Eye Trouble j| Marvelous Relief J In Five Minutes (In Cases Mentioned Below.) Astonishing Remedy Acts Almost j Like Magic—Physician Tells j ■" Readers How To Use It h Did you ever notice a mainspring of a watch; how it bends and the great strain it will stand, but if you put too much strain on it, the spring finally snaps like a dry straw and your watch stops? . I , When your eyes get tired, sore or j t inflamed; when your vision becomes | j hlurred. or you have a stinging smart- j ing or gritty sensation In the eyes; or . looking at the "movies" gives you a i headache, you ®re putting a greater ] strain on your eyes than nature in- ( j tended. If you don't stop it, one day j you may wake up with a cataract shutting oft your vision, or granulated 1 1 lids may form, then ulcers and you ] ] may lose your sight entirely, or i atrophy of the optics nerve may cause I blindness. Don't fool with your eyes. c In bad cases you need a specialist. | r In all ordinary cases mentioned below, • use a few drops of luxotone once or i twice daily. It will make red, In- , s flamed eyes white, clear and bright j r in five minutes' time. To one who has never witnessed this j t astonishing transformation it seems I , like magic; almost unbelievable. It j t practically immediately rests, refresh- < ens and tones up tired or weak eyes — j It makes them feel just like a long I , cold drink of pure water makes you | j feel after you have walked for hours 1 1 in the boiling hot sun. j , It quickly restores impaired vision |, due to simple inflamed conditions of , ( the eye. \ The discovery of one of the ingredi- | s ents contained in luxotone has almost! j revolutionized the treatment of eye s troubles mentioned above. It is now { widely used by eminent eye specialists everywhere. Luxotone is such_a won- j derful eye remedy that it should be A kept in every home to use after auto mobiling or when you use your eyes ; ( too much or late at night, or when j ( your eyes become inflamed, or con- , nested from any cause. It is an abso- j ( lutely safe and most pleasant prepa- . ration to employ. I always prescribe I J it in all ordinary cases of eye trouble that come to me. If you are nervous ' or run-down you should also take two ' five grain tablets of nuxated iron three ■ times a day after meals, as this will ' greatly improve your eyes by quickly ' increasing your physical and mental J power.—E. Sauer, M. D. NOTE: The publication of the above t is authorized by the Ptiblic Health f Laboratories It is desired to instruct , people how to care for their eyes and , prevent in-so-far as is possible the j alarmingly large number of cases of loss of eyesight that occur every year through carelessness or ignorance. The ! luxotone referred to above Is carried in stock by Croll Keller and other ( leading druggists of our city. Advertisement. ' Kesorts i ATLANTIC CITY, S, J. LEXINGTON , Ttdfie & Ark Ay«f. Grounds with tennis courts adjoin Beach. Only popular priced , Aoltl where GLESTS may wo from HOUSff ® SURF in BATHING ATTIRE without using U Prohibited. U«e o< BATH of ,uit * FREE- RUN NING WATER In rooms. ORCHESTRA. *1.40 and up daily, SB. to $17.50 weekly. Ameri can plan. WHITE SERVICE. GARAGE. , Booklet. PAUL C RCSECRANS. [ ■ flDarlboroug(Rp||j —J7TL/7/V77C C/TY. N.J.-* THE LEADING RESORT HOUSE OF THE WORLD is particular.? attractive, with its two blocks of ocean frontage facing south and cooled by the prevailing Southwest ocean breezes, during ATLANTIC'S GREAT SUMMER SEASON extendinc from j JUNE TO OCTOBER inclusive I It has 400 private baths, each with sea water, and its exquisite music, every night throughout the year, with special solo week-end features, is justly celebrated. White service in both American and a la carte dining rooms. Theatres. Rolling-chairs. Golf and other amusements in full swing. OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT JOSIAH WHITE & SONS COMPANY DOUBLING GAP, PA. White Sulphur Springs Hotel DOUBLING GAP, PA.. i Via Xeirvllle Noted for its refined patronage, numerous medicinal springs, natural beauty, and abundance of fresh vege tables which aid in emphasizing ex cellent table service. Special attention along with reduced rates will be given < to Harrisburg patrons during the month »f August. For prompt reply inquire jf Mrs. G. A. Freyer. SAFETY] FIRST The object of "Safety First" is prevention. You cAn prevent your advertising from meet ing the fate of the waste basket if you will make It attractive with proper illustration. Bring your next copy to us for Illustrative treatment. One treat ment will convince you 'hat our methods are a success. The Telegraph Art & Engraving Departments 216 Locust Street Merchants * Miner* Tram*. Co. Vacation Trips "BY SEA" BALTIMORE: to BOSTON' and return, S2B.M SAVANNAH and return, UILI'I JACKSONVILLE! and return, 935.0* Including meals and stateroom ac commodations. Throush tickets to ait points. Fine steamers, best service, staterooms de luxe, baths. Wireless telegraph. Automobiles carried. Send for booklet. w. P. TUnXEH, G. P. A.. Baltimore, M* 1 ' FRIDAY EVENING. BXRRISBURG sfiSKfe TELEGRAPH AUGUST 27, 1915. WOMEN AND MED WARRED AGES 160 Elijah I> Figure of Absorbing In terest ; He Carries a Message For : Both Children and Men The International Sunday School les son For August 29 Is "God's Care of Klijah."—l Kings 17:1-10. (By William T. Ellis) Enter the hairy, desert-marked i figure of the most interesting man in the Old Testament. Welcome, Elijah, champion of righteousness, fearless foe of a A>rrupt king and queen, lonely servant of truth. First of the long line of prophets of social jus tice and national righteousness, who are only to-day coming to their own, Elijah, son of the wilderness, is a fig ure of absorbing interest. The tens of millions of members of the Sun day School will study his life for the next few weeks, with more than ordi- | nary attention. His career has mes sages for little children, and for strong men in the thick of public affairs. The background is attested both by 1 the Old Testament record and by the monuments. Ahab, a brilliant states man. had succeeded his great father, | Omri, on the throne of the northern kingdom. Ahab was ambitious to make Israel a world power. He made notable alliances with Syria on the east and Phoenicia on the west. As part of his diplomacy, he had mar ried the daughter of the bloody king of Tyre, and Jezebel herself was a J brilliant, bad woman, a stronger per sonality than her husband. Her name is to-day more widely used as a synonym for wicked womanhood than that of Cleopatra herself. Contrasting sharply with the bril liant court of Israel, with its imported worldliness and heathen usages, is the personality of the great prophet. Eli jah. whose character is more clearly drawn than that of any. of the other Old Testament prophets. He is a vivid figure. A Nazarite, vowed to aceticism. and dwelling in the wilderness of Gilead. east of the Jordan, Elijah's every gesture and utterance spells personality. Clad in skins, like his post-type. John the Baptist, and dis daining the polished speech and man ners of the city, he was all rugged, virility, "a man with the bark on." In that best school of soul-greatness, the wilderness, he had learned indepen dence and fearlessness, and a whole some degree of contempt for conven tionality. The voice of God had spoken to him: and that emancipated him from sycophancy and servility. He would never have made a "popu lar" preacher. A clash between shrewd, sophisti cated. palace-trained Jezebel and this voice from the desert was inevitable. Israel was not big enough to contain two such personalities in peace. For they represented utterly irreconcilable forces: Jezebel stood for idolatry, and all its attendant immorality: Eli jah stood for stern loyalty to the one God. who had called the Heorews out from among the nations, to be a pecu liar people. The background of all the studies affecting Elijah which fol low is this fundamental antagonism between the woman Jftebel and the man Elijah. The Man Who Faced a King To souls that dwell apart, friends of the solitudes and silences, God speaks His messages. Apartness from men is often nearness to God. His tory is full of such experiences, right down to our own time. Myriads of present-day Christians afe listening to the spoken and written words of S. D. Gordon, an apostle of the life hid with Christ. Few of them know that Gordon was a Young Men's Christian Association secretary of the sort who is called upon chiefly to lead in merry making and nonsense. Awaking to a need of spiritual power, he went apart for two years, and returned, trans formed. the messenger of mysticism whom five continents know. "For many a wild. In many a land, and many a peak sublime, Can tell how solitude with God breeds souls that conquer time." Out of such a wilderness school— perhaps the very "wilderness.'' east of Galilee, to which Jesus Himself retired eight hundred years later— Elijah came to arraign the corruption of the Court of Israel. We have no record of the full interview. It must have been sizzling. With words that punctured pride and purple state, this incongruous figure wearing an ani mal's skin for a robe, portrayed to the arrogant king how little his trea ties and trade and alliances and glory amounted to. alongside of the fact that he had been recreant to Jehovah, and to Israel's distinctive mission. Thank God that in every time God sends a voice to call men back to right paths. Royal thunderbolts were hurled at IHSBlifl MpSi j. Shines fH? if I Without Hil l;\ Labor ; It gives a Mason's Black Dressing free from acid. Preserves the shoe. Try it and see. Fifty shines for one dime. At dealers' everywhere. JAS. S. MASON CO. 134-140 N. Front St., Philadelphia BILFCATIONAL School of Commerce Troup Building, Phone. Bell IMW. IS So. Market Square, Hnrrlaburg, Pa. Fall term begin*i Day School, Septem ber 1; Night School, September C. Office open from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Phone, write or cnll for cntalog or further lnformntloa; Harrisburg Business College Day and Night School Sept. 7, 1915 Business. Shorthand and Civil Serv ice. 30th year. 329 Market St., Har risburg, Fa. Just a few short days and then— The Largest Ready-to-wear Department Store I in this section of Pennsylvania The Women's Coat & Suit Department ( will occupy 12,000 Square Feet of Floor Space * J . It will carry by far the largest shocks of women's suits, coats, separate J * m N skirts and furs of any store outside of Philadelphia and Pittsburgh. « H L-|Lu n 'gl j You will have equal advantages in buying outer garments of Philadelphia and j *5 The enormous purchasing power of the new and bigger Kaufman Store will % J l t | k .iBjLIyPO show its savings possibilities in Kaufman's underselling prices which have / made this the largest ready-to-wear Department Store in this section of the / <J The women's coat and suit department will be under the direction of Mr. f J. M. Lloyd, whose experience is known for years to the people of Harrisburg 1 The Kaufman Underselling Store has always been a friend of the masses and » > the same good values will prevail which for years have helped the people of c m ~ €. j this community save money on stylish and dependable outergarments. C Cj The styles will be up to the moment and the stock will be always fresh I and new. f a 5.000 feet of ;loor what price you pay for your suit or coat at Kaufman's, you can ( A ?Pat j r depend upon it to give you entire satisfaction or you may have YOUR | Auto delivery service. ' MONEY BACK FOR THE ASKING. & Store flooded with sunlight. Pneumatic tube cash system. <J Thousands of women in this community are acquainted with Kaufman's x Vapor steam heat system. suits and coats. We hope to be able to make friends with thousands more. ( And This Is Important to , I T 'Xc nt booths for " ,e The Hard-to-fit Woman Wide aisles and easy stair- A special feature—different and exclusively at Kaufman's—a separate sec ways. , tion devoted entirely to the outfitting of out-of-the-average size women—with Roomy passenger elevator. complete stocks, complete assortments —and always the newest fashions in Newest improved store fix- r« •« « r\ 1 ni • i Suits, Coats, Dresses and Skirts Handsomest display win- , dows in the state. at the same Underselling Prices that have built Kaufman s Ready-to-Wear De- Semi-direct electric liHitine. partment Store to this magnitude. In this section will be "Even" sizes to 52, v , , . , "Half" sizes to and "Odd" sizes to 55. \our money back for the x asking. Where alterations are necessary the work will be done in our All cars stop at Kaufman's. large sanitary tailor shop under the supervision of a thor oughly experienced master tailor. Watch and Wait the Openin^^^^Jj the shaggy locks of the Tlshbite. But God's man has mightier weapons than any earthly kind: and Elijah declared to the enraged and impenitent Ahab that God would send a drought upon Israel, as a punishment for its idol atry. That word of disaster set all the hounds of hate at the heels of the stern prophet. He had to flee for his life: and the Lord directed him to the brook Cherith. The Raven Commissariat Travelers who have gone from Jeru salem to Jericho cannot forget the huge ravine, or gorge, at the bottom ol' which flows the brook Cherith. The immensity of this rocky chasm is a surprise. As I stood on the edge of the precipice that forms one of its sides, and looked down to the dizzy depths below, where the Monastery of Elijah is perched on the lower reaches of the opposite side, I saw the huge, strong-winged ravens circling before me. It was easy to picture the lonely prophet, in the fastnesses of this ma jestic and well nigh inaccessible soli tude, fed by these powerful far-faring birds. Hermits and recluses have al ways made this a favorite resort, and the cliffs are full of caves. A strange place and way for God's man to be kept? God always has moved in mysterious way to care for His own. The ravens that fed Elijah are not any more marvelous than the providences that are sustaining trust ful souls in this year of our Lord 1915. There are pantries as empty as Eli jah's which are being replenished in ways as wonderful. God still has His ravens, running His errands. Shining out from this old, old story Is the prec ious truth that God is concerned in the welfare of His friends. "He will keep the feet of His saints." The experi ence of Elijah is re-enforced by the teaching of Jesus concerning the birds of the air and the flowers of the field. The Highest is not above being solici tous for the lowlleßt of mortals. Peter's word sums up the lesson, "Casting all your carp upon Him, for He careth for you." That text could be Illus trated by countless experiences from the recent hard times. Tlie Original Widow's Cruse Elijah the Tishbite is to-day preach ing a sermon on the resourcefulness of Jehovah God has many ways of car ing for Hie own. The brook Cherith CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears Signature ol : | dried up, and the prophet, who usually 11 had to do considerable traveling to , speak or hear His messages or to do i His work, was sent —afoot, of course, ■ on the long Journey across Judah and 1 Israel to.the coast,of Tyre an'd Sidon. • There at the town of Zarephath, he p was to find a new sort of providence awaiting him. He accosted a widow at the gate, asking for drink and food. She con fessed, in sorrow, that she was on her I way to gather firewood for the last j meal for her son. All she had left was a handful of meal and a little ! olive oil in a cruse, j To her astonishment, this Israelite i bade her prepare the meal for him, saying that if thus she fulfilled the I law of hospitality her scanty store i would not 'm' until the drought was j over. "And the barrel of meal wasted | not, neither did the cryge of oil fail, i according to the word -of the Lord, | which He spoke by Elijah." Mrs. . Charles has gathered the message or i 1 the story into her familiar lines:— "Is thy cruse of comfort fUiling? Rise and share it with another. And through all the years of famine It shall serve thee and thy brother. Love divine will All thy storehouse. Or thy handful still renew. Scanty fare for one will often Makn a royal feast for two. "Kor the heart grows rich in giving: All its wealth is living grain; Seeds which mildew in the garner, Scattered. All with gold the plain. Is thy burden hard and heavy ; Do thy steps drag wearily? | Help to bear thy brother's burden; . God will bear both it and thee." One point remains to be noted par ticularly. It was to the man about the Lord's work that the ravens came, and for whom the widow's barrel and cruse marvelously replenished. God's cai-e is for those who care first for His kingdom. A life lived for great and godly goals finds all the divine re . sources pledged to its re-enforcement, t "Seek ye first the kingdom of God | . and His righteousness, and all thesei i things shall be added unto you." ' HELD AS HIGHWAYMAN S fecial to The TeUgrafh Dlllsburg. Pa., Aug. 27.—The case I of Stewart Chllson. who was arrested : last week, charged with holding up and robbing Mrs. William Murphy, of Carrol township, of S6O while she was returning from Harrisburg market an fluturday, August 7, was brought be ore the grand Jury of York county I court on Wednesday and a true bill was found for highway robbery, and Chjlson was returned to jail until the October court. 10 ADVANCE HUMANE! MOVEMENT AT PICNIC Women Will Speak Against Cruelty to Animals at Grangers' and Distribute Literature The Granger's Picnic at Williams |' Grove. Augjjst 30 to September 4, is i' to be the occasion of the first rural j' Anti-Vivisection Exhibition in the his tory of the movement in this country. Plans have been completed by offi cers of the American Anti-Vivisection . Society and the Women's Pennsyl- | vania Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals for a complete free exhibit of the methods employed in experimentations upon live animals In i the medical schools and laboratories and of the accomplishments of the humane movement in general. There will also be a meeting in the grove , 'on Tuesday, August 31, which will be addressed by prominent anti-vivisec tionists and humanitarians. The exhibit,- which will continue , from the first until the last day of the 1 big picnic, will be held under a big tent, and will be in charge of a com- 1 mlttee of well-known Philadelphia , men and women, Including Robert R.. Logan, president of the American Anti-Vivisection Society, Mrs. Caro line Earle White, Mrs. John H. Easby, Miss Katherine Stanley Nlcholspn, Mrs. Frederick Thurston Mason, Airs. 1 James Francis Sullivan, John Cad wallader Rowland, Dillon Biddle, Mrs. M. M. Malvey, Mrs. W. W, Wharton, Mrs. Stephen Rand, Miss Henrietta Ogden. Mrs. George S. Lovell and Miss Nina Malvey. f Frank Stephens, sculptor and orator!; whose home is in Arden, Delaware, will deliver the principal address at meeting. Mr. Stephens on several occasions appeared before commit tees of the Pennsylvania Legislature In defense of anti-vivisection meas ures. Miss Amelia Durbin and Miss Boyer of Harrisburg. and Miss Amy Bon ham of York, are also expected to be members of the committee In charge of the exhibit. A ton of literature will be distributed. JYaamafzY / | CALL 1991—ANY PHONE POUNDED 1871 WHY PAY For brand-new, first-class, guaranteed (3,500 miles) i Goodyear Fortified Tires » i You can save a neat sum on each tire by pur chasing here—from one of the largest stocks in Cen- v , tral Pennsylvania. Compare this new Bowman Price List With prices you are now paying Plain ' Non- Plain Non- Size Tread Skid Size Tread Skid 28x3 $7.21 $8.46 33x4 $16.48 $19.29 30x3 • 7.69 8.98 34x4 16.85 19.73 32x3 8.59 10.01 35x4 17.63 20.65 30x3% 10.01 11.73 36x4 17.95 20.95 31x3% 10.59 12.39 35x4% 23.39 27.45 32x3% 11.55 13.49 36x4% 23.79 27.85 33x3% 13.39 15.68 37x4% 24.79 28.98 34x3% 13.05 15.35 35x5 26.19 32.75 31x4 15.36 18.01 37x5 27.69 34.69 Other sizes at proportionate reductions. Agents for Kelly-Springfield, Capitol and Nassau Tires Investigate the Bowman Emergency Tire Service 5
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