Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 20, 1916, Page 13, Image 13

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    WOMAN HAD
NERVOUS TROUBLE
wydia E. Pinkhaim's Vegeta
ble Compound Helped Her.
West Danby, N. Y.— "I have had
nervous trouble all mv life until I took t
{ljlljfljjMlllj ' Vegetable Coin
pound for nerves
and for female trou
"S W bles and it straight-
I ened me out in good
'sl'iffk L< i shape. I work nearly
Mjjj I'ty | | all the time, as we
j MMTVIIj live on a farm and I
Ve^?Ur^[' S "
fhows that I stand it real well. I took
the Compound when my ten year old
daughter came and it helped me a lot.
I have also had my oldest girl take it
and it did her lots of good. I keep it in
the house all the time and recommend
it."—Mrs. DEWITT SINCEBAUGH, West
Danby, N. Y.
Sleeplessness, nervousness, irritabil
ity. backache, headaches, dragging sen-
Tations, all point to female derange
tnents which may be overcome by Lydia
E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
This famous remedy, the medicinal
Ingredients of which are derived from
sative roots and herbs, has for forty
fears proved to be a most valuable tonic
and invigorator of the female organism.
Women everywhere bear willing testi
mony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia
E- Pinkham's Vegetable Compound.
7IMPLY? WELL, DOiTT BE!
People Notice It. Drive Them Off
with Dr. Edwards'
Olive Tablets
A pimply face will not embarrass yoa
much longer it you get a package of Dr.
Edwards' Olive Tablets. The skin
should begin to dear after you have
taken the tablets a few nights.
Cleanse the blood, the bowels and the
liver with Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets,
the successful substitute for calomel—
there's never any sickness or p3in after
taking them.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets do that
which calomel does, and just as effec
tively, but their action is gentle and
safe instead of severe and irritating.
No one who takes Olive Tablets is
ever cursed with "a dark brown taste."
a bad breath, a dull, listless, "no good"
feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad
disposition or pimply face.
Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a
purely vegetable compound mixed with
olive oil; you will know them by their
olive color.
Dr. Edwards spent years among pa
tients afflicted with liver and bowel
complaints, and Olive Tablets are the
•mmensely effective result.
Take one or two nightly for a week.
See how much better you feel and look
10c and 25c per box. All druggists.
HOW GRANDMA
CURES A COLD
Coughs and colds, no matter how
slight they may seem, are dangerous
thinrs. Any physician will tell vou
so. _
Nowadays folks aggravate a cough or
cold either by neglecting it or using
dangerous patented medicines which
bring false relief by deadening the
nerves of the nose and throat. 'Then
they wonder why they get the grippe,
bronchitis and even pneumonia.
But Grandma know* that nothing
will cure a cough or cold that does not
go direct to the cause of these danger
ous afflictions. That's why she turns
a deaf ear to patened nostrums and re
lies only on the 50-year-old prescrip
tion she has always used. It is tailed
Wonderoil and it hasn't failed her vet.
Wonderoil wipes out every svmptom
of cold so quickly that you almost think
it is done by magic. Wonderoil is made
from an old recipe that has been
handed down through several genera- j
tions. You car. get the genuine Won
deroil in Harrisburg from George A :
Gorgas or any other good druggist.
Keep some In the house all the time
Grandma does and she knows Adver
tisement.
NIXATED IKON
increases strength of
V'JrrsvtViTtl delicate, nervous, run-
EA fB T I lllli down people COO per
I B I I I "4cent. In ten davs j n
■ l|ll ton instances $lOOl
Per full explanation ?n
article soon to
druggist about it. " 5 -t->r or
Croll Keller. G. A. Gorgas always
carry it in stock.
Round Trip
TO
I' Philadelphia
A city rich In historic
memories.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 29
Special Train Leave*
HAKHISHI HG - 7.00 A.M.
Returning;. I.eaves
PHILADELPHIA 7.00 P.M.
C7?ef the Battleship* at
I.eaicue Inland .Nary
Yard, cpen until 4.00 P.
M., City Hall Torrer,
open 1 -.30 to 4.00 P. M.,
Independence Hall, open
1.00 to 4.00 P. M.. Mem
orial Hall and Academy
of Fine Arts, open 1.00
to 5.00 P. M. # Fairmoant
Park and the many oth
er objects of interest of
-The Quaker City.**
Pennsylvania R. R.
FUNERAL DIRECTOR
AND EMBALMER. *
Use Telegraph Want Ads i
FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG t/SfSfi TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 20, 1916.
PAIL'S PREACHING
WAS SENSATIONAL
Minister Should Be Most Gen
erally-Discussed Man
in Town
(By William T. Elllii
THE ORATOR A\D THE KING
Oriental pomp and pageantry con
front the Sunday schools as they en
ter the great audience hall of Gov
ernor Festus, on the special occasion
of a formal appearance of King Herod
Agrippa II and his wife Bernice, who
was also his full sister. Lovers of
show and state were all the Herods—
: they gave more heed to the outward
form than the inner integrities. They
were courtiers alike of the Jews and
!of Rome, cloaking their selfish ambi
tions and unscrupulous intrigues be
; ueath an appearance of Jewish ortho
doxy. The sumptuously robed monarch,
and his beautiful wife, blazing with
jewels of state, looked the part of Ro
mans rather than Jews. It was such j
occasions of ceremony as this, when all
the lick-spittle officialdom of Caesarea
did obeisance to them, that stirred the
jaded Herod blood.
Did the proud king and his wife re
call. as they confronted the manacled
prisoner who had been brought before
them to gratify their curiosity, that
it was in this very city that their fath
er. Herod Agrippa I. who had slain the
Apostle James with the sword, had died
a horrible death, smitten in his pride
as he paraded himself a god? And did
their thoughts go back to their great
grandfather. Herod the Great, who had
vainly sought to slay in childhood the
infant Jesus, after whom ail these
| Christians were named? A sort of dire
Judgment seemed to attend the contact
of the Herods with all who were as
sociated with this new religion. Did
Agrippa and Bernice recall their great
uncle Herod Antipas who had slain John
the Baptist, at the behest of a dancing
g:rl? The king and queen were not
without imagination, and their facing
of the foremost Christian of the day
did not leave them wholly comfortable,
even if he were but a prisoner, with
fetters on his wrist and ankles.
LJttle would the world to-day know
or care about the whole tribe of Her
ods, were it not for their connection
with Christian history. Gone 1* Cae
sarea, the scene of the stately Herods in
triumphs. The allied warships that
patrol the coast of Palestine to-day
, waste never a shot upon it. Gone, i
too. is. Rome, with all her might, while
the messages of Paul, and the spiri
tual forces which he represented, are
daily increasing their sway around the
world. "The world passeth away, and J
the lust thereof; but he that doeth the j
will of God abideth forever."
The Preacher as a Sensation
Those jaded Jewish-Roman poten
tates. who sought a new sensation by ]
hearing Paul, have their counterparts \
:in modern society leaders who lionise!
evangelists. "Billy" Sunday's ovation in \
Washington, at the hands of political |
and social leaders, rather brings the
matter down to date. Thank God for
the men who have made the gospel a
sensation: who have set cities bv the
ears; who like Savonarola, have been i
preachers of righeousness to entire
communities. The preacher should be :
the most generally-discussed man in I
town. His words should set the people i
talking about the truth he preaches.
But woe unto him if he yield to the !
temptation to be a mere entertainer, j
a seeker after notoriety and social po
sition. If we have one gospel for the |
rich and another for the poor; if he
be afraid to speak in Dame Society's
parlor the message he delivers in the I
rescue mission, then he is an unworthy
wearer of the name of the minister of
the gospel.
This man Paul never swerved or hesi
tated or compromised when he stood
before King Agrippa. His oration was
almost the high-water mark of his re
corded utterances. Essentially though!
it was the same old speech that he had j
j been delivering up and down the land.
Because It is a great and classic ut
terance. more impressive than any com- 1
ir.ents upon it. the address is quoted !
j in full:
A Famous Oration
So Paul with outstretched arm pro-
I ceeded to make his defense.
•The kind of life I have lived from
my youth upwards, as exemplified in i
my early days among my nation and
in Jerusalem, is known to all the Jews.
For they all know me of old—if they |
wojld testify to the fact—how, being 1
an inherent of the strictest sect of our
religion, my life was that of a Pharisee.
And now I stand here impeached because !
of my hope in the fufilment of the
promise of God to our forefathers the
promise which our twelve tribes, wor- i
, shipping day and, night with intense
devotedness. hope to have made good I '
to them. It is on the subject of this ;
hope. Sir. that I am accused bv the j 3
Jews. Why is it deemed with all of i t
ANAEMIC PEOPLE :
I t
Need More Iron in the Blood 1
a
If you are anaemic, you need more '
iron in your blood, and the tell-tale
symptoms are a pale face, colorless t
lips, ashen finger nails, poor clrcu-I r
lation and ' short breath, and more
serious diseases are easilv contracted
when in this condition. • j <
Mr. W. H. Hodges, of Kansas City, t
Mo. says; I suffered from the effects 1
of cad blood,' was • run-down, dizzy s
had headaches and did not feel like <
working. I had tried Beef. Iron and I
v\ine without any help. After taking-
inol four days I noticed an improve- t
lnent and its continued use built up
m\ blood and my bad feelings dis
appeared like magic." .
The bad effects of poor, devitalized i
blood cannot be overestimated, and
It is the beef and cod liver peptones
iron and manganese peptonates and ,
glycerophosphates contained in Vino!
ihat enriches the blood. Improves the '
circulation, and in this natural manner I
, builds up health and strength. Try it 11
j on our guarantee.
George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken- ■■!
nedy s Medicine Store. 321 Market ,
street; C. F Kramer, Third and Broad
streets: Kitzmiller s Pharmacy, 1325
Derrv street, Harrisburg. Also at the 1
leading drug stores in all Pennsylvania 1
towns. 1 1
_Jl
When Croup Comes
Treat Externally \
The old method of dosing delicate littla '
stomachs with nauseous drugs is wrong ,
and harmful. TIT the external treatment ,
' —Vick's "Vap-O-Jstub" Baire. Just rub a
little over the throat and chest. The Ta- ,
pors, released by the body heat, loosen the 1
choking phlegm and ease the difficult 1
breathing. A bedtime application insures '
sound sleep. 25c, 60e, or fI.OO. 1
WOOWo^rSAIVE!
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I 1 II" * ™'"ill |
V.' *v®B
\f si
•pi g The VOGUE—a two vHffl
In g button style for young g j
!|d - men with radical ideas of |
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fij row notched lapels; " ]
jy 1 fronts very slightly cut * |
WW | alway; diagonal pockets; ®
Ugl g natural shoulders; vest ® J 1
mo with soft rolling collars; _ - . ill * I
m ■ seam back, no vent. Our business is guarded by ; :
| i principles as vigilant, as any ■
I J soldier who ever did duty ■ |
Da Y * n an( l day out, we are *li
on guard against the en- !§
trance of merchandise of B||
T unworthy origin and un- 2 y
'! • trustworthy character. J I
■ We are against any exag- j
Mgmmi geration or misrepresenta- • j
" tion setting foot within the '
• border of our advertise- {
• Only goods of the character ■
• rsc^^aum ot^es at * 1
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£ Founded 1871 £
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you a past belief if God raises
the dead to life?
"1 myself, however, thought it a duty
to do many thing* in hostility to the
name of Jeaus. the Naiarene. And that
was how I acted in Jerusalem. Armed
with authority received from the High
Priests I shut up many of God's people
in various prisons and when they were
about to he put to death I gave my vote
against them, in all the synagogues
also I punished them many a time, and
tried to make them blaspheme; and in
my wild fury I chased them even to for
eign towns."
"While thus engaged I was traveling
one day to Damascus armed with au
thority and commission from the High
Priests, and on the Journey at noon
Sir. I saw a light from Heaven—bright
er than the brightness of the sun shin
ing around me and around those who
were traveling with ni*. We all fell
to the ground; and I heard a voice
which said to me in Hebrew.
"Saul, Saul, why are you persecut
ing Me? You are finding it painful to
kick against the ox-goad."
"Who art thou. Lord?" I asked.
"I am Jesus whom you are persecut
ing." the Lord replied. But rise and
stand on you feet; for I have appeared
to you for the very purpose of dl
appolntlng you My servant and My wit
ness both as to the things you "nave
already seen and to those In which !
will appear to you. I will save you
from the Jewish people and from the
Gentiles, to whom X send you that you
may open their eyes, that they may turn
from darkness to light In order to re
ceive forgiveness from the sins and an
Inheritance among those who are sanc
tified through faith and me."
• Therefore. King Agrlppa. I was not
disobedient to the Heavenly vision; but
I proceeded to preach first to the people
In Damascus and then to those In Jeru
salem and In all Judea, and to the Gen
tiles that they must repent and turn
to God, and live lives consistent with
such repentance."
"It was on this account the Jews
seized me In the temple and tried to
kill me Having, however, obtained the
help which Is from God. I have stood
firm until now. and have solemnly ex
horted rleh and poor alike, saying noth
ing except what the Prophets and Moses
predicted as soon to happen, since the
Christ, was to be a suffering Christ, aud
! by coming back from the dead was then
]to be the first to proclaim a message
■ of light both to the Jewish people and
Ito the Gentiles."
j As Paul thus made his defense Fes
i tus exclaimed in a loud voice,
j "You are raving mad, Paul: your
great learning is driving you mad."
j "X am not mad. most noble Festus,"
replied Paul; "I am speaking words of
I sober truth. For the King to whom
I speak freely, knows about these mat
ters. I am not to be persuaded that
any detail of them has escaped his no
tice; for these things have not been
Idone in a corner. King Agrippa. do you
believe the Prophets? I know that you
believe them.*
I Agrippa answered.
! "In brief, you are doing your best
to persuade me to become a Christian."
! "My prayer to God. whether briefly
! Or at length." replied Paul, "would be
j that not only you but all who are my
; hearers to-day. might become such as
I X am—except these chains.'
"CrJir Moody"
! "Heedless of self, forgetful that his
I life
I now to be defended by his words,
'he only thinks of doing good to them
; I That seek his life."
j As "he pressed home his message—
] for Paul's defense of himself was b'Jt
a proclamation of Christ; the sycophan
tic governor, Feetus fearing that the
message was crowding too close to
home to the royal hearers, Interrupted
with the cry of madness. That is a
favorite charge against the most earn
est preaehers. When Dwlght L. Moody
began to do Christian work In Chicago
they nicknamed the young man "Cruzy
Moody." It is not "good form" to make
religion personal; yet all about us
people are hungering for fciie direct pre
sentation of Christ.
When Baron Shlbasawa. the fore
most Japanese businessman, was In
this country he told a reporter of the
New York Herald that when he attended
John Wanamaker's Sunday School,
In Philadelphia, Mr. Wanamaker not
only presented him with a Bible, but
he also urged hit distinguished guest
to Become a Christian. The incident
greatly impressed the famous Japanese.
Thftt'i business—Christian business.
No man is too high to be dJrectly ap
proarhed with a personal appeal that
lie yWld his own life to Christ Paul j
' ma-3e direct address to King Agrippa.
He saw him as a possible convert.
I True, the king like many oiher self
inflated notables since, supposed that he
wa above the claims of religion. He
might give his august approval to I
'Christianity, but as for discipleship—!
, faugh! Did Paul think that he could |
become one of the despised sect?
With amused disdain he interrupted i
; the address, not confessing that he was ]
| "almost persuaded." as the old version
1 has it, but. as the American revision
translates it, "With but little persuasion
I thou wouldest fain make me a Chrls-
I tian." The idea is preposterous! The
fellow thinks that, with a few words,
he could Induce a Herod to follow a
Nazarene. There was a rebuke in the
, royal answer. Did It abash Paul?
If I'll!re* "Were Changed
. I Not for an instant. That ready orator
, | made instant and eloquent reply, "I
' ! would to God, that whether with little
, ! or much, not only thou, but also all
that hear me this day, might become
! such as I am. except these bonds." What
j an admixture of sublime passion with
exquisite courtesy! Paul wished his best
Ifor even his enemy—but not his bonds.
| | The scene recalls his own words to
I Timothy, "But the word of God is not
. ; bound.' The disciple might be fettered,
t but his message had free course.
Come to think of it that was an ex
, traordinary wish of Paul's for the king.
J , The unaffected audacity of It Is stag-
I 1 gering. It Implied the prisoner's moral
L .
" |
;i
New Home Treatment
For Banishing Hairs
(Beauty Topics)
With the aid of a delatone paste, It
I Is an easy matter for any woman to
; remove every trace of hair or fuzx
from face, nock and arms. Enough j
. oX the powdered delatone and water ]
is mixed into a thick paste and spread j
on the hairy surface for about 2 min- i
utes, then rubbed off and the skin '
washed. This completely removes the j
hair, but to avoid disappointment, get
the delatone in aa original package.
superiority to the monarch. The Chris
tian state Is more than royal. All the
attributes of worldly wisdom and pow
er and position are less desirable than
the qualities of a Christian. Stupen
dous as was the proposition made by
Paul, history has vindicated It fully.
An acid test was this which the pris
oner replied. Dare we wish for our
friends no better boon than that they
become as we are. Would it solve the
IS THERE ANY DIFFERENCE
IN CIGARS?
OF COURSE THERE IS AND
YOU KNOW IT. MOREOVER
THE LARGE MAJORITY OF
SMOKERS APPRECIATE AND
PATRONIZE QUALITY. THIS IS
WHY
KING OSCAR
5c CIGARS
ENJOY SUCH A STEADILY IN
CREASING PATRONAGE.
JOHN C. HERMAN & CO.
Makers
world's problems if all men wcr to be
come like unto us?
"What kind of church would my church
be.
If all Its members were Just like me?"
The Implication of Paul's statement la
tlmt every witness to the Gospel shOuU
testify first by his own life. Paul lived,
and so he was qualified to stand before
kings and preach.
13