A El P Medicine Store vL/illlV l 3 396 Broad St. "WE MEET ALL ADVERTISED PRICES" Witch Hazel, best, qt 25c (bring bottle) 75c Bay Rum. Imp., bot 39c 25c Ess. Peppermint, 3 oz 15c 25c Arom. Spt. Ammonia. 3 oz., 15c 10c Poison Fly Paper, 2 5c pkgs.. 6c Eagle Milk 12 He Patent Medicines Sargol 29c S.S.S. for blood 63c, SI.OB Diapepsin 29c Pitpe Cold Comp 15c Wyeth Sage and Sulphur 59c Parisian Sage 29c California Syrnp of Figs 29c Doan's Kidney Pills 35c Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin 59c SaJ Hepatica 16c. 33c, 65c Mrs. Price's Canning Com., 7c; 3 for 20c Hay's Hair Health 59c Llsterlne 82c, 65c Bromo Seltzer 16c, 33c, 65c (Jude's Peptomangom 75c Reslnol Ointment 69c Castoria. Fletcher 20c Wainpolc's C. IJ. 0 59c Black Flag Powder Bc. 18c Creolln Pearson 84c, 67c Cutlcura Soap 18c Butter Color, W. R. & Co 17c Beeeham's Pills Bc, 15c Antiphloglstine 17c, 84c, 49c HONOR FOR HEADMASTER Mercersburg. Pa.. Sept. 3. The tioard of regents of the Mercersburg Academy at a recent meeting appoint ed a committee to inquire into the advisability of permitting the 4,000 graduates of the academy to elect three alumni as their representatives upon the board. The board also voted to start a fund of $150,000 to endow Tires 30X3V2 Also 30 x 3 With Three More Extras Note that the Goodyear has for a new design has shown in years held the leading place. It has creased endurance, proved its supremacy to hundreds of thousands. No other tire has $317,000 Extra ever won so many users. Even the 30x3 size is a four-ply , ThcSC three " CW CX,raS wi " Ure. And the All-Weather tread C ° St s3l7 '°° o - They on it is made double-thick. SBVC °° r USCrS ten timeS that or more. Added Size No like capacity was ever be tl- • i f° re embodied in a small-size 1 his year we ve increased our v small-tire size. We have added t,re ' Yet this year we made 20 per cent to the air capacity— another bi S P ri <* reduction. the {actor which carries the load. Get these new extras when We have added 30 per cent to you next buy tires - See for >'our the side-wall rubber—just above se w hat they add to your mile the bead. That's where constant a S e - Don t take smaller, thinner flexing breaks so many tires. And tires when Goodyears offer these we've made new molds because things. Goodyear Service Stations Tires in Stock HAFkISBURG—Ford Motor C?.r Co. Harrisburg Auto. Geo. W. Myers Andrew Redmond Rex Auto Co. Jno. T. Selsman BERRYSBURG—P. H. Keboch DILLSBURG—Dillsburg Auto Supply ELIZABETHVILLE—C. T. Romberger HUMMELSTOWN—Brownstone Store Co., Ltd LYKENS—Lykens Motor Car Co. A. A. Rudisil MIFFLINTOWN—Juniata Garage i MILLERSBURG—W. H. Tyson Jt NEW CUMBERLAND—Brooks Weigel NEWPORT—Newport Auto & Garage Co i| TOWER CITY—J. B. Watkins Myers "The Tire Man" i * * * J Distributor for Goodyear Tires £ | Cameron and Mulberry Streets i * * * First Class Tire Repairing of All Kinds I***#'****'*'***-****'**'*******************-*'****'#-****-*-***** FRIDAY EVENING, Toilet Articles Creme de Meridor 29c Jess Talcum 15c Swan Down Face Powder 10c Satin Skir Kaoe Powder 15c DJer Kiss Face Powder -13 c Woodbury Face Powder 17c I.a R1 nolle Face Powder 34c Satin Skin Rose Tint 15c Kolynos Tooth Paste 16c Othine 67c Massata Talc 15c Odorono 17c Mcnnen's Talcum Powder .... 11c Sttllnuin Freckle Cream 26c Eu thymol Tooth Paste 14c Peroxide Hydrogen. 8 oz 10c Palm and Olive Soap 74c Wash Hag and Castile Soap. . 7^c Cold Tablets Pape's Cold Comp 15c Hill's Cas. Qiiin. Tab 11c Laxative Broni. Quln. Tab. . . . 15c Cough Syrups Piso Cure 15c Bull's Cough Syrup 15c. 29c Kemp's Balsam 16c, 32c Sliiloh isc .layiies' Expect 15c. 80c, 59c Alexander I.UIIK Healer 12c Brake Croup 19c Foley Honey and Tar .... 15c, 29c Belavanu Remedy 32c the headmaster's chair at Mercers burg, this fund to be named after the I present headmaster and to be known jas the "William Mann Irvine Head j mastership Endowment Fun," In ap -1 preciatiofl* of Dr. Irvine's services to I the academy. In the last twenty-two years he has enrolled 4.000 boys. A number of sub scriptions have already been made to the fund. ELIJAH FOUGHT DUEL ON MOUNTAIN 10P This Drama of Ages Was Staged at Fitting Spot; Sunday School Lesson The International Sunday School Ld—yes. it was trtie, though we could scarcely believe our eyes—out of the sea, on a cloudless sky, rose "a cloud the size of a man's hand," such as the prophet's servant saw. Small wonder that Lawrence and Alice Oll phant, the British authors, made this mountain top their home; I saw the monument of Mrs. Oliphant in the yard of a Druse's home. The Man of Mystery Reappears Three years had elapsed between the story of last week's Sunday School lesson and the present one. The drought and the famine predicted by Elijah had fallen. The hand of sor row was heavy on the land. People s hearts had been mellowed by suffer ing. Many penitent thoughts had been directed to the old days and the old ways, when Isra>el was loyal to Jehovah. The news that this sorrow had been sent as punishment for idol atry, had run to and fro over the land. Elijah had become an awesome fig ure in the popular mind. As for# Ahab, ever prodded by his vengeful queen, Jezebel, he had sought everywhere for Elijah He could not reason with him, but he could punish him. Might was on his side, if right was not. The fate that he wanted to visit upon the elusive prophet, fell upon the heads of other ministers of Jehovah. Jezebel vented her hate in hunting and harrying priests. Obadlah, the palace steward a chancellor of the household, a man of God, had hidden a hundred in caves, so that their lives were saved This character of Obadlah Is # study in itself: there are always to be found friends of righteousness and justice ever near the high places of wicked power; there were saints In Caesar's household. After three years, Elijah reap peared, showing himself to Obadiah when he, like Ahab, was searching for water. The sort of glamor and mys tery that had invested the name or Elijah is revealed by the panic that seised Obadiah when he saw the prophet. And when he was bidden to tell the king "Elijah is here," he fell into abject protest, for he feared that the man of God would spirit himself away, and thus he would incur pun ishment. All up and down the land, with his full royal resources, Ahab had sought Elijah, to compel him to take oft the "spell" of drought; and now to have him suddenly and fear lessly present himself—it was really unbelievable. ' King and Prophet Clash Tet so it was. and shortly the skin girt, stern-visaged ascetic from the wilderness was confronting the mon arch? apparelled in royal state. De spite the contrast in appearance, it was easily apparent who was the greater man. So Ahab tried to assert himself by bluster;— "Art thou he that troubleth Is rael?" Back to the king's teeth the un abashed prophet hurled the taunt "I have not troubled Israel, but thou, and thy father's house, in that ye have forsaken the Lord, and thou hast followed Baalim." Diagnosis is the highest art of the physician, and of the preacher and statesman and social student. To tell what is really the matter Is most Im portant. A lot of folk, like Ahab, are crying out against the prophets who tell them the real trouble, instead of seeking to remedy the root difficulty. Blaming Elijah is a popular habit. It is easier to criticise the preacher of plain truth than It Is to remedy the evil he points out. Some blind Ahabs would expel all "social agitators" from our universities and politics and pub lic prints and street corners. That will never end the difficulty. Unjust con ditions must be remedied. Killing the physician does not stop the progress of the disease he has diagnosed. The Ahab state of mind merely aggravates the ills It would be rid of. In a minute It was the prophet, and not the klnff, who was the masterful man. Elijah bade Ahab gather the nation—representatively, of course to Mt. Carmel. He specified in par ticular the four hundred and fifty priests of Baal, and the four hundred prophets of the grove. "which eat at fLAJFLRISBURG TELEGRAPH fi— ———M You Don't Need a String I o^em ' n( '^ oU W> ere I This "Live Store" Is. ' /I Doutrichs is talked of everywhere— I and we're still talking about {[* lf\ 7C I those sls and $lB Suits at I* * I You will also after you have look- t I ed them over. Light and medium weights, plain I blue, gray and other desirable weaves. Now We Are Ready For the ✓""" I Sweater Season I Sweaters For Men . . SI.OO to $8.50 f Sweaters For Boys .... SI.OO to $5.00 Sweaters For nfants . . . SI.OO to $2.98 I, Sweaters For Women . . SI.OO to $18.75 \-J| Sweaters For Girls .... SI.OO to $5.00 . Boys' K & E Blouses & Shirts, BOYS' SUITS All Ready For School Wear Good Clothes For Boys 50c and SI.OO $3.50, $5.00 to SIO.OO ■ Boys' and Men's Fall Caps, 50c and SI.OO L^^^^lc{Always_Rellablgj^^^ fc^ij 304 Market St. Harrisburg, Pa. Jezebel's table"—even the prophet could not resist this sarcastic fling at the woman who was "his arch enemy. Puzzled, but desperately ready to do what this drought-brlnger demanded, Ahab convoked the assembly at the I foot of the mountain. The Challenge and the Test If artists traveled more we should | have a great picture of the scene that j ensued. There are few episodes in all historv to match It. On a hold head- I land stood the uncouth but sublime J figure of Elijah, his thick, black, un- | shorn hair streaming In the breeze, j Surrounding him, sullen, resentful and j mystified, are the priests of Baal, and j to one side sits the king, animosity in j every glance. Below, In their flowing, many-colored garments are the peo ple, anxiety and expectation written on every face. All eyes are centered on the swart, skin-clad figure from the desert. Listen: he is about to speak. As he raises his arm, faces bend forward eagerly. Then, In a swelling voice, heard by the last man In the throng, j there rises the eternal challenge, as I applicable to-day as it was nearly | three mllleniums ago:—"How long j halt ye between two opinions? If the Lord be God, follow Him; but If Baal, | then follow him." That was fair. The throng received the challenge In silence, but It was im pressed. So Elijah proposed a test. He stood alone: the priests of Baal were four hundred and fifty. Let two rival altars be built, each with a bul- I lock upon It. Each party should call upon Its god, "And the god that ans wereth by fire, let him be God." A thrill, a gasp of astonishment, and then the shout, "It is well spoken." The crowd's sense of fairness was ans wering. Such a teat as this was out- Mde of all tradition and Imagination. Instinctively, every one present knew that he had come to a great hour. Here was a tale to tell to children's children. • The Preacher Who Gare Odds Red blood leaps at the spectacle of Elijah on Mt. Carmel. He was all man. No small sanctimoniousness de terred him from jeering at the futile antics of the Idolaters, as they leaped and cried and cavorted and gashed themselves, entreating that their sun god would vindicate himself at high noon. The more frantic their antics, the more biting the mockery by Ell- i jah: the hunted dweller In caves was! squaring accounts with these luxur- i lous-llvlng palace priests. There is the edge of a razor, the swish of a scourge, the sting of a hornet In Eli jah's taunt, "Cry aloud; for he Is a god; either he Is talking, or he is pur suing. or he la in a Journey, or perad i venture he sleepeth, and must be . awaked." Cold, unresponsive stood the altar of Baal, with its priests sobbing and wailing about it. The people's pa tience had been worn thin: the idol | aters had been given more than a fair I chance. Now comes Elijah's turn. I But what Is this? He has not only repaired an overturned and moss | grown altar of Jehovah, but he has dug a deep trench about It. Down to I the spring he has sent servants, In I three relays, for twelve water Jars of ; water, with which he has drenched i altar and wood and bullock, until the j trenches are filled. People are gaz | ing with popping ayes and bated breath. I Then comes the prayer, a great prayer, freighted with memories of the Chosen People's great past. The man who made that master prayer j in public had learned the art in the l school of private intercession. Great j praying Is not mastered in a day. This petition ple.-yjed covenant mer- J.cies: it sought the honor and vindi-j I cation of Jehovah, It offered the pe- : | tltloner as God's humble servant; and | : It pleaded for the people that they | ! might again know God. Heavens of | brass could not withstand such a prayer, much less a God who is more ready to give than His children are to receive. Marvel! Mystery! Miracle! Af frighted. the multitude fail on their faces as one man. For with a crash I and a crackle the bolt of heaven has j descended, and the flre has consumed ' sacrifice and altar alike, and licked | up the last drop of water In the trench. The duel Is over. Jehovah has again vindicated Himself. Sound ing above the thunders of heaven Is the shout of the people, "Jehovah, He Is God! Jehovah, He Is God!" In natural revulsion, they seize the' false prophets, and visit Justice upon them at the brook Klshon; while Eli jah went further Into the mountain top to pray for rain. So full of faith was his prayer that he sent his servant seven times to look for the storm clouds; and then on the horizon above 'iftiHflllllMH I | Non-greasy Toilet Cream the Skin Soft and Velvety. Prevents tan, relieves sunburn. An Exquisite | Toilet Preparation. 25c. GORGAS DRUG STORES » IS 2*. Third It., and P. R. R. Station 1 SEPTEMBER 3, 1915. the sea arose a little cloud, the size of a man's hand; the precursor of a heaven black with clouds, and a great I BUY RUBBER GOODS IN A RURBRR STfIREHnM End-of Season Sale of Guaranteed Garden Hose I Balance of our stock of high grade garden hose, moulded I and ribbed, braided, non-kinkable and guaranteed to stand up I under high water pressure. All this season's stock. Formerly 18c and 20c | t ) n Per Per Foot. Sale Price, foot Harrisburg I 205 Walnut Street ■■■■■ < F IT ' S MADE OF RUBBER WE BATE IT ■■■■■3 s N I . j The New Labor Law —_____ The new Workmen's Compensation Act goes into effect January Ist, next. If you are an employer of labor you should be familiar with every phase of this most im portant piece of legislation. We are prepared to supply this act in pamphlet form with side headings for easy reference. Single copies 25c with very special prices on , larger quantities. The Telegraph Printing Co. PRINTING—BINDING—DESIGNING PHOTO-ENGRAVING HARRISBURG, PENNA. l | rain. The three years' drought was broken. God, and God's man, had I been vindicated. 7