime a Trip Like This There are two wonderful Expositions in California this year and railroad rates will be much reduced. You can get *-Ihe most out of your trip to California by including the marvelous ride through Colorado and Utah on the way out. There are several ways of taking it all in. but only one hot way, with out extra expense and Inconvenience. Everybody knows that the Burling ton Route iC., B. & Q. R. R.) is the standard, highly equipped "On Time" railroad to Denver; but I want to tell you in particular about our through service to California, passing in dav liclit, Denver, Colorado Springs, Pike's Peak. Pueblo, the marvelous Royal Gorge and Salt Lake Pity. And then I can tell you about coming home by way of either Glacier National Park or Yellowstone Park. In fact I Will gladly help you plan vour trip and suggest the most com fortable. Interesting and economical way of going and returning. Tnat is my" business and my pleasure. Will you allow me to be of use, and furnish vou without charge, such pictures, maps and train schedules, as will enable vou to determine .lust what to do. Will call on you at any time, or shall be (?lad to see you at my office. Write, telephone or call. Wm. Austin. General Agent, Passen ger Dept.. C.. B. & Q. R. R. Co., 836 Chestnut St., Philadelphia.—Advertise ment. FRECKLE-FACE Sun and Wind Bring Out Vjrly Spots. How to Remove Easily Here's a chance. Miss Freckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable dealer that it will not cost you a penny unless it re moves the freckles; while if it does give you a clear complexion the ex pense is trifling. Simply get an ounce of othine— double strength—from any druggist, and a few applications should show you how easy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beauti ful complexion. Rarely is more than one ounce needed for the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine, as this is the prescription sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles.—Advertisement. CHEAP MOTH BAGS DON'T LAST—GET A GOOD ONE Cedar Moth Proof Bags AIR TIGHT—DEST PROOF Germ and moisture proof De signed to provide perfect protec tion for all articles of apparel. FURS AND FABRICS against moths. Insects, mice, ete. 60c 75c 24x37 30x50 Inches. Inches. 860 91.00 80x60 80x70 Inches. Inches. FORNEY'S DRUG STORE 426 MARKET STREET Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect May 24, 1914. TRAINS leave Harrlsburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburg at 4:03. *7:50 a. m., *3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Chambersburg, Car lisle, Mechanlcsburg and intermediate {•tations at 6:03, •f:SO, *11:53 a. ■"■4o. 5:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanlcsburg at 9:48 a. m., 2:18; 3:27 6:30, 9:30 a. m. For Pillsburg at 5:03, *7:50 and •11:53 a. m., 2:18, *3:40, 5:32 and 8:80 p. m. •Daily. All other trains daily except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, J. H. TONQE. G. P. A. Try Telegraph Want Ads * KID AY EVENING, DAVID KING OVER judiuiiiu Entered Jerusalem After the Judges Had Failed to Conquer and Saul Had Passed It Bj CITY OF WONDERFUL HISTORY S. S.Lesson For May 23 Is "David King Over Judah and Israel," II Sam., 2:1-7 5:1-5 (By William T. Ellis) A great name emerges in the pres ent study. It is not the name of David the outlaw, whom we now And coming t<> the throne for which his many vicissitudes had prepared him, but the name of that ancient city which is in our own day figuring in creasingly in the news dispatches. Perhaps it has never occurred to the reader that there ever was a time when Jerusalem definitely ascended to its primacy among historic cities. We vaguely think of it as being like its earlier king, the mysterious Melchl«e dek, a timeless name. Certainly Je rusalem, which is our spelling of the old name «borne by the city before ever the Israelites entered Canaan, was a might yfortress centuries before writ ten history began to deal with it. With the possible exception of Constantinople, is there any other city on earth which has anything like the romantic and historic and religious associations of the city of David, which is still a sacred shrine for the three great monotheistic faiths—Judaism, Christianity and Mo hammedanism. Joshua and his hosts haa been unable to wrest the city from the Jebusites. The Judges had never conquered it, and Saul had passed It by. Perched on a great rock, surrounded on three sides by ravines, the city was so impregnable that the Jebusites boasted that the blind and lama could defend it. Certainly the Philistines and the Amalekites and the Israelites had all dashed against it in vain. Invaded Through the Water Courses One day. a few years ago, when visiting Jerusalem I was walking through the ravines that still sur round it, and I saw that the British excavators, whose carefully guarded diggings were the talk of the coun tryside, had excavated clear down, through • the overlay of the crowded centuries, to a deep aqueduct cut in the solid rock. This many archaeo logical friends told me, was a Jehu site creation, and It probably was visible in the time of David. We only know that when David at length came to his kingship over the united nation, and had to choose a neutral capital which, could not be credited either to Judah or Israel, he conquered Jerusalem, making en trance through the subterranean wa ter courses. No man knows fully the number and nature of these myster ious conduits and caverns which, in a perfect network, underlie the sacred rock. When once they are explored there will probably be revelations to astound the world. All the boasts of the Jebusites were set at naught when David and his host conquered the city, which to this day is associated with his name. At the present time the pos session of Jerusalem is a factor in international diplomacy. More per sons are interested in this woild cap ital than are Interested in Washing ton, or London, or Berlin, or Paris, or Petrograd or Peking. It is a cap ital •of human hearts. Its greatest primacy is due to the awful fact that it was in Jerusalem that David's Greater Son erected His universal throne, which was a cross. The Ways and Wiles of an Outlaw Before ever he won Jerusalem, however, David had undergone a dark and discouraged period in his life. Driven out from the Israelites by the Insatiable jealousy of Saul, he had at last taken refuge In the city of Gath, where he became a vassel of King Achish. The driving out' of David £rom the nation that needed him so sorely recalls an equal blunder in our own time on the part of the Christian Church. There is no deny ing that tens of thousands of strong men, especially among the laity, have been crowded out-of the church by a diversity of causes. There is no value |in laying the fault at the door of any man or men. or any particular ec clesiastical system. The immediate truth Is that the church ought to move to secure the return to her member ship and to her service, for their own sakes, and for hers, of these strong men who have become leaders in the world; but who no longer turn to the church for fellowship, inspiration and comfort. The movement in Ireland for the return of her emigrants is wjse and timely, but it is neither so oppor tune nor so necessary as a kindred "Back-to-the-Church" movement. Like David, many who have been forced out of the church because it did not give them a field for the ex ercise of the abilities which they knt*v to be theirs from God, have slumped in their morals, even as did David while among the Philistines. He deceived Achish by pretending to war against the Israelites, when all the time he was making forays only against the Amalekites. He lived In a tissue of falsehood and mlsrepre- POSLAM CALMS ITCHING AND BURNING SI If you feel as though you would give : anything just to relieve itching dis tress, remember that Poslam actually stops itching as soon as applied and, what is more, quickly heals and re stores the skin to health. Brings Just the soothing, antiseptic, healing influ ence needed. Controls and eradicates Eczema In all its forms. Readily re moves Pimplps, Complexion. Blemishes, Rashes ana all surface affections. Your druggist sells 'oslam. For free sample write to Emergency Labora tories. 32 West 25th St.. New York. Poslam Soap, medicated with Poslam, for toilet and hath. 25 cents and 15 cents. —Advertisement. Merchants * Miners Trans. Co. Vacation Trips "BY SEA" BALTIMORE: to ROSTOV and return. S2K.no SAVANNAH and return, «2«.20 JACKSONVILLE and return, fJUt.OO Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. Fine steamers, best service, staterooms de lluxe, baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Send I for booklet. i W. P. TUKNEK. G. P. A., Baltimore, JMiL Now as Never Before the Live Store Stands Supreme In the vastness of our stocks, in the quality of every article, in the merit of our merchandise and last but not least in the greater values we have made it possible for the public to enjoy, we take a natural, a justified and we believe a pardonable pride. No great clothing institution is growing faster than |M|M I The House of Kuppenheimer P|j| You know how closely we are allied with them, \\ Wf) you know how this Live Store is always first in the showing Ww// of their sartorial triumphs. Years of successful dealing with a host of the most discriminat- Jj //oilIK(/HI ing, has shown us the strength of our position as Harrisbug's exclusive representative for l! j\| : j vttfjw/ Kuppenheimer Clothes. We have no hesitancy, therefore, in offering the latest styles of If I jf|||j Ik .-j rjIJRKr Spring and Summer on the confidence winning, patronage producing basis of satisfaction, or lj j jraljjlf |Jk|! your money back, at our greater value price I gk 1 >'lj itm, llj ] S2O $25 S3O Iff Scoring a Triumph of Tailoring With WM Doutrich's Special Suit at sls |H 1 I Fifteen dollars has always been a popular price ||||l 1 for men's clothing; that figure, hitting the middle of the price tar- §|l|l 111 1 get, has always made a most extraordinary appeal to men of economy, and we are convinced jjjji|ll|\l II from the sales records of this department during the last two or three weeks, that Doutrichs illMl Special Suit at fifteen dollars has so many points in its favor as to merit the rather extraordi- it nary praise accorded it by the hundreds who have already made their selections. U I Visit This Store==the Home of Haberdashery „ | Space prevents anything like a fair review of the values to be had here and here alone, in all the accessories of a man's wardrobe. I A visit now will disclose positively the greatest array of Shirts, Ties, Hosiery, Collars, Underwear, etc., ever gathered under a reputable roof. I Prices a third lower than elsewhere. Quality far above the ordin ary level always. 304 Market Street v Harrisburg Penna. sentation, and these days must have been unhappler for David even than thosj when he was a hunted wanderer like the wild goats upon the moun tains. The Suicide of a King In the great battle of Gllboa be tween the Israelites and the Philis tines, Saul and his army were routed. God be merciful to the man who so ineffectually leads the hosts of right eousness that they are defeated. Saul had been so engrossed In his personal ambitions and Jealousies that the cause, which was the one Warrant for his life, had suffered. His plight was worse than David's. We find him at this period consulting the witch of Endor. Whichever tvay he turned he heard only words of doom. Jonathan, royal in soul and in rank, fell with two of his brothers In this battle. Driven to an extremity, Saul thought of suicide. He entreated his armor-bearer to slay him; but this man would not touch the Lord's anointed, Saul sought the refuge of the cowardly man who is "Without God and without hope In the world." Suicide is always Indefensible. The Imperial Statistical Bureau of Berlin, according to "The Mission ary Review of the World," some time ago published the averages of deaths by suicide among one hundred thou sand people in the German nation. Their ratio gave the following inter esting light upon the relation of reli gion to the sanctity of life and to courage In bearing life's burdens: Among Moravians, Mennonites, etc. 1 Among Protestants 81 CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears Signature of HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH Among Catholics 37 Among Jews 40 Among the religionless, especially among Socialists 605 Loyal and Royal How a man behaves toward an enemy, gives a good measure of that man's character. We see the stuff that David was made of when we note his magnanimous conduct to ward his dead foe, Saul. He snfote the Amalekite who had robbed the body of royal Insignia and had has tened to him with them, hoping thereby to secure a reward. "The Sjong of the Bow" into which David broke forth—from which we have the greatest of all funeral dirges, "The Dead March in Saul"— sprang from David's lips as his tribute to his friends: "How are the mighty fallen in the midst of the battle! Jonathan is slain upon thy high places. I am distressed for the«, my brother Jonathan: Very pleasant hast thou been unto me: Thy love to me was wonderful, Passing the love- of women. How are the mighty fallen, And the weapons of war perished!" ! When David learned that the men of Jabesh-Gilead had . fearlessly se cured the bodies of Saul and Jona than, which the Philistines had shamelessly exposed, and had given them royal cremation and interment, he sent his greetings and thanks to these who were brave men after his own heart. Saul, in his better days, had come to their help when they were oppressed. David and the men of Jabesh-Gllead shine like candles in a dark night. A Crown at Last His enemies defeated, the people clamoring for his leadership, David was crowned king of Judah, and after an Interval of sevpn years the leaders of Israel assembled in convocation land asked him to assume reign over I them. When his day of triumph came, David behaved royally. He sought counsel of the elders; he displayed magnanimity Ishbosheth, son of Saul, reigned for a while in the northern kingdom, but David bided his time. He had learned in his wanderings how to wait, as well as how to work. He came to his throne by way of his char acter and his accomplishments. In this period of David's life noth ing is more striking than his spirit of reverence. With all his backslid ings, David was ever reverent, and never long lost the sense of his ac countability to God. Along with this went a respect for God's anointed. That high impulse kept him from slay ing Saul when the king was in his power, and caused him to sentence to death the murderers of Ishbosheth. He would not profit by perfidy. In David we see a man who was kingly before he was a king. TO REDUCE DANGEROUS VARICOSE VEINS People who have swollen veins or bunches should not wait until they reach the bursting point, which riieans much suffering and loss of time, but should at once secure from any reliable druggist a two-ounce original bottle of Emerald Oil (full strength). By using this powerful, yet harm less germicide treatment improvement Is noticed in a few days and by Its regular use swollen veins will return to their normal size and sufferers will cease to worry. The Emerald Oil treat ment is used by physicians and in hos pitals and is guaranteed to accomplish results. It reduces all Ulnds of enlarged glands, goitres and wens anil is used exclusively In many large factories as an unfailing first sid to the Injured antiseptic. Any druggist can supply you.—Advertisement. MAY 21, 1915. Canvas Tread Tires ~oNS K | Non-skid. No Punctures. No Stone Bruises. No Loose rea d s - No Blow-outs. * -t Patents Pending. 5,000 £/ '.WW \«CH 11 T htn°sS-f. W&Vi' |/ fijjjjf.J: Guaranteed. Ford f ; Wf v Q-. ] Cars, 6,000. | i SAVE "50 /0 13 This cross section of tire I c\H nM YnilD TIDCC M/o "hows the improved way of mak 'i\w® Uli T UUK I lr\Lv> Mjl/J' Ing the highest grade Pneumatic ' vmß DY nnilßl Iklft Etis S tlre tread The tread Is made UUUDLIINu SB! it from a serleß of canvas strips rn YOUR MILEAGE Jp Impregnated with rubber in suoh I \ a way that it prevents the tread iafSlipP from separating from the alr- carcass, splitting, peeling off, or coming apart. It also prevents rupturing of air-carcass, which is the ruination of all tires, and it also prevents punctures and blowouts. The tread is so tough it will not split, peel ofT. or crack like other makes of tires. Each layer Is a binder to the tread, which holds the rubber between the plys In its place. It takes more than 1,500 miles of road service to wear oft one layer—each layer is non-skid. No chains necessary. Count the many thousand miles you can run. It saves 25 per cent, on gasoline and engine power. Don't liny anv tires until you have riamlnrd this tire. Write for free booklet tell ing many other important features and agents' proposition. Harry P. Motter 1925 DERRY STREET . Bell Phone 3955. Harrisburg, Pa. GENERAI. AGENT FOR THE CANVAS TREAD TIRE CO. OK UTAx*. N. Y. Try Telegraph Want Ads 11
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers