2 (ffiftt^pcnnayLVAmftf^eqas] ME HI HOLD COM Attendance at Biederwolf Meet ings at Waynesboro So Great Building Is Enlarged Waynesboro, Pa.. Jan. 13. —The at tendance at the tabernacle to hear the sermons preached by Dr. Bieder wolf, the great evangelist, who is conducting a Ave weeks' campaign here, lias grown in such numbers that there isn't sufficient room in the spa cious building with a seating capacity of 6,000 persons to accommodate the people. It was announced on Sunday after noon and evening by Dr. Biederwolf that the tabernacle would be en larged and he requested -fifty mem bers of his congregation to report at the building early Monday morning with hatchets and saws, for the pur pose of taking out the east side of the tabernacle and making the build ing seventeen feet wider and 125 feet longer. The men reported lor work as requested and the addition was built, under the direction of S. K. Yankey. This will give accommoda tions to at least five hundred more persons. There will no services in the tabernacle Monday niglit. Dr. Biederwolf has been here one week and the attendance has been 29,500: collections amounted to $897.67, and there were 208 conver sions. Sunday was a red-letter day. At the men's meeting in the taber nacle during the afternoon there were 4,000 persons present; the collection amounted to $210.32, and there were 25 conversions. At the meeting for women held at the same time by Mrs. Marie Brake, assistant to Dr. Bieder wolf, in the Methodist church, there were 1,200 present; the collection amounted to $22.50. and there were seven conversions. At the service Sun day evening the tabernacle was not large enough to accommodate the gathering—several huntlred persons o.ould not gain admission. There were 5,000 people present. The collection amounted to $111.33, and there were 110 conversions. Dr. Biederwolf said the attendance was the best in his experience, con sidering the short time he has been conducting the meetings here. A naval officer I know 1 canceled a lot of en- E gagements last week I in order to devote the i time to his dentist. 'I "lamgoingon a long cruise," I he said, "and I know the value rj of good teeth. Good teeth mean jy good health afloat or ashore and K a man can't do his work well unless he has good health." In the army and the navy, and in all great industrial spheres the value of good teeth is being recognized. Statistics prove that sound, clean teeth, pre serve health and promote busi ness efficiency. The twicc-a-year visit to the dentist and the twice-a-day use of Colgate's Ribbon Dental Cream, the efficient, deliriously . flavoreddentifrice, insure sound clean teeth, better health and better looks. \bu too should use COLGATE'S RIBBON OENTftC CREAM Heats the House Now what do you think of Kelley's Coal? It has the heat efficiency that is lasting—not a flare-up and lot' of ashes and clinkers. Kel ley's coal is all quality coal—clean. Best for furnace are— Hard Egg at $6.45 Hard Stove at $6.70 H. M.KELLEY & CO. 1 N. ThW St 10th and State Streets. Cumberland Valley Railroad TIME TABLE In Effect November 30. 1913. TRAINS leave Harrisburg— For Winchester and Martlnsburc S:O3, *7:52 a. m„ *3:40 p. m. * 1 For Hagerstown, Chambersburg Car lisle, Mechanicsburg and intermediate Stations at 6:03, *7;52, *11:63 a. m •8:40. 6:32, *7:40 •11:16 p. m. " Additional trains for Carlisle and Mechanicsburg at 9:44 a. m., 2:18, 3:27 1:80, 9:30 a. m. For Dillaburg at 6:03, »7:62 and *11:61 a. m„ 2:18, *3:40, 6:32 and 6:3u p. m. •Daily. All other trains daily excent Sunday. H. A RIDDLE, P 3. H. TONGE, Q. p.'a Supt. "" UNDERTAKERS RUDOLPH K. SPICER Funeral Director and Embalmer SIS Walant St. ilr 11 Phone TUESDAY EVENING, {Bible Term at Elizabethtown College to Open Tomorrow j Elizabethtown, Pa., .Tan. 13.—At | Elizabethtown College to-morrow the I Bible term, which opens and continues : for ten dny:s, promises to be full of in- I terest and weil attended. •I TO MAKE LEBANON "DRV" Annvllle, Pa., Jan. 13. Remon ] strances aro being circulated through Annville for the purpose of making Lebanon county "dry." The remon j s trances, in the hands of several of ] the citizens, are being circulated, j about one-third of the voters of this j place having already affixed their sig- I natures. A remonstrance was placed | in Lebanon Valley College, nearly all ; the male students signing their names. OLD EM I'LOVF. RESIGNS 1 Waynesboro. Pa.. Jan. 13. —Newton ! S. Jacobs, North Potomac avenue, for j almost thirty-three years an employe [ of the Geiser Company, has resigned his position there to accept one in the ! patternmaking department of the Lan | dis Tool Company. Mr. Jacobs started i to work with the Geiser Company in 1880. when he was 12 years old, as ;: sweeper and errand boy. Major George Kemp Winner of Newport Slogan Prize Newport, Pa., Jan. 13.—The "Old Boy" has been discovered. Major 1 j George Kemp, of Philadelphia, has i written to his friends, Charles W. Eng j lish, stating that he had sent in the I I slogan. "Newport on the Blue Juni lata." Major Kemp, who has been su- I I perintendent of the Germantown Post j Office, was a resident here many years 1 a. o, but still takes an interest in and ! keeps in touch with the doings of his 1 j old home. COASTER BADLY INJURED Newport. Pa.. Jan. 13. —Samuel H. Kipp, 9 years old, son of Mr. and Mrs. i-.T. Walter Kipp, met with a very pain ! I'ul accident on Saturday while sled- I ding in Oliver street. The boy started : at the top of the hill, lying on his j stomach, with liis 5-year-old brother, I James Kipp, and Irwin Tarman on top of him. At the foot of the hill he , was unable to make the turn at a tree I and ran into a tie pile. His lip was | cut through, the whole way across, at i the base of the nose and required j many stitches to bring the parts to j gether. His companions were unin jured. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania Denver. —Mrs. Delia A. Oberlin, 45 years old, wife of IT. John Oberlin, j died yesterday. She is survived by her j husband, six children and one sister. Ml. Union. —Dr. D. C. Nipple died at his home in Pennsylvania avenue | after an illness of some months. He was 59 years old and was born in Sny j der county. Funeral services will take j place Wednesday afternoon from the Presbyterian jChurch. Mechanicsburg. Mrs. Mary E. ' Hippie, wife of Emory T. Hippie, died at her home near Mt. Zion Church, j Hampton township, Cumberland coun ty, on Sunday. Funeral services will Ibe held on Thursday morning at 11 o'clock, with burial at Marysville. Water Pipe Awards Under New System j Under the now system of competi- I tive bidding for Water Department 'supplies inaugurated by Commissioner of Public Safety Harry F. Bowman, contracts for laying pipe in Thompson, ! I.ogan and Second and Division streets were let yesterday afternoon by Mr. I Bowman. The awards were made ' shortly before I o'clock. Some weeks ago Mr. Bowman announced that no contract ft>r any materials would be | awarded in his department unless there was more than one bid offered. For this reason he rejected the proposal of ! Millard F. Saul at the time, the only bidder. Mr. Saul was one of the suc cessful bidders, however, and his name along with that of Johnson Brothers, another local firm, will be included in j a resolution formally letting the con ] tract that was submitted to Council j this afternoon. The bids, per foot, are as follows: | Thompson street, Johnson Brothers, 87 cents; Stucker Brothers. $1; M. F. ! Saul, 73 cents; W. H. Opperman, 74 I cents, and S. W. Shoemaker and Son, ;97 cents. Logan - street. Johnson Brothers, 22 cents; Stucker Brothers, 29 | cents; M. F. Saul. 27 cents, and W. H Opperman. 39-\ cents: Shoemaker and j Son, 27 cents. Second and Division I streets, Johnson Brothers, 22 cents | Stucker Brothers, 28 cents; M. F. Saul', 27 cents; W. H. Opnerman, 42 cents' and Shoemaker and Son, 27 cents. HOUSEKEEPERS have enough to do on wash day with out adding unneces i sary drudgery. Household expenses : are great enough with out adding unneces sary costs. Clothes wear out soon enough without being scrubbed and "eaten up" with chemicals. Housewives should know i Babbitt's Best Soap the economical laun dry soap that lightens work and does not harm the finest fabrics. Save Babbitt Trade Markt Exchangeable lor Valuable B. T. BABBITT, Inc. New York |WEST SHORE NEWS MARYSViLLE PUBLIC FOITAII ERECTED Needed Improvement Secured by Contributions Solicited by J. D. Carmichael PI . -v,- :■■■. : ♦ - . pw~v ' M V; mm I The finishing touches in' the placing iof Marysville's handsome new public water fountain took place on Saturday afternoon. Although the work is all completed, water will not be turned into the fountain until Spring, on ac count of the danger of freezing. Im pressive dedication exercises will be held at that time. The fountain is twelve feet in height, with a large globe on top, in which an electric light has been placed. The fountain has drinking re ceptacles for dogs and horses, and a | sanitary drinking bulb for the needs of man. The bowl for dogs is seen in the picture in front, near the bot tom; the bowl for horses is at the left and the sanitary drinking bulb is at the right. Pure mountain water, piped from the reservoir of the Marysville Water Company, at Lamb's Gap, four miles west of Marysville, will be furnished for the fountain, free of charge, for ninety-iiint - years, by the company. A public fountain has been one of ! .Marysville's greatest heeds for many | years. Through the hot summer days i of next summer, the weary traveler, | refreshed by a drink of pure, cool I water, will breathe many thanks to Jacob D. Carmichael, Marysville's street commissioner, through whom the purchase and placing of the foun tain was made possible. He first | thought of Marysville's great need and I set out to secure money for the pur chase of the fountain. In the securing .of the necessary contributions, Mr. Carmichael put in eight weeks at hard I work. "Jake," as he is familiarly | called, deserves great credit from ail , the town's residents, for the work he I has done for "A Bigger and Better I Marysville." State Officials Hold Farmers' Institute in New Cumberland Hall A number of farmers from York and Cumberland counties are attend ing the farmers' institute which opened yesterday under the auspices of the Department of Agrictulture, in Junior Hall, New Cumberland. An address on "Potato Culture" was given by H. M. Anderson and D. H. Watts spoke on "Soil and Plant Nutrition." In the evening C. M. Barnitz, a son of the late Rev. Mr. Barnitz, a former pas tor of the Methodist Episcopal Church at New Cumberland, talked on the "Chick from Shell to Maturity," il lustrated with lantern slides. Music was rendered by the Emerson Glee Club and men's chorus. AI)MINISTRATOR APPOINTED letters of administration were is sued yesterday in the estate of John, Miller, deceased, of New Cumberland. His son, Amos Miller, has been ap pointed administrator. SPOKE FOR ANTI-SALOON LEAGUE The Rev. A. O. Stone, of New Cum berland, spoke in the interest of the Anti-Saloon League near Halifax on Saturday and Sunday. STUMPF-MUSSER WEDDING Lltitz, Pa., Jan. 13.—Miss Susan B. Mutsser was married yesterday to Mil lard E. Stumpf, of Elizabethtown, by the Rev. Jacob Hershey, at the home of the bride. PURCHASES GROCERY STORE Mrs. Jennie Sweeney, of Wormleys burg, has just completed the purchase of a grocery store in the upper end of the borough from Mrs. J. W. Stone sifer. Mrs. Stonesifer purchased the store from Harry Spangler about a! month ago. JAMES SMITH RECOVERS | James Smith, of Front and Ferry! streets. Wormieysburg, is able to be! about the streets again after having' been confined in the Harrisburg Hos- j pital with serious injuries. Mr. Smith | was working on an engine ire the! Enola yards several weeks ago and in falling off. fractured his skull. REVIVALS IN WOIIMLEYSBVBG Revival services which are attract ing much attention are being held in St. Paul's United Brethren Church, Wormleysburg, nightly, conducted by the pastor of the charge, the Rev. Mr. Renshaw. The services are now in their second week and already several conversions have been reported. One of the features of the meetings is the congregational singing. BANQUET FOR FIREMEN Penbrook, Pa., Jan. 13.—Plans are being made by the members of the fire company for the semiannual ban quet which will be held in the town hall either in the latter part of this month or early in February. An exe cutive committee will be appointed in the near future to arrange for the feed. Invitations will be sent to all of the members of the company and it is thought, more thun one hundred will be present. HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH !A Great Kidney Remedy I According to Thousands of Reports My »wife has been suffering with 1 kidney and bladder trouble in a bad form since she v\ as nine years of age. ' She wag in such a condition that she was confined to her bed and several j doctors here treated her, but to no effect. About nine months ago she I began to take Dr. Kilmer's Swamp- Root and began to Improve !mme- ] i diately. She is practically well now and i |is able to do ail of her work. At the' ! time she was sick she suffered great- j ily and It looked as If she would die, I ' but thanks to your valuable remedy,' [she is now a new woman. I can roc- i j ommend Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root as] ithe best kidney and bladder remedy on 1 earth and if you desire you may pub- , lish this letter in the "hope that it may ! enable other svfferers to get relief. Yours very trulv, G. T. CURRY, Hubbard, Texas, j Subscribed and sworn to before me this sth day of April, 1912. H. C\ BISHOP. Notary Public. | Gentlemen:—-I sold the above Mr. i G. T. Curry the Swamp-Root. J. Olin Keitt, Druggist. Letter to | Dr. Kilmer & Co., | Blnghamton, N. Y. | Prove What Swamp-Root Will l>o For You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., I Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size ! bottie. It will convince anyone. You j ! will also receive a booklet of valuable I information, telling about the kidneys | and bladder. When writing, be sure : and mention the Harrisburg Tele graph. Regular flfty-cent and one dollar size bottles for sale at all drug stores. —Advertisement. COUNCIL ELECTS ROSSEL I SEAMAN ASS'T CITY CLERK t Incumbent Under Old Form of Government Unanimously Chosen Today ———mm Rosso I R. Sea fflunder old V 9 wl form of y , • afternoon elected ymLk as Assistant Cit> Clerk to llarris mission form of m A- JI " The ordinance creating the office of assistant at $1,200 per year was 1 passed last week and upon motion of Commissioner W. H. Lynch, with the second of Commissioner Harry V. Bowman, Mr. Seaman was by unani mous vote chosen to the position at this afternoon's session. Mr. Seaman, who has served in the State Depart-' ment of the Dairy and Food Commis sion and later as clerk to Mayors Gross and Royal, has an unusually fine record as Assistant City Clerk and a wide circle of friends. Council took no action with refer ence to new officers for the Police De partment. Rumor had it yesterday that the expected shake-up to the ex tent. of a dozen policemen, a couple of sergeants and the lieutenant was to occur to-day. Commissioner Lynch, of the Department of Streets and Public Improvements, smilingly de clined to discuss the matter to-day. Board of Hraltli Ordinance Passed Council passed finally the ordinance creating the Board of Health. The members of the present board have bean asked to remain, although their terms of office will be appointive for terms of from one to five years. The acceptances of D. E. Tracey, Ed. C. Thompson and J. William Bow man as members of the. Board of Pub lic Works were received by Council to-day. The Park Board's acceptances got in too late for action to-day, but will be formally received at the next meeting. Council approved the contracts of the pipe line bids as awarded by Com missioner of Public Safety Bowman yesterday. By the competitive bidding method adopted by the superintend ent $647 was saved. The Friendship Fire Company was BTiven permission to hold a fair in the fire house from January 19 to Febru ary 2 on motion of Commissioner Taylor. Mayor Royal, while declaring that he wasn't opposed to the reso ltion, asked whether the old council hadn't passed an ordinance prohibit ing this. Mr. Taylor said the com pany wanted the proceeds to refur nish its parlors in view of expected entertainment when the big firemen's convention comes to Harrisburg. He knew of no ordinance against it, he said, although he believed Council once made a rule prohibiting this. The Mayor said similar requests re ferred by him to the old Council were refused action. He didn't recollect, ho said, that such permission had been granted. An the inflamed nerves into temporary quiet. It does not cure. Not until «tlie nutrition of the nerves is restored will the inflam- i mation subside. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills furnish to' the blood the needed elements and the'blood conveys them to the nerves. The only way of getting food or medi cine to the nerves is through the blood. Remember that. Neuralgia is a general term. It l means inflammation of a nerve. It is given different names according to the nerve affected. Sciatica is neuralgia of I the sciatic nerve. Application of heat will soothe the pain in all forms of neuralgia and Dr. Williams' Pink Pills will correct the condition that caused it. Your own druggist sells Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills and the Dr. Williams Medicine Co.. Schenectady, N. Y., will send you a little book on "Home Treat ment of Nervous Disorders" for the asking.—Advertisement. The Music That Mother Played th e onc^w " For the cost barrier has fallen in this store from the best pianos and player-pianos in the world. If you desire one of the better makes—the power of our organization can change that desire into realized possession! PIANOS CHICKERING, EVERETT, HARDMAN, KIMBALL, POOLE, BUSH & LANE, MERRILL, ESTEY, SHONINGER, CABLE-NELSON. Angelus and Autotone Player-Pianos From a field of America's best pianos and player-; pianos—select yours. Select your terms —$5 monthly and upward— makes an excellent instrument your own. There are no interest charges. A month's free trial—privilege to exchange within a year—are yours also. A guarantee covering five years. Certainly—you can play any music—lf you but will. The J. H.TROUP Music House Troup Building, 15 S. Market Square raise money. And they'll need it for tliis convention." "Well, I don't recollect of it," said the Mayor. "Oh, my, yes," said Mr. Lynch. The Mayor suggested, then, that in view of the unusual occasion, that he would vote "aye." Council adopted the resolution. Another application for a ponce man's job was filed. Tho applicant is Jack W. Witiner, First ward. Thomas W. Eider wrote that he has a $3 note issued by tho borough of Harrisburg in 1838 and wanted to know If he could get It redeemed. The matter will be looked Into to deter mine whether or not this and other notes of the kind are legal. FIRST NATIONAL ELECTS At the annual meeting of the stock holders of the First National Bank held to-day seven directors were elect ed for the year. Approval was given to the action of the board of directors in accepting the national currency plan. The board of directors elected > follow: C. 11. Backenstoe, John Fox, Weiss, William Jennings, W. T. Hild-. rup, Jr., A. Carson Stamm, James,' •Brady, John K. Small. H A Mfl fflHk J1 JB| Notch COLLAR ! 2 lor 25 cents Clnott. PeaboJy St Co., I«e. M»h«n Paint Your Car We liave an absolutely dust- i tight paint rodm, light and warm. The best paint and varnish money can buy and a First Class Coach Painter We will repaint your cap free if our work don't hold up. Harrisburg Auto Company 1 THIRD and HAMILTON r— HZIZZHZIZZZIZ' PATENT YOUR IDEAS and make I «»»»»"»«« boor |U| ""' r— —' "HOW TO CET THEM" nnone y I T/ ad vie* mks " Whk, If Net Bumrfrf. WPft-KfT" JOSHUA R. H. POTTS 929 CHESTNUT ST. PHILADELPHIA MSC3>.W«»to»t«Q.D.C.