6 f Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Announcement For Men Here's Good News From the Men's Clothing Section: 250 Regular Stock $25.00 Suits Reduced to $18.75 rpplHIS is one of the most important announcements our Men's Clothing Sec- f~ bad tion has made this Spring. The clothing offered at $18.75 is not a special All Sizes in the Sale purchase, but from our regular line of $25.00 suits. The man who needs 33 to 44 regular a suit and neglects to take advantage of this sale may not have another chance for 37 to 46 stout such a profitable clothing investment in a long while. Suits That Are Distinctive in Style and f \ \ Sg Handsomely Tailored * ' j/ \ X SCOTCH MIXTURES AND TWEEDS FINE BLUE SERGES AND UNFINISHED / PLAIN GREY CASSIMERES WORSTEDS ,\ / GREY SHADOW STRIPED CASSIMERES TARTAN CHECKS AND CARLTON " Mmm PIN STRIPED CASSIMERES AND WORSTEDS OVERPLAIDS JjfMIP ißy; Jm s BLUE FLANNELS AND HOMESPUNS PIN HEAD CHECK WORSTEDS 0"j l|jf SU ' tS ,^ fe ,' n P°P u^ar English sack models with two or three buttons, skeleton or full lined and patch SIB.OO and $20.00 Suits at $13.75 If Store News B ' s another attractive lot of suits at a special price. They say that $15.00 is the average price paid for ( Cj r 1 a su ' r - e h, this special is less than the average price for clothing that is above the average price quality, work- v^sTs P on ia Jj Jif manship and style. In this lot are these good patterns— -18 _—s lLjj Black and white check cassimeres and worsteds. Blue serges and blue unfinished worsteds. / ">v s / » ■* * Fancy grey Scotch mixtures. Fancy overplaids. Tartan checks and Carlton overplaids. " \| Student models in plain grey worsted shadow striped cassimere, blue herringbone worsted, brown Scotch mixtures and chalk striped worsteds and cassimeres; stout and regular sizes. Pives. Pomeroy & Stewart, Men's Clothingr. Second Floor, Rear. J) How Fat Folks May Become Slim A SIM PI,K. HFE A\D RKLIABLE WAY THAT CALLS FOR NO DRASTIC DIKT. on TIRE SOME EXERCISES To be excessively fat Is very mortify ing' People who are too stout are mighty sensitive on this subject. Style and fat folks are strangers. Therefore people who are carrying around a bur den of unhealthy and unsightly fat will be plad to know that they can reduce their welptvt without starvation diet or tiresome exercises. If you have been getting too stout of late and want to reduce your weight In a simple, safe and reliable way, spend as much time as you can In the open air. practice deep breathln™ and get from any good druggist a box of oil of korein capsules: take one after each meal and one before retiring at night. Weigh yourself once a week so as to know just how fast you are losing weleht. and don't leave oft the treat ment or even skip a single dose until you are down to normal. Oil of korein is absolutely harmless, is pleasant to take, nelps digestion, costs little and is designed to reduce fatty accumulations in the system wherever located. Even a few days' treatment should •how a noticeable reduction In weight, the flesh should become firm, the skin smooth and the general health improv ed. In fact, your footsteps should even become lighter, jour work seem easier and a lighter and more buovant f»eling take possession of your whole being. Every person who !s ten or fifteen pounds over tjormal weight should give this treatment a trial. Toil will prob ably find It Is Just what you need.—Ad vertisement. \ SPECIAL FRIDAY and SATURDAY Toasted MtRSHMALLOWS 20c th Gorgas' Drug Store 16 N. Third Street - June Brides will need coal next Winter. This is the last month to buy hard pea coal at a saving of 25c, and furnace sizes at a saving of 50c. The first duty of the June bride in her new home should be to have Kellev fill the bins with coal for next winter. This is one way to begin housekeeping on an econom ical basis. !H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets , Try Telegraph Want Ads FRIDAY EVENING. 111 WRONGDOERS WILL BE REBUKED Every Violator of Divine Law Will Some Day Be Reached by the Accusing Message MODERN SIN IN OLDEN TIMES International S. S. Lesson For June 6 Is "Nathan Rebukes David,'' II Sam., 11:1 to 12:7 (Bv Wtlliam T. Ellis) Three editors were in consultation concerning a series of character sketches of public men. Name after name was rejected because some one of the three editors knew of serious moral blemishes in the man suggested. At length one of those present ex claimed. "Well, what do you think of that for a list of spotted church men:" Another made answer. "One of the hardest tests of a man's own sanity POSLAM ENDS DISTRESS OF ITCHING SKIN No more itching when Poslam Is used. Nothing but soothing, grateful comfort as it controls and heals Eczema, Acne. Scalp-Scale, Rash, Pimples. Irritations or eruptional dis orders of any kind. No need to scratch no discomfort during the day or to keep you from sleeping. Constantly see and feel the results of its healing work. Whether vour skin trouble is serious or slight, try to day this wonderfully efficient remedy. Your druggist sells Poslam. For free sample write to Emergency Labora tories, 32 West Isth St.. New Tork. Poslam Soap, for toilet and bath medicated with Poslam; 25 cents and 15 cents. —Adv. Supplies for the Sick Room Sickness is unfortunate at any time, but how much more unfor tunate it Is to be sick and not have the right sick room accessories with which to save time, labor and trouble. Our sick room supply depart ment is well equipped with the best conveniences at reasonable prices. FORNEY'S DRUG STORE 426 Market Street EDUCATIONAL Harrisburg Business Ccllege 329 Market St Fall term, September first. Day and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL OF COMMERCE IS 8. Market S«., Harrlsbuig, Pa. |of judgment, and confidence in rell | gion, is his ability to preserve his I faith in men and In goodness and in I God, after he has learned of the ! blemishes of some of the men who 1 are leaders in church and nation." Every once In a while some Chris- I tian leader is detected in shameful sin. Even preachers occasionally fall. At once, a certain number of shallow thinkers cry, "If that's the kind of people that are in the church, then I do not want to have anything to do with the church." Xot very logical reasoning, that, for If It were univer sally and rigidly applied it would drive everybody away from every organiza tion professing moral standards; it would depopulate the ranks of busi ness: it would annihilate all political parties, and it would do away with thi? institution of the home itselft Every one of these is marred by in consistent and hypocritical members. When the Good Go Bad What are we to say concerning the moral lapses of Christian men? Cer tainly we must face the fact, and not try to cover it up. The ecclesiastical court that lets loose upon the com munity a man. be he minister or lay man, who has been proved guilty of! crime, is worse than dishonest. Let us at least be brave enough to refuse to cover up a vile sore with an all effacing plaster like the Chinese doc tors of the old school. The examples of the Bible's historical passages should be our guide. All such moral lapses of religious leaders should admonish us to hu- 1 mility. No man or woman is beyond danger. There Is no room for spir-1 itual pride or self-complacency. I "Let him that standeth take heed lest; he fall." From the intimate circle of i Christ's own companions two of His | friends fell foully on a single night, i The ripest saint never outgrows the need to pray daily. "Lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil." The other message to all of us from the sins of the saints—from David | down to the latest preacher whose | wrong-doing has got his name into to- | day's paper—is that faith to be! founded upon Christ, and not upon | any of His followers. Men stumble: Jesus stands fast. The holiest come! short of being perfect patterns: Jrsus shines truer the better He is known. I His character and that of the other, men are like a photograph and an oil: painting beneath a magnifying glass, j The painting shows coarse and un- ' lovely, mere masses of pigment; the ! photograph reveals new lines, not ap parent to the naked eye. They who ! know Jesus best see the most beauties j in Him. Other examples become iri- , adequate; Jesus suffices to the end. ! The long stretches of eternity will be ! needed to reveal His excellencies. The Book That Tells the Trulh One peculiar evidence that the Bible ! is an inspired book is that It preserves i life's proportions. It does not make i its heroes demigods, as do the other j ancient sacred writings. There are only two important characters in the Old Testament who are not shown to i have serious blemishes. We are shown ! the bad as well as the good, in this record of a race struggling upward toward God. In reading a great deal of current literature one easily gets the impres sion that all the world Is evil. Many of our popular periodicals are passing through a depressing stage. They i present a lopsided view of life, Ignor ing the vast majority of husbands and : wives, men and women, who are true and pure, and bravely struggling to- \ ward spiritual excellence. As I go through the magazines from month to i month, and read also the reviews of i the stage, I am reminded of an II- I lustrated lecture I once heard upon Philadelphia's housing. The lecturer ; showed only pictures of hovels and I huts and tenement and human kennels j such as most of his hearers had j scarcely ever seen. He did not throw on the screen a single example of the comfortable, sanitary, beautiful homes which have made the city famous around the world. A stranger, hear ing that lecture, might have got the impression that Philadelphia is one vast slum. Likewise. It is possible to get from the periodical press of our time, daily, weekly and monthly, the idea that human society Is going to the dogs, and that nobody is thinking! upon "whatsoever things are true. , whatsoever things are honorable, whatsoever things are just, whatso ever things are pure, whatsoever things are lovely, whatsover things are of good report." Not so with the Bible. It preserves proportions and perspective. It tells HARRISBURG !s£§£ TELEGRAPH I fearlessly the story of King David's shameful sin—and aiso of his spiritual i aspirations. He is shown in his fall — ■ a marred man, punished in soul and > estate for his sin—and also in his peni tence and forgiveness. Despite the . moral lapse which he so bitterly re- I pented, and which hung as a clank ing chain to his life until the end, David was a man whose dominant pas •'sion was a yearning after God. A Modern Sin in Olden Times Modern photographers can soften a negative so as to eradicate blemishes i in their subject. There is no retouch ing in the Bible's picture of David's sin. In strong, clear, lines the king is j shown idle on his housetop when he I should have been off at battle. He | saw Bathsheba, the wife of a brave !soldier, Uriah, who was off at the j front; and he let his eyes have free j reign. .He was thereby, according to j dictum of Jesus, an adulterer before I even he possessed the woman he de j sired—as truly an adulterer as the : foul-minded men who loaf along our ! city streets, ogling women and girls. | David yielded to his vagrant wishes jand took Bathsheba. Then, by a base ! plot, he put noble Uriah, whose con i duct shames that of the king, at the j battlefront where he would meet sure death. After a period of hypocritical mourning for Uriah on the part of David and Bathsheba. David made the woman his wife. It looked as if i the horrible strategem had succeeded j perfectly. But had it? Does any j scheme succeed which leaves God and i the moral law and its inevitable retri bution out of the reckoning? | Read the classic tale of how the sin |ful self-complacency of the adulterous iking was pierced: i "And Jehovah sent Nathan unto I David. And he came unto him, and jsaid unto him. There were two men in one city: the one rich and the other : poor. The rich man had exceeding jmany flocks and herds; but the poor i man had no thing, save one little ewe j lamb, which he had bought and nour ished up: and it grew up together with ■ him. and with his children; it did eat of his own morsel, and drank of his ! own cup, and lay in his bosom, and was unto him as a daughter. "And there came a traveler unto the rich man, and he spared to take jof his own flock and of his own herd, 'to dress for the wayfaring man that ; was come unto him, but took the poor !man's lamb, and dressed it for the man I that was come unto him. And David's ! anger was greatly kindled against the man; and he said to Nathan. As Je | hovah liveth, the man that hath done this is worthy to die; and he shall re store the lamb four-fold, because he ! did this thing, and because he had no pity. "And Nathan said to David, Thou iart the man." Tile Probe For Today I Timelier story could not be studied jby mature minds to-day. Here is ex posed the greatest weakness of our generation. Most observers agree that the social evil is at present a worse ! blight upon humanity than even strong drink. All about us we see a grow ing laxity with respect to the Seventh Commandment. The commonest of current philoso phies is that which defies desire Into duty. Do as you please If you would attain highest happiness, says this de vastating teaching. The simple fact | that a person wants a thing makes his getting it right. Unbridged desire is ] exalted to the throne of life. The old words. "Duty," "Self-Restraint," "Self : Denial" seem to h'ave gone out of fash | lon in certain circles. The marriage ; ' Do You Enjoy Your Work? No one can enjoy his . work as he should If his ..■% vision is not perfect. A pair of the right kind /TC* of glasses will often change labor, that seemed ,7 ■* a mere grind, into pleasur able work. <j w If you have to use your 1 eyes constantly get a pair Vw of Tories, and see how much easier you can do your work, j i Our Tories give the wide-angle | vision of the natural eye. j With tie rests as lightly as a summer robe. "I want" has been substituted for "I ought." Bearing down strongly upon this contemporary evil comes the Bible story of David. It shows the sinful ness and folly and suffering of un restrained passion. The sovereign laws of Jehovah swing into view. God is concerned In the moral order, and He holds men accountable for their sins. The nation itself Is involved in the moral misdeeds of men: for "none of us liveth to himself, and none of us dieth to himself." Some day, some where, somehow, the accusing message of God is going to be pointed directly at every violator of the divine law which was enacted for human wel fare "Thou art the man." NEW SUPERINTENDENT NAMED Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg. Pa., June 4.—lnforma tion has been received here that the depot quartermaster's department has designated Superintendent Austin Chapman to fill the position of superin tendent of the Gettysburg National Cemetery, made vacant by the resig nation, of Major M. M. Jefferey. Mr. Chapman comes here from the Na tional Cemetery at City Point, Va. "Complexion Secrets of An Actress" In a recently issued volume bearing the above title, the author says: "Con tinuous USP of grease paints, rouge and the like, had ruined my com plexion. My skin was colorless, wrinkled, coarse and punctured with large pores. In Kngland I heard of the virtues of mercollzed wax; my first experience with this marvelous sub stance convinced me it was more valu able than all cosmetics combined. Now whenever my complexion begins to go wrong I get an ounce of mercollzed wax at the nearest drug store, spread on a thin layer of It before retiring, wash ing it o(T next morning. The wax, after a few such treatments, seems literally to absorb the worn-out cuticle, when a brighter, healthier, younger-looking skin appears. •For the wrinkles and enlarged porfs I began using a solution of sax olite, one ounce, dissolved in a half pint witch hazel. Bathing the face In this every day for a while soon re lieved the condition most wonderfully. Freckles Now Is the Time to G<-t Rid of These Ugly Spots There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, as the prescription othine double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength—from any druggist and apply a little of it night and morn ing and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to dis appear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than an ounce is needed to com pletely clear the skin and gain a beau tiful clear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength othine as this is sold under guarantee of money hack if it falls to remove freckles.—Advertisement. Merchant* Jt Miner* 'lrani. Co. Vacation Trips , "BY SEA" BALTIMORE to BOSTON and return, $25.00 SAVAXXAH and return, 936.^0 JACKSONVILLE and return, S3S.O# Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Through tickets to all points. Fine steamers, best service staterooms de luxe, baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobllers carried. Send for booklet. \V. P. TURNER, G. P. A.. Baltimore, Md. Quick Relief for Coogha, Colds and HoaCMnen. Clear the Voice—Fine tor hwl ni ii and Singers. 25c. .ftPJVyAS' DRUG 510R54 JUNE 4, 1915. SUFFRAGE CXVB ORGANIZED Gettysburg:, Pa., June 4. —A suffrage organization was formed in Wenks vtlle, composed of forty women and about the same number of men, on Tuesday evening by Mrs. E. B. Rinz, a suffrage orgaiiir.er from Philadel phia, who has been meeting with great success in this locality for the past month. WAI/TERS-THOMAB WEDDING Arendtsvllle, Pa., June 4. —Wednes- day evening the Reformed Church In this place was the scene of a pretty wedding. when Miss Blanche Thomas, of Menallen township, and Ira Walters, of near Fairfield., were married by the Rev. T. C. Hesson, pastor. Absolutely No Pain / My ,at ** t tmprored sppll- +o* _- M anres. Including an oxygen- .»V S * z ® a * lr apparatus, make* k S kP¥'KWWi extracting and all den- S ».0 .£\ UU work positively S S painless j>nd la per- jr ink 'i p|j| <A«/ no obj^: EXAMINATION / > teetli .. . 55.00 B Ipppp A Bold Olllnga 91.00 XaW • Filling, la silver alloy cement 60c. X a\.\T Gold Crowns and ltectetered Ta'VT' S Bridge Work, $3, <4, 15. X > a X U-K Gold Grown ....$6.00 Graduate X X Office open dally UO a. m. to « p. «M Hon, Wed. Atlanta \7 ▼ S aad Sat. TIH 9p. m.; Sundays X \ X 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. S r g * m "*"* * Biaß aP • EAST TEKMB OF X X FAXMKNTB m^^hnk SilO Market Street vfair dOrer tha Hnb) Harrisburg, Pa, n mtat Hart a n PAIITinM I WhGn Coming to My OfTloo Bo wIU I lUli . Suro You Aro In tho Right Place. C ® New Universities Dictionary ! How to Get It ££?&£ For thm Merm Nominal Cott of _i_„_ p Manufacture and Pistribmtiam above With ninety-eight n#i.ui#ti% cents to cover cost of luOupOlr ll€3 handling, packing, clerk and fOC hire > rtc - secure this NEW authentic MAIL AMhiP<**,t Dictionaiy, bound in real ORDERS uSEIooSiS" J# flexible leather, illu«trated WILL i^»tooo^L"i§ with full pages in color BE and duotone 1300 page.. FILLED 25 DICTIONARIES IN ONE All Dictionaries published previ:• ous to this year are out of date V■ ■ 4 CONVENTION AT GETTYSBURG Special to The Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., June 4.—ln re sponse to an invitation presented to the convention at Lancaster from tho Rev. Father W. F. Boyle, pastor of St. Francis Xavier Church, the Penn sylvania Beneficial League will hold Its 1916 convention tn this place. WEDDING AT IJTTLESTOWN Llttlestown, Pa., June 4.—Allen Gel wicks and Miss Mary Spalding were united in marriage at a nuptial mass in St. Aloyslus Church Tuesday even ing tn the presence of a number of relatives and friends by the Rev. W. J. O'Callaghan, rector.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers