Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, September 23, 1915, Page 18, Image 18

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    18
iVDOLLARf
:| SPECIALS lj
J Umbrellas, J
J Canes, t
i Toy trunks, «
• I Suitcases, •
• Straw traveling bags, ♦
• Manicure sets, ♦
• ♦
Drinking cups, •
Handbags, ♦
♦ Flasks, ♦
♦ ♦
* Medicine cases, J
J Brass smoking sets, *
J Shaving brushes, J
I Safety razors. J
J Picture frames, J
1 Bill books, J
: Bill rolls. :
. Traveling clocks, !
J Thermos bottle, J
J Music rolls, ♦
Safety pockets,
I Money belts, J
J Toilet rolls, J
Jewel boxes, j
. Bridge sets, ♦
J Coat and trouser hangers, »
J Traveling slippers, J
♦ Traveling laundry kit, ♦
* Watch bracelets, ♦
t Cigar cases,
• Card cases, ♦
Collar bags,
« Necktie holders, !
J Traveling mirrors. J
AT THE REGAL
: Umbrella Co. :
; 2nd and Walnut St. J
*, ■I■TI I■■ « ■ T,I I I I. I . *
' ■»■■! H i l l Mill U tiWH
i| Harrisburg j
lj Carpet Co. 1
• j is now showing a large J
<■ line of new Fall patterns *
<; in Rugs of all sizes, at t
■ • ven- attractive prices. T
jj Harrisburg j
jj Carpet Co. i
•: 32 N. Second St. I
Coal For Winter
There are many homes
in this city kept com
fortable during the long
winter months with Kel
ley's Coal .
If you have heating
troubles, get acquainted
with the superior burn
ing quality of Kelley's
Coal.
Best for heater or range
because it is all pure coal
and clean, with all the
impurities that retard
combustion eliminated
before it goes into your
cellar.
H. M. KELLEY & CO.
Office, 1 N. Third Street
Yard, 10th and State Streets
Lebanon, Pa., 1-9-15.
Too are at liberty to use my
name and testimony for advertls-
Ing CaTA'So tablets, and you may
refer any person to me and I Mill
gladly tell them the good tbey have
lone for me.
Wishing yoa success,
I am yours truly,
MRS. LIZZIE FRITZ,
Kesorts
DOTBIiTXG GAP. PA.
White Sulphur Springs Hotel
DOUBLING GAP. PA.,
Via Newrlllt
Noted for Its refined patronage,
numerous medicinal springs, natural
beauty, and abundance of Iresh vege
tables which aid In emphasizing ex
>. collent table service. Special attenUon
along with reduced rates will bo given
to Harrlsburgpatrons during the month
•f August. For prompt reply Inquire
of Mrs. G. A. Freyer.
THURSDAY EVENING, QXRRTBBUR SEPTEMBER 23, 1915.
UPS AND DOWNS
IN A NATION'S LIFE
Quarterly Review of Sunday
School Lesson Presents Study
of Facts and Teachings
By William T. Ellis
It is the long look that reveals
truth. Things must be seen in rela
tion one to another in order to be
understood. The advantage of a
quarterly review of Sunday school
lessons, such as the present, is that
It enables us to study facts and
teachings in proper proporUons. A
single lesson may concentrate our at
tention too closely upon episodes and
details; a long sweep of history, like
that comprehended within the stu
dies of the past three months, gives
balance and perspective and a sense
of relative values.
Most persons need this. We are so
close to the incidents of life that we
often miss a clear view of life itself.
We "cannot see the woods for the
trees." Saint Peter had a keen word
upon this when he characterized a
certain sort of person as "blind, see
ing only what is near." Now. amid
the present world upheaval, we need
especially the gift of discerning ma
jor tendencies and ultimate issues,
behind the welter of absorbing de
tails. Whatever local conditions may
be. let It be remembered that they
are as the waves, which may
be receding, though the tide is rising.
This essential lesson truth has been
well expressed by Priscilla Leonard in
a poem in "The Outlook":
"On the far reef the breakers
Recoil in shattered foam.
Yet still the sea behind them
Urges its forces home;
Its chart of triumph surges
Through all the thunderous din—
The wave may break in failure.
But the tide is sure to win.
"The reef is strong and cruel;
Upon its jagged wall
One wave—a score—a hundred.
Broken and beaten fall;
Yet in defeat they conquer,
The sea comes flooding in
Wave upon wave is routed.
But the tide is sure to win.
/
"O. mtghty sea! thy message
In clanging spray is cast;
Within God's plan of progress
It matters not at last.
How wide the score of evil,
How strong the reefs of sin
The wave may be defeated,
But the tide is sure to win."
Kings. Great and Small
It is a startling or incredible
thought that the real mission and
efficiency of the ancient Jewish king
dom which we are studying cannot
be fully understood until we have
seen the effects produced in Bible
lands by the present war? A resur
gence of Jewish nationalism is being
witnessed throughout the world.
What twentieth century development
is to inherit the. glories of David and
Solomon?
A long look at the lessons of tho
quarter reveals David and Solomon,
as well as Rehoboam and Jeroboam
and Ahab, and still lesser wearers of
the purple. In great allegience of
Jehovah, David and Solomon had led
united Israel to the apex of its his
tory. The studies now in review
and what rich lesons they have
been! —have included the greatest
days of the Jewish nation. They
have also taken in the tragic times
jof the division of the kingdom. The
| mightiest of the Hebrew monarchy,
as well as the meanest, have been
I under the study of the world's Sun
day schools, all within three months.
What greatness could do for a na
tion. and what smallness could un
do, has vividly been portrayed. God
pity the people who have pusil
lanimous leaders in a time of great
crises. It makes a sovereign citizen
tremble when he sees politicians pur
suing their petty partisan purposes
in an hour of national emergency.
At least we can be thankful that, as
we sweep the world's present trou
bled horizon there are few, if any.
Rehoboams in places of national
leadership.
Leaders and Misloaders
One angle from which the quar
ter's lessons may be viewed is as a
study in leadership. I heard a man
say, in condemning a certain notor
ious ecclesiastic in one of the larger
American religious denominations.
"It will take the Church twenty
years to recover from the blight of
that man's influence, after he is dead.
'Similarly to-day the hand of
Abdul Hamid has been removed from
the Turkish scepter but it remains
baefully upon the Turkish people.
The present saturnalia of massacres
and persecutions of Christians in the
Ottoman Empire is traceable to Ab
dul Hamid's example and influence.
Jeroboam, "who made Israel to sin,"
continued his malign work even aft
er his bones had rotted. No man
sinneth unto himself. If you do not
believe that on first statement ask
the historians; or ask the doctors,
who, in this morning's paper cried
out against the social crime of per
mitting wicked fathers to foredoom
unborn offspring to suffering and de
spair.
Observing the influence of the
character of the kings who were
leaders and misleaders of the Jews
we are reminded of the proverb,
"Like priest, like people." Every
forceful personality should make
himself count, in these days, for the
highest welfare of the world. It is a
solemnizing thing to have great In
U NDERBILTHOTEL
THIRTY FOURTH STREET
AT PARK AVENUE
'J^EWyOFtK
The most
conveniently situated hotel
in Neu) York
At the
Thirty-third Street Subway
WALTON H. MARSHALL
Manager
THE
Office Training School
Kaufman Bid*., 4 S. Market Sq.
NOW IN SESSION
Day School and Mgkt School
C*ll or send for 32-page booklet—
Bell phone C94-R.
Combined With Our Unusually Low Prices
Gives You an Unusual Opportunity
You Not Only Have the Advantage of Our Unusually Low Prices, But
Only on Such Occasions Do You Get the Benefit of Terms Like This
Tv xx ci • i Below We Offer a List of Specials on Credit
Dollar Day Specials f erms Re _
96 Ladies' Waists, regular price $3.75 to $7.50, SI.OO ducedFor (i Dollar Day"
78 Dresses, regular price $6.00 to $16.00 "Dollar o j c •/ i d j c •*. • t
Dav SnpriaU" nn Bedroom Special, 7-pc. Bedroom Suit consisting of
c-|/pL- ti'nn Bed ' Dresser > Washstand, Center Table, 2 Chairs and
Silk Petticoats, SI.OO Rocker> regu , ar price $35 « Do!lar Day - price
urts » ; SI.OO down and 75 cents per week (f*oo A A
Boys' Suits and Overcoats, regular price $4 to $6 for |JU
Handsome Pictures regular price $2.25 to $5, $lO0 Any Bedroom Suit, Parlor Suit, Dining Room Suit,
Men sS3to ?4 Hats, J I.OO Couch, Davenport, or an v bill of goods for less than
$2.50 to $4 Pants, $1.00 5100.00, (f»-j aa
1000 Other Dollar Bargains y ItUU Down on Dollar Day
We Are Outside the High Rent, H
You Best. Let Your Dollars Do Four Times Their Duty on "Dollar
Day."
A Combination Gas & Coal Range
WmMM .
||||p $l.O V
No Charge For Pipe; Let Us Demonstrate This
We Are Prepared to Make This "Dollar Day" a Day Long to Be Re
membered With Real Values.
Everything to Furnish the Home and Clothe the Entire Family
Furnishers
Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Co.
29-31-33 & 35 South Second Street
The Pioneer Department-Credit Store
fluence just now. lSven as these re
ligious studies have constantly Im
pinged upon the field of Jewish pat
riotism, so the call to-day is for
Christian men and women to exer
cise, persistently. purposefully and
potently, their influence in behalf of
the highest national idea's. The
Jews of old never passed through a.
graver crisis than that which encom
passes the nations of the world at
the present time.
The Prophet's Part
Probably the average school
teacher wields a more potent influ
ence over the life than the average
ctflce-holder, taking the two classes
In the large. Kings, on the whole,
have counted for less than the great
reformers, writers and preachers.
To be a speaker forth of truth is to
wield the mightiest septer. After
David and Solomon both of whom
combined the prophet-function with
their sovereignty, so that they are
immortal as teachers, rather than as
rulers—there was no king among the
Jews who counted for as much as the
prophets. Elijah dwarfed all his
contemporaries.
To be the man who speaks for God
in a nation's troubled hour i 3 a great
mission. What if the prophet's work
is hard for the prophet? Better
truth's tempests than error's case.
Elijah in the wilderness is a subllmer
figure than Ahab on his throne. God
still has ravens to feed His messen
gers, so that the mesengers need
give little thought to the ravens, but
only to the message. The firm pays
the expenses of its traveling repre
sentatives.
This review ends where the quar
ter's lessons ended, squarely con
fronting the great and eternal truth
that to represent God, to speak His
message fearlessly, to be true to His
name and mission, is the highest
work possible to mortal. When the
times are most troublous, then the
need for the tellers of the truth of
God is greatest. The highest patriot
ism is to call one's country back to
the faith of its fathers. (
PASSES LAW EXAMS
Clarence A. Fry, 212 Crescent street
has successfully passed the examina
tions before the State Board of
Examiners, which were held In Pitts
burg on July 6 and 7. Mr. Fry has been
a resident of Harrisburg all his life, and
Is a graduate of the Central High
school class of 1908. Dickinson college,
class of 1912, and completed his law
course at Dickinson in 1914. He Is at
pesent connected with the Bell Tele
phone Company as adjuster in the cash
ier's o'/*ce at Pittsburgh.
Special Notice
A record of all Glasses made by the
National Optical Co.
Is on file at our office. When you break your glasses, mail or
send them to Gohl Optical Company. We do our own lense
grinding and will repair them at a reasonable price. If your
glasses need changing, consult us. We will make a thorough
examination of your eyes.
Gohl Optical Co.
34 North Third St.
WHERE GLASSES ARE MADE RIGHT
TO HOLD CORN ROAST
The Aldrich's association, which is a
nonsectarian organization of men on
Allison Hill, to-day sent out Invitations
to about 300 men to attend a cornroast
at Bellevue Park on next Monday
evening. Short talks will be given by
the Rev. James K. Bullett. Harris J.
Bell, an dthe president, J. Klinedlnst.
STEELTO.N SNAP SHOTS
To Arranicc Trip. Steelton Lodge,
411. Knight* of Pythias, will make ar
rangements for the visit of the lodge to
York. September 27. The local lodge
wil be guests of Crystal Lodge at
York.
It's Getting Close to Coal Time
Do you realize that it will be but a short time before we run into
that weather when a fire in the house will be necessary to health and
comfort? Better be prepared. Look after your bins now, phone us
your, order, and we'll send you the kind of coal that gives out the
greatest amount of heat units —the kind that goes farthest.
J. B. MONTGOMERY
Both Phones Third and Chestnut Streets
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. Wc 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.