Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 29, 1915, Page 11, Image 11
Eat a Square Meal and Not Fear Indigestion There are hundreds of people in Har risburg who were not the leaßt bit sur- Srlsed when they road a while ago that rugglsts are now selling Ml-o-na on a guarantee to refund the money In case it did not relieve. This remarkable dyspepsia remedy has proved It will relieve the worst case of indigestion, headache, dizziness, or the general played-out condition that afflicts every one suffering; with stomach trouble. Mi-o-na does not simply relieve, It alms to cure. There is hardly a druggist but can tell you of many well-known people in pity who this remedy has restored t.t hrtlth. often after they have tried many other methods of treatment with little or no benefit. We really believe no other dyspepsia remedy has made so large a percentage of cures as Mi-o-na. It is so larre that dealers who have Fold it for years stand ready to refund the price to any customer whom it does not help. The best kind of advertising is the praise of a pleased customer, and there are hundreds to-day praising Mi-o-na because it has done for them what It is advertised to do. A few months ago they could eat nothing without won dering w hat the result would he. Since using Mi-o-na, they eat what they want and when they want with no fear of suffering This medicine comes in the form of a tablet and Is very pleasant to take. It speedily and permanently re lieves almost all forms of stomach trou ble and is the only one sold under a positive guarantee without any restric tion, t%"> refund the money if it does not relieve. You run get Mi-o-na on this basis from H. C. Kennedy, or any lead ing druggist in Harrisburg.—Advertise ment. SAGE TEA TURNS GRAY HAIR DARK If Mixed With Sulphur It Dark ens So Evenly That It Cannot Be Discovered I v That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only lie had by brew ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul phur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and scraggy, just an appli cation or two of Sage and Sulphur en hances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic; you can get from any drug store a 50c - cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sul phur Compound," ready to use. This can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color, thickness and luster of your hair and remove dan fdruft, stop scalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so natur ally and evenly that nobody can tell It has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morn ing the gray hair has disappeared, and after another application it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy, lustrous and abundant. Advertise ment. A CIEAF COMPLEXION Ruddy Cheeks Sparkling Eyes —Most Women Can Have Snys Dr. FMnnriln, a Wrll-Knonn Ohio I'hyNl.lnn Dr. F. M. Edwards for li years treat ed scores of women for liver and bowel ailments. During these years he gave to his patients a prescription made of a few well-known vegetable ingredi ents mixed with olive oil, naming them Dr. Edwards" Olive Tablets, you will know them by their olive color. These tablets arc wonder-workers on the liver and bowels, which cause a normal action, carrying off the waste and poisonous matter that one's system collects. If you have a pale face, sallow look, dull eyes, pimples, coated tongue, head aches. a listless, no-good feeling, all out of sorts, inactive bowels, you take one of I)r. pdwards' Olive ' Tablets nightly for a time and note the pleas ing results. Thousands of women as well as men take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets now and then just keep in the pink of con union. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, the suc cessful substitute for calomel— 10c and 250 per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, Colum bus, O. Eczema Is I » 0 Greasy salves and ointments should not be applied If good clear skin is l v . a r„ te ?- From druggist for 25c or 11.00 for extra large size, get a bottle of zemo. When applied as directed. It effectively removes eczema. quickly stops itching, and heals skin trouble, also sores, burns, wounds and chafing It penetrates, cleanses and soothes. Zemo is dependable and inexpensive' Try It ,as we believe nothing you have ever used is as effective and satisfy ing. Zemo, Cleveland. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE Id Effect June 17. Kit. TRAINb leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and iiar tine bur* •• t:08, *7:62 a. m.. «8;40 p. m. For Hagerstown, Ctaambtriburg, Car lisle, Mechajuicsburg and intermediate ■tatloos at *S:OS, •T.BZ, *11:83 a. m_ •8:40. 1:47, *7:48, *11:00 p. m. Additional trains for Carlisle »■»* Mechanlcsburg at I:4* a. t:tL . 0:80, 8:36 a. m. For DlUaburg at 6:08, «7:bß and •11:SS a. m.. 2:l*. *8:40. 1:87 and 8:81 p. m. 'Dally. All other trains dally except Eunday. H. A. RLDDLBL J. H. TONQB. oT A. TELEGRAPH WANT AD _ WILL SE.LL THAT AUTO FRIDAY EVENING, , HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 29, 1915 JEHOSHEBA SAVES KING FROM DEATH Joash Came From Stock Which Was Mighty Poor; Inaugu rated Better Era WOMAN CROWNED HIM International Sunday School Lesson For Oct. Is "The Boy Joash Crowned King (By William T. Ellis) The new is ever wrapped up in the old; and the old repeats itself in the new. To-day is yesterday come again to life. Because they mirror the es sential realities of our own day, these stories of Bible times are closely stud ied by the Sunday School millions week by week. The intrinsic facts of the case—the who's who among the kings and counsellors and war riors—are not of great importance. It is poor pedagogy and bare piety that would require the memorizing of all the names of the Jewish rulers. Even the tangle of kings and queens who pass before us in the present les son cannot claim very much atten tion. Clear and disitnet two figures stand forth as types, and of eternally con temporaneous interest. The first is a woman. Jehosheba. wife of the high priest, who saved the boy Joash, who became king, lrom massacre; and the other is the baby prince himself. All others are but background, for our present purpose. A Bad Family Line Like many another youth of our own day, whom the scientists would foredoom to failure, because his he redity is bad, Joash came from stock which, in the immediate past, was mighty poor. His grandmother was the wicked queen Athaliah, daughter of the infamous Jezebel, wife of Ahab, the king who gave Elijah so much trouble. Athaliah had slain all the members of the royal family whom she could find, that she herself might sit su preme upon the throne of Judah. We shrink from telling the story of the Athaliahs and Jezebels to youth, but they need "to know, In preparation for life, that there are such women in the world. More than one boy has come to harm be cause he supposed that all women were as good as his mother. Thank God, most of them are. But to "see life whole and see it true" we have to reckon with the bad as well as with the good. It does not do to leave the Ahabs and Jehoshaphats and Jeaebels and Athaliahs out of our reckoning. A few weeks ago some teachers of this lesson might have said, in con templation of the bloodthirstiness and massacres of this period, that the world has outgrown such cruel ties: they belonged to the dark ages. Now, while we write, the soil of the Bible lands is being reddened with the blood of hundreds of thousands of Christian Armenians, slain by the Moslems. This is the worst perse cution in the history of the Christian church. The. "enlightened" Young Turk leaders, educated in Berlin and Paris, are sponsors for atrocities worse than any of the bloody deeds of Abdul Hamid's reign. We hear of Turkish women shooting down Chris tians froxn sheer blood-lust, and of shepherds on the plains, shooting any Armenians who escaped. Evidently it takes something more than the mere passage of years to deliver the human race from cruelty and savagerv. Wood Branches ol' a Bad Tree There is another woman in the story Resides Athaliah. Iler own daughter, Jehosheba, was as good as her mother was had. Like her little nephew, Joash, she seemed to revert to her noble forebears—Ruth and David and Solomon—for her Quali ties. She became the wife of Je hoiada, the high priest, and had no part in the bloody politics of the pal ace. If we wonder at the badness of some Women, what shall we say about the goodness of others who with every temptation, by blood and environment to go wrong, still de velop only the qualities of purity, strength and sweetness? Only the angels know the struggle that many girls and women, especially out in the workaday world, have to retain their noblest womanhood. They are the saviours of society. In sych fashion, Jehosheba stood, in a terrible time, for the divine ideals of justice and mere.y. Her way of serving God and her country was by taking care of a baby boy. We rejoice in all the new oppor tunities for noble self-expression open to women but, after all, her greatest work is the training of a child. If ever she turns aside from that, it will be a black day for her and for the race. When the carnival of cruelty Was at its height, and Athaliah was slaying all who had royal blood in their veins, Jehosheba surreptitiously got possession of the baby prince Joash, only one year old. The eternal mother instinct in her heart warmed to the helpless infant, and at the risk of her life, she hid the babe and his nurse for six years in one of the re mote rooms of the temple. 1 wonder how many Armenian babies will be saved from the nation-wide slaughter because some Turkish women are bet ter mothers than they are Moslems? Some, surely. The Boy For a Crown All the hopes of a nation weno staked on the child Joash. Even after he was crowned there were wiseacres who wagged their heads ominously and cried, "Blood will tell, and his blood Is bad." These croakers took short views and reckoned only with physical strains. But their solicitude was natural. We look about us at the spoiled children of parents who themselves flout all higher laws, and we wonder. Many a man is piling up millions for sons who have not been fitted, by heredity or training, to in herit such/ responsibilities. I have in mind " boy whose blood was of the best, but who, inheriting a million in Sfotectlfcufrtefl! FOUNTAIN*. HOTELS, OR CLBCWHCKI Got HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK The Food-drlnk for All Ages. Delicious, invigorating and sustaining. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Don't travel without it " A quick lunch prepared in « Unlema you amy -HORUOITS" you may got a Substitute. DOUTRICHS 1 H&rrisburg's Largest, Livest I Leading; Men's Store 1 fThe Home of the I Our obligation and re- j sponsibility does not cease when I you make a purchase at this store. 8 You've got to be satisfied both now and here- B after, before we can really transfer the amount to the credit side of our ledger. But there is still another good rea- | son for this Live Store's success, not one, but g a dozen of the lead ng makers are represent- i ed in our vast stock of good clothes. For, with brands of clothing, as with men, no single one com bines ALL the good features in the highest degree. So instead of being restricted to 1 the product of a single maker, you will find 1 here the best ideas from a score of the best 1 minds in the clothing world, chief among which is the S House of Kuopenhefmet I And Nowhere Else in Harrisburg Will You | Find the Equal of Our New I Suits and Overcoats g sls S2O $251 The size and variety of our stock aston- I ishes those who come here for the first time. | "fn""'/*™' SWEATERS- Women and Children n Eoys' Pajamas, 50c and $1 SI.OO to $8.50 $i to $5 WOOL SftIRTS » Men's Extra Size || High Military or 11 g|p jF B I ST ££ and Longer Than Regular Collar Regular Size si.oo to $2.50 utg Always Reliable SI.OO 304 MARKET STREET, HARRISBURG, PENNA. boyhood, and over-indulged, became a wastrel and a grief to his family. Society aB a whole has no greater problem than this one" of what our boys and girls are to become. The Increased attention paid to the Sunday School, and to the public schools, shows how sensible we are of that truth. It is more important to pro duce a generation of noble men and women than it is to produce vast material wealth. So let us reserve our highest awards for those who have our Jo&ches in their keeping. "Sa.y, boys, did you ever stop to think That we are the coming men? That we've only a few short years to prepare Ourselves for the work, and then The fate of the world will rest in the hands Of those who are boys to-day? I tell you It makes a fellow feel that Me wants to be armed for the fray! Wc cannot afford to hamuer ourselves With habits that work us harm: "We need to bp true of head and heart, With a steady, stronK right arm; We need to be men—real, honest men, AVith a love of life and its Joys, But ever ready to stand for the right; And in order to do that, boys. We've sot to begin right now, or else— No, I am not 'Preacher Ben,' And don't let's forget in our work or our play That we are the coming men!" A prood mother and a Kodly train inn can smash into smithereens all the bad blood ever transmitted. God sends nobody Into the world with a ball and chain to his ankle. As Henry Van Dyke says, "There are many potential men in every man, and which of them Is to emerge, he chooses for himself by a thousand si lent, moral preference." One living Jehosheba, gullding a boy in the house and law of God, can outweigh fifty Jezebels and Athaliahs. The average 'iii bile school teacher has more real I Influence In the world than the be jewelled "society leader," whose pic ture adorns the newspapers. The godly women whose gentle hands are now shaping the plastic souls of youth are the best allies that God and pos terity have on earth to-day. Crowning the True King Taking a leaf out of the strategy of King David himself, when he thwarted the plots of an usurper by unexpectedly crowning Solomon king Jehosheba and Jehoiada adopted the simple expedient of producing the young prince of the blood royal, and crowning him before fiver wicked Athallah could bring- hgr forces to bear |to prevent. This bold, swift stroke I succeeded, as boldness usually does I succeed. | Of course, there had to be loyal i spirits to assist. Here again we con j front the truth taught to Elijah's I servant by a vision of the heavenly I host. God always has His allies. The friends of right and religion stand J ready to rally In ar. hour of need. As there were soldiers and saints quick Ito co-operate In the coronation of l Joash, and to surround, him with their swords and shields, so there are a great host of fearless patriots and Christians to-day, upon whom God can count in any emergency. The ruse succeeded. Joash was in vested with the crown of his fathers, and with the holy oil, and with the sacred Scriptures. In full form and fashion, the boy was made king of Judah. That fact dispossessed the wicked Athaliah, who. Indeed was slain straightway. Thus, by the wit and courage find godliness and patriot ism of one woman, the nation's right ful king was preserved, and a better era inaugurated. r Specia! Piano Tuning Pianos tuncxl, cleaned 0O Af"| and polished for WfcuUU by factory expert, on all orders re ceived during the next ten days. Send orders to R. F. L., care Tele graph. " 11 RifflilWHiM Non-siuuaj i'oilei Cream - .>.<*>!» the Skin Soft and Velvety. Prevents tan, relieves sunburn. An Exquisite Toilet Preparation, 26c. GORGAS DRUG STORES 19 N. Third St.. and P. R. It. Station i Merchants and Miners Trans. Co. FLORIDA TRIPS "BY SEA" BALTIMORE TO One Way .' ... Round Trip S2O JACKSONVILLE s3s 1,600 MILES—7-PAY TRIP. $15.60 SAVANNAH 526.20 Including meals and stateroom berth. Through tickets to all points. Flra steamers. Best service. Staterooms da luxe. Baths. Wireless telegraph. Au tomobiles carried. Steamer Tuesday and Friday 6 P. M. Send for booklet. W. P. TURNER, G. P. A., Dalto.,