6 "LJERE'S "gas" with go and ** gallop galore Atlantic "Gas.** It has gumption, but no grit. It has a uniform "boil ing point." which means that every gallon of "gas" you buy t is sure to be just like the last, banishing frequent carburetor adjustment. It has more miles to the cubic inch, and a liveli ness that enables you to get away quickly in all kinds of weather. Atlantic Gasoline is made from the finest crude oil that flows, by the oldest and largest refiners in the State. All good garages have it, and Atlantic tankers deliver anywhere, any time. Be sure it's Atlantic. Atlantic POLARINB is tht 100-ptr ttnt lubricant that flows freely at all temperatures. It keeps upkeep DO U',V. THE ATLANTIC REFINING COMPANY ATX^TC GASOLINE Once in a Lifetime a Trip Like This There are two wonderful Expositions in («alifornia this year and railroad rates will be much reduced. You can get the most out of your trip to California by including the marvelous ride through Colorado and Ctah on the way out. There are several ways of taking it all in, but only one bent way, with out extra expense and inconvenience. Everybody knows that the Burling ton Route <C., B. Q. R. R.) is the standard, highly equipped "On Time" railroad to Denver; but I want to tell ; *-ou in particular about our through •efvlce to California, passing In dav liaht, Denver. Colorado Springs. Pike's Peak. Pueblo, the marvelous Royal Gorge and Salt Lake City. And then I can tell you about coming home by way of either Glacier National Park or Yelldwstone Park. In fact I will gladly help you plan vour trip and suggest the most com fortable. interesting and economical wav 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 you to determine just what to do. Will call on you at any time, or shall be glad to sre you at my office. Write, telephone or call. Win. Austin, General Agent, Passen ger Dept.. C„ B. & Q. R. R. Co., S3« Chestnut St.. Philadelphia.—Advertise ment. Buy Coal Before July 1 That is, if saving 50c on furnace sizes and 25c on hard pea coal interests you. The summer schedule of low prices is in effect —but July 1 coal prices advance. Order Kelley's Coal for next Winter this month and get the same good burning quality that Kelley always delivers. H. M. KELLEY & CO. 1 N. Third Street Tenth and State Streets Printing and Developing The very best that years of training and careful study can produce. Developing Rolls Any size, 10c Packs, 20c Printing 2c, 3c and 4c each FORNEY'S DRUG STORE 426 Market Street ———— FRIDAY EVENING, IMDID NOT GRATIFY DAVID Spiritual Peace Concerned Him More Than War Victories; "The Blessed Forgiveness" The International Sunday School Les son For June 13 Is "The Blessed of Forgiveness."—Psalm 32. (By William T. Ellis) In some matters we bow to our tyrajinus modernity; but In all funda mentals of life we know that there Is no change. Essentials of life re main as they were milleniums ago. What was most important In the days of King David is still most Im portant to-day. Three thousand years have passed since King David sat on his throne of splendor, and in that day his supreme concern was his re lation with Jehovah. Spiritual values were placed higher than alt male rial interests. The profoundest ut : terances of David had to do with the | state of the human soul. Spiritual peace concerned him more than mili tary glory. 1' "Ah, but that was lojig ago," says some up-to-date youngster. "These modern days are more practical." Not , a bit of it, my boy. Look deeply Ii enough into life and you will find the things which matter to-day are the same things which mattered In the days of Noah. Let me tell you I two stories to illustrate my points. I The first was told me by a good friend with whom 1 lunched at the ; Union League Club in Fifth Avenue |in New York. My friend had named | u "big business" man, known as hard ; and cold and relentless in all his transactions, a veritable money-mak ing machine. One day last February he was going along Fifth Avenue when he hailed my friend, saying, "Look here. You are the very man I want to see. I want to talk with somebody. I was over in Philadel phia the other day and I went to hear that man "Billy" Sunday. I i thought I was past all emotionalism, but Sunday stirred depths in me that I didn't know existed. The spiritual emotions that I had experienced as a young man came flooding over me again. I confess to you that I wept as I listened to him." Can it be that this man of millions whose time was so precious, was spending daylight hours and sitting on a board bench listening to an untutored preacher talk about sin and forgiveness and the love of Christ? Ah, my friend, there are many men of might and money who would give their last dol lar to know the secret of peace which the Gospel proclaims. AVlion the Millionaire Wept Here is another story, and it, too, is related to "Billy" Sunday. It was told me by one millionaire concern ing another. I had seen them both at the "Billy" Sunday tabernacle in Philadelphia while the preacher was swaying a multitude. The crowd was moved mightily by him; but then, say the critics, they were only the gullible masses. Yet these two millionaires have such a standing that there is no businessman In America who would not admit their practical shrewdness and modern ef ficiency. Both are a power In the national life. The older, himself an active Chris tian, said to me a few days later, "I never saw X so affected as he was that night. Tears ran down his face. He was touched to his deepest heart by that simple message. After the meeting he went with me to my home and we talked for a long while about the sermon, and about faith In Christ and about what it means." Spiritual peace is still the supreme concern of mankind. There are un numbered lives to-day, which out wardly seem brilliant and prosperous and favored. which nevertheless carry breaking hearts because of the spiritual unrest and consciousness of unforgiven sin. Verily nothing else counts but being right with God. That alone is real success. Man's re lation with his Maker Is the one theme worth agonizing over, as King Shetect IfeuMefl! AT FOUNTAINS. HOTELS, OR ELSEWHERE Got HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK The Food-drink for All Ages. Delicious, invigorating and sustaining. Keep it on your sideboard a* homy, Don't travel without it A quick buck prepared ii a minute. Unlmmm you mmy •HORUOITS" you mmy got a Substitute. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIM EJT ABLE In Effect May 24. 1»14. ! TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martinaburc at 5:03. *7:50 a. m.. *3.40 p. m. For Hagerstown. Cbambersburg, Car. lisle. Mechanicaburg and intermediate stations at 5:03. *7:60, ni:s» a. • 3:40. 5:32, *7:40, *11:00 p. m. ' Additional trains for Carlisle and Mecbanicsburg at 9:48 a. m„ 2:18; 1:37 6:30, 9:30 a. m. For Dlllsburg at 5:03. *7:50 and •11:53 a. m.. 2:18. *3:40, 6:32 and <:3O p. m. •Dally. All other trains dally except Sunday. H. A. RIDDLE, J. H. TONGE. O. P. A. EDUCATIONAL Harrisburg Business College 329 Market St. Fall term, September first. Day and night. 29th year. Harrisburg, Pa. Begin Preparation Now Day and Night Sessions SCHOOL OF COMMERCE 13 S. Market Sq.. HarrUburu, Pa. BUSINESS LOCALS GROWING FAST Th* growth of children is a subject of daily comment as friends and rela tives note the rapidly changing fea tures of the little ones. Preserve the impressions of infancy and childhood before it is too late by having a splen did likeness taken at our photographic studio. Mounted on plain panels or the more elaborate folders. Kelberg Studio. 302 Market street. Qnlck Relief for Coughs, Colds and 1 Hoarsen ess. Clear the Voice—Fine tor luwliwi and Singers. Jtc. ssmmviwG jioßpg ft ===^ [Ne e ws 0 oi e pagL 0 16j s2s.ooSuits From Regular Stock Reduced to $ 18.75 ETHER you travel during your vacation or spend it in week-end trips to the country V y° ur c l°thes must be up to the mark. Most well-dressed men know that $25.00 will buy them the best ready-for-service clothes produced in America. Our stocks included a representative line of $25.00 suits, but the cool May left us with a larger number than usual in the cabinets so we have reduced them to $18.75. With vacation time just opening, and so many men needing good stylish Summer suits, these values stand out prominently in the medley of clothing "sales." These Fashionable Patte Fine Blue Serges and Unfinished Worsteds. Tweeds. Tartan Checks. Carlton Overplaids. Scotch Mixtures. Plain Grey Cassimeres. Homespun and Blue Flannels. Pm Striped Cassuneres and Worsteds. Pin Head Check Worsteds Another Interesting Lot Is Made Up of (t 1 Q 7C I SIB.OO and $20.00 Suits at . . . . *PIO./ O Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Men's Clothing, Second Floor, Rear. David agoniced and wept over it In this Thirty-second Psalm. The Master of Music There is a piano in a certain home, which is a good piano according to market standards, but for the family it had never produced any great mu sic. The baby thrummed on it, and the boys played mechanically la bored tunes. Occasional guests would perform conventionally upon it. Then one day there came to visit that home a real master of music, a great performer. Then followed a revelation of the possibilities of the piano. It seemed as if the floodgates of harmony were opened. The whole room was transformed. The instru ment itself seemed a new creation after once the master-touch had been upon its keys. All the while the music was there within the piano. It only needed a master hand to bring it forth. So It Is with these sin-scarred, sin-re strained lives of ours. They need upon them the emancipating touch of the master hand of Christ. With His co-operation the least of us can be and do more than we have ever dared hope or dream. Nobody ever attains his full possibilities of peace and power until his life has been given over to Christ. The Silent Warp For a year King David's harp had been silent. It had lost its music of God's peace. Sin had broken Its strings. The great minstrel was mute. True, he had triumphed in passion's plot of lust and murder. Uriah was dead and Bathsheba was his. Tet David's inward unhappiness was greater than words could express. He knew himself separated from God. Nothing went right with him. There was strife and unpleasantness in the palace. The misery of life, the sui cides that seem so mysterious, can usually be explained by the one little word "sin." Suddenly, as we studied last week. Curing Catarrh is A Simple Method Go to its Source and the Cure Is Then Ac complished. Only those who have used S. S. 8. for the blood know that catarrh is sim ply a blood trouble. Most people, unlnstructed In this mem braneous disease, treat their nose and throat as if catarrh was a local trouble. It is not so. To treat catarrh It is nec essary to go Into the stomach, the liver, the lungs, the kidneys and all the vital organs of the body. And it is S. S. S. that at once enters the entire blood cir culation, all the organs of the body, all the mucous surfaces and becomes a dominant factor for renewed health. It is a simple method when you figure it out. Catarrh Is plainly an Inflamma tion of the mucous membranes. And there Is In S. S. S. certain Ingre dients which cause these mucous sur faces to change or convert their secre tions into a substance for easy elim ination. A special book on this subject will be mailed to all who write to The Swirt Specific Co., 110 Swift Bldg., At lanta, Ga. Catarrh Is very often the result of some other blood trouble, some germ that gets Into the blood and multiplies beyond the control of nature. S. S. S. Is the remdy. Do not accept a substitute for this matchless remedy. Read the circular wrapped around the I botU*. It is important. HARRIBBURG TELEGRAPH Nathan revealed the sinning king to himself. In agony of spirit David cried out for forgiveness. He knew where to go in his hour "of need. Pity those whose feet are not accus tomed to the path to the Mercy Seat. David, penitent, confessed and wa* pardoned. Then In new and profound Joy and with a fresh understanding of the character of God, David broke forth in his new song: the song of forgive ness, which is to-day's lesson: "Blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven. Whose sin is covered. "Blessed is the man unto whom Je hovah imputeth not iniquity, And in whose spirit there is no guilt. "When I kept silence, my bones wasted away. Through my groaning all the day long. "For day and night Thy hand was heavy upon me: My moisture was/changed as with the drought of summer. "I acknowledged my sin unto Thee, And mine iniquity did I not hide; I said. I will confess my transgres sions unto Jehovah; And Thou forgavest the iniquity ot my sin. "For this let everyone that Is godly pray unto Thee in a time when Thou mayest be found: Surely when the great waters over flow they shall not reach unto Him. I j"Thou art my hiding-place; Thou wilt | preserve me from trouble; ;Thou wilt compass me about with I songs of deliverance. "I will instruct thee and teach thee in the way which thou shalt go: I will counsel thee with mine eye upon thee. "Be ye not as the horse, or as the mule, which have no understand ing; Whose trappings must be bit and bridle to hold them in, • I'.lse they will not come near unto thee. "Many sorrows shall be to the wicked; I But he that trusteth in Jehovah, lov j ing kindness shall cumpass him | about. "Be glad in Jehovah, and rejoice, ye righteous; And shout for joy, all ye that are up right in heart." The New Sons; Only sin confessed, is sin forgiven. That is the heart of this Psalm. Un confessed sin is unforgiven. It is like a canker in the center of life that ar fects all the being. We may accept it as a fundamental spiritual truth, that wherever the Spirit of God is ac corded full sway there will be confes sion of sin. A few months ago in Wooster Col lege, Ohio, there was a memorable revival, of which the apex was a ses sion in which, without premedita tion or expectation, the students con fessed their sins to one another and to God. So it was with the great Korean revival. Confessions marked all the great meetings. The same ;» the history of the Welsh revival. These but illustrate the Scriptural teachings, that if any one Is travel ing along comfortably with his old sins, he is not walking with God. Pardoned spirits are given a new i start. Some persons will never for get the scene when thousands of men among the "Billy" Sunday converts marched down the street singing, | "Since Jesus came into my heart. What a joy in my soul Like the sea billows roll, I Since Jeaus came Into my heart." The sc«*ne reminded one of the Scripture "He hath put a new song in my mouth." David was rejoicing be cause forgiven. He had that inward i peace which the world cannot give j [or take away. 1 The most comprehensive cure for the day's evils Is revealed by pure religion. When public leaders and the peo ple following find that new lite or forgiveness and righteousness which Is in Christ, all our political and so cial and economic wrongs will T>e remedied. The last word taught by David in. this lesson Is "Get right with God." Purebred Percheron Horses Will Be Shown at Hogestown sp trial to The Tel*graph Hogestown, Pa., June 11. —One of the most important and Interesting features of the Hogestown Horse and Cattle Show at Big Head Woods next week will be an exhibition of purebred Percheron horses owned by Edward Nicodemus, of Waynesboro. The horses to be shown have been bred on his form and will consist of a stallion named Marcassin, three years old, weighing 2,000 pounds. Also, these fillies: Lisette, aged three, weight, 1,- 800; Alice, aged two, weight 1,700: Lucia, aged two. weight, 1,700, and Jean, ased one, weight 1,150. He also expects to bring with the others his aged mares. Columbia and Lucille, 11 years old, with suckling colts. HOW SHE ENDED TEN YEARS OF SKIN-TORTURE Oct. 28. 1914.—"1 have eczema on my face for ten years. Little red pim ples formed in a small spot on my chin and then spread all over my face. They Itched and burned me awfully. It was certainly embarrassing to me. and I would not go amongst people. I tried almost every remedy and treat ment that could be used for this trouble, but nothing did me ahy good. I used Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap, and was relieved in a day or two. In one month I was cured. This was six months ago and the trouble has never returned."—(Signed) Mrs. C. C. Roberta, Weatherford. Okla. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and doctors have prescribed the Resinol treatment for twenty years.—Advertisement. If Too Fat Get More Fresh Air BE MODERATE I* YOUR DIET AND REDUCE YOUR WEIGHT WITH Oil. OF" KOREIN Lack of fresh air weakens the oxy gen-carrying power of the blood, the liver becomes sluggish, fat accumulates and the action of many of the vital organs are hindered thereby. The heart action becomes weak, work is an effort and tho beauty of the figure is destroy ed. Fat put on by Indoor life is unhealthy and if nature is not assisted In throw ing it off by increasing the oxygen carrying power of the blood a serious case of obesity may result. When you feel that you are getting too stout, take the matter in hand at once, don't wait until your figure has become a .ioke and your health ruined through carrying around a burden of unsightly and unhealthy fat. Spend as much time as you possibly csn In the open air, breathe deeply, and get from any druggist a box of oil of koreln capsules; taxe one after each meal and one before retiring at night. Weigh yourself every few days and keep up the treatment until you are down to normal. Oil of koreln Is abso lutely harmless. Is pleasant to take, heln* the digestion and Is designed to Increase the oxygen-carrying power of the blood. Kven a few day*' treatment should show a noticeable reduction In weight. There Is nothing better.—Advertise ment. JUNE 11, 1915. Absolutely Wo Pain JKSwMHBg Ky w«rt «vpn> -<3> mkjbb, including an oxygen- Xa. > alr epp«armtifl z makes HmffiffPtl? axtnfa-On* and all <la»- « d , £-^f 7 XIVaV / h*lrnhM * EXAMINATION FREE /.».<& * S x "sacrii™ 1 " anoy caw 600. _ X a\\/ X fl°M Cpowm and Bectat«M« \V M. M. 15. _ x A aV" X Gold Crown ~..|i,00 «*■£»»•• Offloo open daily «JSO a. PV. *o _g_P- ■*•! Moa, Wed. **"""' ▼ _MU» fltt. TtO t p. B.; Snadaya, X V X >• «. »to> R a X ▼" X M H*— WMB af 0 BAST TEKMJ3 Q» /\\ fATMEIWI i mWg'l«ili Market Street ROrer €bm Hnk) X Harriaburg, Pa. nMMtnutaui P AIITIfIN V lw,#n Coming to My Off/00 Be UftU I lull • Suro You Aro In tho Right Plaoe. Of what use is a band on a nickel cigar? You tear it off before the flame reaches it, anyhow, and the cigar is going to smoke the same as before the band was removed. King Oscar 5c Cigars have no fancy bands to lure the eye but they have a rich aroma to satisfy the taste every time you smoke them. Regularly Good For 24 Years 1 "River Coal & Sand Men Attention"! We have just received three carloads of 4-inch C and 5-inch flat sides and 2x12 plank for bottoms. The J sides are 20 inches wide by 50 feet long. This is beau- g tiful lumber and will pay you to see it, even if you do x not buy, but we want to sell and can name low prices j for immediate deliveries from cars. f Wittenmyer Lumber Company ' SCHUVXKILL
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers