6 Name Army Man Chief of Police in Chicago Chicago. John X Garrlty, form er colonel of the old Second Infantry Regiment of the Illinois National Guard, now a part of the Prairie Di vision on duty lis France, wu to-day appointed chief of police by Mayor Thompson, to till the vacancy eauresd by the death of Herman V. Scliuettler last summer. QL'I.N INK THAT DOBS NOT AFFECT HEAD Because of its tonic and laxative ef fect. LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE (Tablets) can be taken bv anjvMie without causing nervousness or ring ing in the head. There is only one "Bromo Quinine." K. W. GROVE'S signature on the box. SOo.—Adver tisement. FOR COUGHS, COLDS AND X SORE THROAT \ There Is n-mfdy eqaal to \ the old rrllabto \ JUNIPERTAIA The safest, best R. : and cheapest fam-Jyyy \ ily medicine. V 60 Doses, \ 30 Cents \ At t nqtwnu* cckumJ N, Druggists j 5 \ An Overcoat for Every Man In the Family That's a pretty fj- broad assertion , i to make but , ' we're not a bit < timid about c s '' saying it while . " !tet> v fine variety \ of overcoats , we have here WC, lidVL liUC. / tf r |MI £sg3L jgf 1 here san over- \ Jffjp coat here for ; father and right down the line for , j every fellow in / ; < the home. It's up . „ ' / to you men-folks to SHrar come in and get pff| llpl one of these. ipl|| ||!||| " Adler-Rochester" or "Stratford" Overcoats $25 s3® $35 $lO Dad may wear a conservative model, the eldest lad may have an Ulster or Ulsterette and the younger fellow will take to the new Waist-line Overcoat. It's the safest investment in Overcoats —when the Wm. Strouse label is attached. Wm. Strouse Store 510 Market Street FRIDAY EVENING, The Dreamer Who Saved the World International Sunday School Lesson for December 1 Is "J osc Pli Sold by His Brothers" Genesis 37:18-28 lly WILLIAM T. ELLIS There is a choke in our throats, a i mist before our eyes, a thrill in every fiber of our being, as we real- • ize, in waves and surges of feeling, that the war is over and that the j world has been saved. Even the j thoughtless and the irreverent tif there be any such left) cry 'Thank i God!" Now we have come to a point where we can look back and ] see the Providence which has ruled j in all the strange and tragic events: of these dark years. Already there j emerge above the darkness and tha' ruin dim foregteamS of the pur- | poses of the Supreme Ruler who I makes the wrath of man to praise ! him, ar.d who has declared "My j ways are not your ways, nor my j ♦houghs your thoughts." None is | so intidel as not to believe that throughout the war the Almighty j has been doing business with man kind. As if to re-enfcrce this great! truth of an overruling Providence, ] which lies like the light of sunrise | behind the darkness of the world's j night, millions are this week call-1 ed to consider the same theme as 1 it is set forth in the romantic story of Joseph, the dreamer whose dreams came true. The closing: chapters of the book of Genesis,' which began with the story of Crea tion, are devoted to the affairs of this one man. L)oes that seem lilto na Incongruous descent from the great and sublime to the small and the unimportant? Far front it. The providence of God is as truly con cerned in the affairs of one life as in the establishment o'f the uni verse. Reverently it may be said, that the Creator himself reveals his height in ordering the life of mortal, into whose frame he has breathed a free and sovereign spirit. All the final aims of God have to do with man's life. It is for the sake of humanity, in whose estate God himself has chosen to find his highest glory, that the worlds were brought into being; and It is for the sake of humanity that he has over turned nations and systems and the ancient order in a world cataclysm. As we follow the course of Joseph we find ourselves in a plain path of divine leading. By a Way .We Knew Not Bad men and good men are both tools in the hands of God. The mad and ruthless ambitions of a German kaiser; and the lofty, altruistic pur poses of an American president, alike serve the benign purposes of an overruling Providence. Joseph. BLAJRHISBUIUI TELEuKAPti: - . . , ' j the idealist, the dreamer, is an in-1 I strumer.t of heaven, as are also the 1 ! bloody brothers who consign him 1 to a cruel and unnatural "fate. As j j we now look back upon history, and I try to see things In the lnrge, it is j j clear that a vast Purpose was at j j work in Canaan and Egypt long j ago; and in the whole world before our eyes. I Joseph had to go into bondage In | order that his race might come into ! their heritage of freedofn. He was 1 carried out of Canaan to make it j possible that his father's remoter children should continue in Canaan, iHe became a slave in order that j they, ultimately, might become free. I Our sons have died in France in , order that never again will blacks In African forests; Ncstorians In far 'Kurdistan; Armenians in Turkey, j and Christians in the Balkans die ! victims ot tyranny and bigotry and I autocracy. We see something of I the sweep of the new peace and ' safety that have come .to earth ; through the sacrilice of all who have i suffered in the war. It is only In the j light of the world's long to-morrow 1 that we may be reconciled to the 'world's awful yesterday. Without I a grip upon the truth that, seen as 1 God sees it, life is a whole unity j of good, such tragedies as the war would be intolerable. "Still behind the dim unknown, Standeth God within the shadow, Keeping watch above his own." The Bord is still ruler of his 1 world, even as in the days of Jo seph. He holds our times in Ills hand. He may be leading by a ) way we know not. but he is still I leading. One simple truth that was ' visualized for me in a wonderful ' airplane ride I had in France, early I this year, is that the heavenward side of all clouds are beautiful be -1 yond . telling. Remembering the Josephs I Some\Vhere there is always a Jo-1 t soph. Most of the world ignores | that fact, it is more Interested in | 1 the rich and powerful Jacobs—about. Ito die. By the time a man has ] spent his force and originality, and I I become the jnere possessor of a j i fortune or a position, his ncigh | bors dub him a "leading citizen," I and elect him upon boards and com -1 mlttees and to public office; al though really his days of leader ] ship and initiative arc done. We | forget that it has ever been the young men who have created the new nations, the new eras, the new 1 methods. Now is the time to take thought j of Josephs, the saviors of to-mor ' row. "If ever there was a day for | looking well to our youth, protecting I it, inspiring it, and make sure that it dreams the right dreams, this is ; that day. A plastic world awaits ; shaping hands. Feeble and nerve j less lingers, surviving from yester day, are trying to crowd it back- in to the old molds. In vain. Youth | will have its way with the eman cipated world; ours it is to see that ! youth's way is a way of wisdom and brotherliness and reverence. At the I present time, it is more worth while i to teach a class of boys or girls the j clear and simple integrities which j God has stamped as eternal than it is to sit on committees of "emi nent citizens" or to be a director of ; the largest bank on the continent. Vital forces are human fprces. What counts most to-day for to-morrow iis boys and girls. If the recon ; struct ion era does not witness a | world-wide stressing of the import : ance of child-training it will have i missed its greatest opportunity. This ! is the hour to Concern ourselves with j springs. It is quite possible that some body who reads these lines has in ; his, oh more likely her, keeping the Joseph who 'will again save the j world. Nobody in that Southern i Christian home, a generation ago, | imagined that the boy, Thomas W. Wilson, who was trained at a fam ily altar, in a Sunday school and j church, and in a Christian school, | and saturated with the impulses and ! ideals of simple and since-e Anglo i Saxon Christian faith, would one day ; become the whole world's voice and I leader. Suppose there had been a i failure back in those forgott> n be jginnlngs? Every parent, every teach- I er, every editor, is divinely wise who assumes that the impressionable youth whom he is influencing, mtty 1 be the world's Joseph to-morrow. Recently I talked with a friend ! about his college. He recited a list ; of its graduates who had grown rich i and become figures in the commer i cial and political world—and some !of them, admittedly, by mathods j which the founders of the institu ! Hon would never have condoned. 1 But among them a'l there is only I one man who has become a moral I force of magnitude, and he is such ; because of his integrity in public | life. There has come forth no ) great prophet or Idealist. A few ! faddists, blind to the sublime spiri | tual integrities, are the college's S only contribution to public life on I the nonmaterial side. It has sent II forth no dreamers, no men or wo -1 men .of vision, to inspire their time. | j And this is the supreme arraign -11 ment to be made of many American j! schools and homes. We teach our j sons and daughters how to, grow I prosperous and "successful"; but we | are not burdened in our spirits with i j desire that they should be inter- I; preters of God to their time, dream ers and prophets. Out of the soul- I agony of the war, will a race of men | and women spring whose supreme i quest is for God, and for human ser- I vice. A "Good"eltoy With Bad Brothers This Joseph, son of Jacob and his favorite wife Rachel, was a guile less, coddled, self-centered young ster. That he was not entirely spoiled \ was a Wonden; his parents openlV ! favored him above his older broth ; ers. When there is favoritism in a I family trouble is certain to follow, j Jacob should have known better; ' for his own mother's partiullty to 11 him, above his brother Esau, had caused most of his troubles. In | stead, he openly showed his special love for his youngest son, adoring him with a coat that distinguished him from the others. There was a reason; but no rea son is justification for favoritism in a family. The brothers were rough, I uncouth, out-of-doors men, who had not always conducted themselves in a way that reflected credit upon the family honor. Joseph, on the con trary, was a gentle, sensitive, ima ginative and appreciative boy, frank, simple, sincere and affectionate. As such natures usually are, *!ie was -a bit of a prig and a poser. In his self-absorption he forgot the feel | ings of others. It was all right to I dream, but to tell his dreams as he did Was not considerate, to say the least. Most of the fine feelings thrive best in the seclusion of one'H own breast. It was neither bright nor brotherly for he boy to tell the others that, in a vision, he had seen theni and their father mak ing obeisance to him. We must confess that Joseph at this period belonged to the class of offensively ' good. "If the good were only clever, And the clever only good, The world would be better than We thought it possibly ever could." As for the ten brothers, perhaps. the lens said about them the bet ter. Earlier chapters of tho Bible story reveal their character. They may sectn poor stuff upon which to builcl a nation of promise. This Y>roportion of ten to one is sug gestive. Is it not about the normal proportion between the ."rough necks" and the "highbrows"? For a hundred thousand "Atlantic Month lies" there are a million "Cosmopoli tans" sold. For one person who reads Ibsen there are ten, plus, who read George Ade. For one man at the prayer meeting there are ten or* more at the prize-fight ,or the musical comedy. N'evertlid [lesr, us Joseph should have been 011 | terms of real friendship with hi* 1 brothers so the church folk should i be' comradely with the nonchurch' I crowd. Bet us hope that the shock I of the war will shake pious folk out of the bad and priggish habit of contorting only with pioug folk. A real indictment lies at the door of i religious people that they do not 1 know, understand or sympathize ! with their neighbors who ure not i religious. The church has too often 1 allowed herself to drift off into a | backwash of life, apart from the main currents. Joseph should have been an influence in shaping the life of his ten brothers; and the church should be a power, now more than ever, in changing the minds and motives of the men outside her membership. The world is not safe unless it is impelled and guid ed by the great convictions. War I has been a schoolmaster to show I the church how to lift the generality [of mankind up to new and nobler j levels. In this day of democracy, the leaven beiongs in the lump. Joseph's story bristles with truth for our times. But its main mes sage is one with the war's great lesson, which is that God rules, and, in spite o ail, gets his will done among men. When he needs a man in Egypt, he may have to send him by the slave route; but that road led to the highest place in the world. We know that wc are in God's hands, and on the way to somewhere and something good, we know not what, but God Is In control. His purposes are better than our plalis. Our path, as during the past four years, may run down through the j Dark Valley; but it leads to God's good goal. t I 111 ji. I\\ —Ruddy Cheeks and Strong || \ viipßlF Healthy Bodies m What greater endowment ||j|j . can a mother bestow upon her | What greater factor in keeping hO W /FT them than clean, whole'some food. H \l fi // more h ea lthful spread for jl bread can be purchased than gj • Swift's Premium 1 ' ' Oleomargarine |j WL It is sweet, pure, clean and appetizing. ||m \ N, & It has the elements for growtji that all , Made from pure vegetable oils; Govern- {Si ment inspected animal oils, Pasteurized milk and butter and finest dairy salt. Not K] JpFQmk touched by hand in manufacture or packing. rSB JY * u '' Saves 20 cents or more a pound. 9j & f • Fine for cooking and baking. 2g ' Other Quality Brandt 0 Fancy , , Svtfift & Company, U. S. A. S Harrisburg Local Branch fz&jj Seventh and North Streets I££®J t F. W.Covert, Manager ;. j ' BRIEFS FROM THE ' BIG NEWSEVENTS fl.v Associated Press ' \ New Vork. Pltfc engagement of 1 Miss Margaret Carnegie, daughter of I Andrew Carnegie, to Roswell Miller, |of this'city, is announced. j l'bllltpi, W. Va, A broken rail on ' the Buckbannon and Grafton branch 'of the Baltimore and Ohio ltu'li uud. ncur .this town, deruiled two passe 11 ger couches of the morning train from Buckhannon, injuring more than a score of passengers, two of them seriously. N l.omlon. ■ — A dispatch to the Daily ; Mail from Amcringen, Holland, says j the stories regarding the former Em peror's princely surroundings and big j dinner parties und similar functions j are not altogether true. | Charleston, W. Va. A committee I6f Charleston businessmen. Just re ! turned from Washington, was assured by officials there that the govern i ment explosive plant at Nitro would | not be abandoned. I Amoy. China. —An epidemic of in t fluenza is prevalent in Amoy. It is es ; timnted that 8 per cent, of the popu j latton is ill. | New York. Mrs. Dellora R. Gates. I widow of John W, Gates, died yester day at the Hotel Plaza, where she lived, after an attack of apoplexy. New York. Colonel William Hay ward. commander of the Three Hun dred und Sixty-tlfth Infantry, former ly the Fifteenth Regiment, New Y'ork National Guard, was wounded in the ' Champagne offensive last September, land with bis regiment has been cited ! for the Croix Do Guerre for gal [ lantry. I Amsterdam. According to a ; Treves dispatch, six American oflieers, I described as "of an American relief 1 committee," arrived nt Treves, con- I ferred with the Workmen's and Hol , diers' Council and proceeded to Cob -1 lenz. | Washington. Officials of the In- I dependent Order of P.'Nai B'Ulth pre | sented to President Wilson the gold I medal awarded him by the society last j Oetober as the man who rendered the i most distinguished service to hu manity during the past year. .tuenos Aires. The appointment of Dr. Thomas A. Bo Breton as Ar- I gentine Ambassador to the United j States, in succession to Dr. Komulo S. N'aon. is warmly welcomed by the Ar -1 gentian newspapers. NOVEMBER 29, 1913. \ "Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is certainly a *a \< most pleasant and efficient solution of the w \ 'castor oil problem' that confronts most lP V mothers."- (From a letter to Dr. Caldwell 1| \ written by Mrs. Chas. Daly, 412 Shonnard VI \ St., Syracuse, N. Y.) For most children a mild laxative, ad ministered occasionally, is all th.it is necessary to assure normal regularity and consequent good health. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a pleasant-tasting combination of simple laxa tive herbs with pepsin that acts gently, yet ef fectively; children like it and take it readily. DR. CALDWELL'S Syrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative ■ Sold by Druggists Everywhere 50 cts. (£,) SI.OO A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED. FREE OF CHARSE. By WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL. 4J9 WASHINGTON STREET. MONTICELLO. 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