I The Store That ¥7" T* \T \T T"* T\ \T f O The Home of Makes Them ]( E N ED I S All Advertise 1 1 A Cut Prices! Standard Medicines p ace Powders Toilet Creams | Saturday Saleof Rubber Goods I ssg=s -z wmmm -)ic Sassafola 15c " -Resize 1 ond s Vanishing Cream, tubes, 14c Qatnrilau Q n | a (.1. I D IL C * -n p. \ bc Azurea Face Powder 75c 50c size Stillman's Cream 27c OatUrdaySale Saturday Sale 01 BillD SVNngeS * CX , "A C Florayme Face Powder 79c 25c size Satin Skin Cold Cream 15c Fountain Quvin<a ..J SI.OO Pinkham s \eg. Compound 62c Hudnut's Face Powder 39c 25c size Satin Skin Creaseless Cream .. 15c rOUlltaill OyNllgeS 311(1 AloftllZerS 25c Bromo Seltzer 14c Hudnut's Rice Powder 17c SOcsizeKintho Cream .. 39c $1.25 Fountain Syringe 83c 50c Atomizer 38c s i-°° Safgoi 55c Carmcn Facc Powdcr 29c ** pompc,„ Manage Deam.... 25c fus Ponnt , in 0 5c AtomLer v° i?! n ! e f t0 " C ™° sl>ha " ! V" I ,T Laßlache Face Powder 32c 25c size Mind's Cold Cream, tube's !!" 17c 98c Fountain Syringe 69c i? C n^ t ? n " Z ® r 580 * r . S na 9c Java Rice Powdcr *. 27c 50c size Hind's Money and Almond s l - 50 J-a Salle Fountain Syringe sl.lß 'J'?- Atomizer 78c ■ SI.OO Listerine 53c Rogers & Gallett"Rice Powder 21c „.^ re . am • 31c $1.23 Cleveland Fountain Svrinee 98c '' " S ' omizer 98c $3.75 Horlick's Malted Milk $2.75 Rogers & Gallett Face Powdcr 39c Daggett & Ramsdell Cold sl.lß Fountain Syringe 98c 75c Alellin s l ood 50c j css p ace j> ow der 19c i '"r Vi $2.00 (joodyear Fountain Syringe .... $1.35 Rlllh 75c Jad's Kidney Salts 41c Woodbury's Face Powder'!.'!!.'!.'.'.'.'.' 15c 3 5c size CrcnfeDeMerldor' 3 " 1 14 1 &5 J? ad ? well J ounta ? n Syringe ... $1.23 _ Y 6 * 25c Red Cross Kidney Plasters 15c Tetlow's Swandown Face Powder 9c =;oc cize Creme rv\forwlnr g7 _ ST"~ Goodyear Fountain Syringe ... $1.63 50c Bulb Syringe 38c |soc Sal-Hcpatica 28c Sanitol Face Powder 15c 50c >Wtugr™'* MilkW°ed Cream '.V. 29c !im Sli 'i, 9 * K C Blh Syringe 48c 0 - t • • Charles' hace Powder 29c ci /in * i * . rM ... , * s*-.UU Ilub Combination $1.48 /oc Buib Syring ~. 58c 2oc Listerine 15c • r-i ."D" "I oc - 00 slze ln !? ra,n s Milk Weed Cream, 67c $2.00 Combination I 4R CI m B„1K LRL ™ rll SI.OO Scott's Emulsion 75c L a BaronessePowder 6 . °. W . T... ... ..! 19c | P . almo . ,,ve . c, . t J a,n •• • • 25c $2.25 Puritan Combination \ ...... .. . $1.65 $1.25 Bulb Syringe !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'.!!! 98c 25c Atwood's Bitters 14c Lady Mary Face Powder 39c 25 c s i ze Cream 17c ll'sn C l ? mbinatl °" •. S LIS $2.00 Ladies' Rotary-spray Syringe ... $1.38 SI.OO Danderine 57c Elcava Face Powder 39c ? 0 c Riker's ViJlet Cerate *" \ol fi S ?i iall t cn^e F Syringe .... $1.23 ■ 25c Vicks Van-O-Rub 15c Manilla Poudre.de Riz 38c f oc Si .!!!! S s2s ° C '° od * car Combination $1.68 H 25c Hill's Cascara Quinine ~l4c Marquese Powder 39c 50c Viola Cream 29c 1 OatUfdaybale ( r! il! D °* s •••••••• 39c udy cS !!!!!!!!!!;:::! 39c .. a *^ day _ Sa !® Rubber Necessities 25c James' Headache Powders".l3c Q . * Q - f 50c ChTrle^iq^Food 31 " '. 29c a^er Rubber-lined Sanitary Aprons 21c 50c Sioan's Linimcn, . 28c Saturday Sale Of —— |l.2| H„b Hot Water Bo,„e 67. £-3^2U SI.OO Nuxated Iron Tablets 59c _ a . .. - Saturday Sale Of IAI ?u°l 2°" 6 65c Rubber Sheeting, single coated, the yd., 65c M 50c Glover's Mange Remedy 29c Tfillftt. AxtlCleS n.-L.i A |}'r H 6 tw )u* B . ottle 73c Hard Rubber Pile Pipes 39c N SI.OO Milk's Emulsion ...' 67c W ' ° Dental CreamS I -5® Hot Water Bottle ......... 98c Rubber Bath Tub Mats $1.78 50c Ely's Cream Balm 29c "5c Pinaud Lilac Water 48c Kolynos Dental Cream 14c Bottfe a llot " ater 4 . „ Rubber Complexion Brushes . 19c K, U„ sf , m |a ,o 75c Mercolized Wax 48c Colgate's Dental Cream ' ?(\r i in r> A "iV VWT 'W ' 3 Rubber Bath Sprays 69c -3c Mustcrole 18c 50c C anthrox 27c Pebeco Dental Cream ■ Ijr g°> aI Rd Water Bottle ... 9 8c Rubber Crutch Tips, the pair ,10c 1 52.00 Lckman s Alterative $1.20 75c Amonized Cocoa 45c Lyon's Dental Cream " 15c ( oodveVr nU l i ? i' V, Corrugated Rubber Mats 38c §1 Alpine Tea 6c SI.OO Kenklav Freckle Cream 69c Sanitol Dental Cream 3c T*7? -ri ?TJ Special $1.48 Perfume Atomizers 78c ■ 3oc Drake's Croup Remedy 18c SI.OO Delatone 63c Pond's Extra Paste 15 c S?'iO T W Prld r , J L3S Rubber Plant Sprinklers 78c 50c Lysol 29c SI.OO Othine Freckle Cream 59c Sozodont Paste l7c |7 SfSew?!! ' J 1 ' 63 Rubber Air Pil,ows $1 " 78 H rOc Rheuma (for Rheumatism) 28c 50c Doris 1249 Rouge V.. 39c Mennen's Paste ' i7 r cVm \v \v . of $ Rubber Bath Shoes 98c H 25c Jayne's Expectorant 15c 50c El Rado Depilatory 27c Arnica Tooth Soap ..!!!!!!!!!!!!! j! j , 5c Standard WaJerßotrta ! Iljs U^Xr'T^'\\V.V.V.V.V.':.V: 48c I KENNEDY'S 321 iV\ark:et Street! THE WOMAN WHO DID NOT CARE 1 Girl at Jacob's Well Likej Present Day "Popular" Variety (By William T. Ellis.) Because the principal highways of | the great cities, and the places of j public entertainment, are nowadays crowded v ith overdressed, over-1 rouged, oversophisticated women, i who have apparently parted company j with the womanly ideals of their grandmothers, it is easy and natural' to say that the women of our time j are careless of the great verities' which have ennobled womanhood 1 since the days of Mary. Such a; judgment is unfair, because it fails lo take into account the greater num ber of homekeeping, modest, culti-1 vated, sweet and sincere girls and women whose existence is not flaunt- ' ed before the eye of the idlers on the j highways of life. So there is pertinency and profit J in the present study of a woman of the long ago who was free, careless, cynical, immodest, and ready for any I wayside acquaintance. This woman 1 HYOMEI ■ I (PMWHCED m/f-O Mf) | ENDS CATARRH, ASTHMA, Bronchitis, Croup, Cough* and Colds, or money back. SoW and guaranteed by H. C. Kennedy. Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service *■ By McManus ~ I ' r - ) hrU 1 Tot^T™ FRIDAY EVENING, at Jacob's well embodied our modern ideas of the "advanced" and "world ly-wise" woman, except that she had neither wealth nor education. She was of the sort who profess to scoff at the modesty of their sisters. For herself, she was ready to strike up an acquaintanceship with any man that happened along: and she was too shallow to understand the sig nificance of the fact that none of these friendships were continuing. She knew many men, but among them all there was no one who respected her utterly and loved her devotedly, being willing to leave all else and cleave only unto her. Obviously, it is more of a tribute to a woman's worth to be loved by one true man, than to be "popular" with a crowd of men. Pert, tantalizing, ingenious in ex cuse, quick in repartee, this woman of Sychar saw things only in their superficial aspects. It is hard for the right sort of young man to believe j in the existence of such women, who are not genuine, not good, not rever-! ent, not constant and not truly lov-; ing. As one sees the throngs of ul- 1 tra-fashionably-gowned women, in ; restaurants and hotels and places of entertainment and 011 the streets, and | knows them for light-minded spend ers and wasters, mere moths flutter-! ing around the dangerous candle of! pleasure, one finds it difficult to vis- \ ualize them as the makers of happy, I restful homes, as the inspirers of men,' and as the mothers of patriots, heroes! and saints. This is a phase of the modern ; "woman question" from which one shrinks; it is more satisfactory to! contemplate that larger number of | women, who while splendidly true to ! the type of Christian womanhood, are expressing themselves in old andt new ways for the present time, I through home and church and club and social relationships. After all, I as our story of the Samaritan woman : makes clear the old, old thirst for i life's realities is ever-present; it is merely unrecognized or hidden by the foolish. When The Right Man Appears One sure mark of the best friend j is that he helps us to be our best! self. Jesus pre-eminently had this! quality. He discovered the soul o; t this misguided Sychar woman. His directness and candor and sincere I spirituality pierced the shell of her > superficial worldllness. He met her '| on one level, and left her on a htgh ■ er. Casual acquaintances a thirsty I I man by a well, and a woman with a I drinking vessel, eager for a flirtation ij — became friends on the high plane • I of concern about God and the human ' soul. Do we wonder how our touch ! | affects the lives we meet? Are they II left on a level where it is easier for • I them to think about God? ; There was nothing snobbish about ■ j Jesus. He freely spoke to all whom ;j He met on the highway of life. Last 1 j week we saw Him colioquing with a Jerusalem scholar and aristocrat: | this week He is in conversation with i a Samaritan woman who was appar ; ently a field hand. Neither the fact • j that she was a woman nor the other ! fact that she was of the despised, hy > | brid Samaritan race, marred His real ■ friendliness. Had He been more i zealous for the mlnutae of the strict | Jewish law He would not have gone I through Samaria, but would have ! made the long detour east of the ' jJordan. Few places In Palestine are more thoroughly accredited than Jacob's well. It is near Alt. Gerizim and Mt. '! Ebal, and hard by is the city of Shec j hem, now called Nablus, a fanatical community where at present a garri | son of Turkish troops are quartered. 1 The tomb of Joseph is on the neigh j boring hillside. During the Crusades a church was built over the well, but j it had been long in complete ruin; | before the war, the Greek Church I was building a new edifice. I have J drunk from the deep well that Jacob dug; and the monk who was my con ductor seemed to marvel that I did | not carry any of this holy water I away. The Wells of the World What thoughts throng one as he , stands by the worn stone coping of jthis very well upon which the weary Saviour rested! Nothing is more ! suggestive to a thoughtful traveler than these ancient wells of the Orient, j But this one typifies the highest truth the Water of Life. A public I I fountain in Philadelphia bears the] jfsiinple inscription, "Whosoever drink HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH eth of this water shall thirst again"] a picture of the transitoriness of all the satisfactions that earth offered. This jaded woman, who had drunk the cup of passion to its dregs, had I a soul-thirst too great for her own! understanding. Jesus met her real! need by offering her the privilege of! becoming in herself a fountain; and I when she accepted His gift, she did begin to supply others in the village of Sychar. Even this loose woman! straightway became an evangelist, j That is Christ's plan for all His I friends. He does not make then* cis tern-saints, mere receivers and Von- , tainers of the water of grace; He makes them fountain-friends, flowing! springs of blessings. Modern hotels! advertise, "Running water in alii rooms. ' Would that the churchj might proclaim, "Flowing waters in' all saints." We want welling Chris-1 tians more than we want anything else this side of heaven. In Shanghai there is a fine tlior °uhfare called "Bubbllng-Well Koau. which is as badly misnamed as some Chrlstains, for its well is neither bubbling nor sweet. But : what a joy it would be if we could i all have our homes on a spiritual; Bubbllng-Well Hoad." For the wa ters of grace are "living" waters,' fresh, sweet and effervescent. Unless I Christ is a present reality. He is not! a reality at all. One cannot live on. old spiritual experiences any more i than he can subsist on last year's i bread. Day by day Christ is to be' experienced anew by all who would i be fountain-friends of His. The Tactful Approach To be willing to accept favors is! more difficult for high spirits than! to be willing to bestow thein. The ex quisite tact fulness of the Master's ap- j proach to this common woman is noteworthy: He permitted her to do Him a favor. That is often the sur est approach to the good will of a person. weary, thirsty Jesus sought a drink at the hands of the woman who had doubtless come from! the harvest field with a vessel to be filled. Xn wayside ministries there must be wisdom in making a begin ning. Contact is the first important step in personal work. So this tired traveler entered the first and most natural door to this woman's confl | dence. All the surroundings recall to the i modern traveler, as to Jesus and the 1 Samaritan woman,- the history of the ] Jews. In Nablus alone does one find i a synagogue of the Samaritans. So | ■ when the talk of Jesus crowded the j woman close, and He had shown to! her her real self, she took refuge in | a theological controversy no new \ ! dodge. i Then followed the greatest defini- j [tion ever made of spiritual religion. IW e are amazed that such treasures! i should be poured out to a congrega- I tion of one and such a one at that! j Some teachers and preachers do not jdo their best because they do not ; have hearers worthy of them. That | was not the Jesus way. Ho gave His ! finest to the least deserving. j week we learned how one timorous | aristocrat heard "God so loved the ! world." Now it is to the Samaritan j peasant woman that the words ring I out: "God is a Spirit, and they that j Are You Worn Out? Does night find you exhausted nerves unsettled —too tired to rest? ] scorn EMULSION is the food-tonic that corrects these i troubles. Its pure cod liver oil is a cell-building food to purity and i enrich the blood and nourish the nerve-centers. Your | strength will respond to "f 1 Scott's Emulsion — but see Yfj/ t that you get SCOTT'S. 4LUL Scott St Bowii, Liioorafield, N.J, 16-19 ' FEBRUARY 9, 1917. worship liim must worship him in Spirit and in truth." In the light of that sublime decla ration from the lips of the Lord Him jself, how all petty controversies over 1 forms and codes and creeds,, and the j lesser things that make up our de i nominatlonalism, shrivel into noth j ingness. The plumb-line has been | laid to our building by the Master: ! excerpt our worship conform thereto, all of its beauty and ecclesiastical correctness will be in vain. These are the words to whisper to our own hearts as we enter upon our daily devotions, and as we approach the j Jpl§L Absolutely No Pain < My latest Improved appll ' a AfNL jrtji KLI ancea, Including aa oxeygen l"ei* ■ lr apparatna, makes . (*V . extracting and all deatal \V V jm I vork positively palnlea* A /Ap Kr\ v . .'■ "*r kj and la perfectly harm- O V j Ua*. <Agnableetla^^^^r EXAMINATION FREE vS&.'TS*2 ———— S"°y 60a Registered 4V r Gold crowns and Graduate brldgo work 3, M. 5 Aaalat-r*- T JEF* Office open dally BiRO 22K (tld crown. . .93.00 JL f to • p. M.i Man, Wed. and Sat., till • p. m.| Sua. days, 10 a. at. ts 1 p. aa. 8F.1.L PHONE 8323-K. BAnr TKRMJ O* FA'JTMUCNTB ' 320 Market St. (Over the Hak) S Harrlsburg, Pa. „ hvrt . M sanctuary on the Sabbath "Spirit | and Truth." ! In this immortal story, tly! Samar : itan woman found the Messiah for (herself: and straightway her entire life was changed and she became a j bearer of the Good News. May the j sume result follow its study by j countless lives, the world around. QUICK RELIEF fop VOICE STRAIN o l p r^. E^Tr BT,, BROWN'S "oxchuITROCHES JOHN I. BROWN & SON. Boston. Ma**. 7
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers