Demonstration OR THE We Will Have at Our Store All Week MR. W. C. ELLIS, SUk Artist Who will demoaatrate aad exhibit th« FAMOUS White Sewing Machine We want every lady in Harrlsburg and vicinity to call at our store and get a beautiful souvenir—your name la silk. Initial coat marks for the gentlemen, beautifully em broidered with finest shaded corticelli silk: and also see The Wonderful Sewing Machine We will lake your old sewing machine in exchange and you can have a new white sew ing machine at a reduced price and all the time you want to pay for it. ROTHERT'S 312 Market St. r ( T "\ New Queen Sewing New Model Sewing Machine on oar Club Mach ne on our Gnb Plats. P'®ns $25.00 $16.50 ✓ V J DON'T {RUST CMEI Thousand? Experience Bad After Effectt From This Danger ous Drug A Safe Testable Subatltnte I* Dr. j Edward/ Olive Tablets for the Liver. Dr. F.M. Edwards, a prominent phy- I nician a Ohio, has discovered a laxu- 1 tive an. liver toner in a combination j of vegeable materials mixed with olive oil, whch is in effect almost exactly 1 like crfomel, except that there are I none q the bad after effects. Dr. Edwards has long been a foe of ealomJ, though he recognized its value alongwlth its dangers. His distrust of the uncertain drug evenflally started him, years ago, j towards experiments with the view of discd'cring a substitute, a«d he has j beenfor several years in possession of the / long-sought-for combination, whfh is in the shape of a little sugar | coajed. olive-colored tablet. ■fie results of 17 '-ears' experience i am practice are embodied in these m/velous little tablets. They are called Dr. Edwards' Olive i Tplets. And their effect on the liver I been the means of relief to many I o Dr. Edwards' regular patients as veil as to thousands of others who j suffered and were afraid of calo- M, There Is no necessity, when you take ir. Edwards' Olive Tablets, by follow- t ng them up with nasty, sickening, I griping salts, or castor oil, as you do j after taking calomel. Try them. 10c i isnd 25c per bf>x. The Olive Tablet Com- | r>any, Columbus. O. At all druggists.— Advertisement. 1 Let Us Do This Tedious Work We isk you for your own good, J to let lis do the most disagreeable work of wash day. Not only the; wasling but the wringing the | dryitg the ironing. While we j are liligentlv and carefully clean- j ing>'Otir clothes you can be read-j ingthe latest novel or visiting! fric»ds. No hot kitchen,! No lost j lenper! No tired out feeling! Thnk of it. Our charges for fam ih washing are extremely mod eate. Send you little boy Hound for our price list. Or fione or drop a postal saying ••'hen you want our wagon to call. Troy Laundry Hoffman & Schooley Props. Both Phones 1520-26 FULTON ST. * s Non-greasy Toilet Cream keeps the akin soft and velvety in rou*h weather. An exquisite toilet prep aration. 25c. OORCAS DRUG STOKES 1« I*. Third St.. aad P. R. R. station WEDNESDAY EVENING MRS. MRU TO BE HIED Oil FRIDAY Member of One of City's Oldest Families; Mother of Miss Elizabeth Muench The funeral of Mrs. Adelaide jE. Muench, widow of the late Isaac S. Muench, who died yesterday morning at her home, 1352 State street, will take place Friday after- I noon at 2 o'clock. Services will be : conducted by the Rev. S. Winfleld ; Herman, pastor of Zion Lutheran Church. Burial will be made in the Harrisburg Cemetery. Mrs. Muench was the daughter of the late Benjamin and Priscilla Stroh, early residents of Harrisburg. She is survived by one daughter, Miss Eliza beth Muench, a music teacher of this I city, and the following brothers and staters: Mrs. F. B. Kinneard. Mt Hol ly Springs; Mrs. W. Miller, Mrs. Cath erine Dwyer and Mrs. Charles E. Co vert, Harrisburg; Harry Stroh, and E. B. Stroh, Washington, D. C. The late Isaac Muench, was for many years identified with the freight department of the Pennsylvania Rail road as chief clerk. Mr. Muench was a machinist by trade, and in 1862 en tered the Lnited States navy as an en gineer. He served in the gulf aquad r?n " Il( ' er Admiral HWragut, and in the West Indies squadron under Ad miral Larder until the fall of 1865, when he returned to Harrisburg and entered the services of the Pennsvl van!a Railroad. \v. C. T. 17. REORGANIZED The Meade W. C. T. U. met last night at the home of J. H. Kase, 15 North Seventeenth street and reor ganized with an enrollment of forty one active and six honorary members. Mrs. M. M. Stees presided. These of ficers were elected: President, Mrs. H. J. Kase; vice-president, Mrs. Frank Seeman Fisher; corresponding secre tary, Mlsa Hazel Stahler; recording secretory, Mrs. Violet Hollar Bolan; treasurer. Mrs. George Shertzer. The next meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Kasa. Friday nlsrht, March sixth. j CHRONIC COLDS Are Contracted by Changeable Weather. A Simple Remedy, j Sudden changes are particularly trying for old people or those who suffer front a. weakened, run-down condition, chronic coughs, colds or bronchitis, but If such persons would only apply common sense methods in the treatment of their condition much discomfort and suffering might be avoided. The most essential thing to do is to build up strength, enrich the blood, increase vital resistance, and to ac complish this nothing equals Vinol, our cod liver and iron tonic. Mrs. M. J. Grimes, of Springfield, Ohio, says: "I was badly run-down nervous and weak, and while In this condition I contracted a heavy cold and rheumatism. Vinol was recom mended and I am happy to say it cured my cold and restored me to health again." . Old people, delicate children, run down, overworked and tired women, those suffering from bronchitis' chronic coughs and colds, should try a bottle of Vinol. We will return your money If It does not help you. George A. Gorgas, Druggist, Harrisburg Penna. Vinol Is sold In Steelton bv T Prowell. P- B—For Eczema of Scalp try our Saxo Salve. We guarantee it.—Ad vertisement. PI STREET 15 56 YEARSQLD SUNDAY To Observe Anniversary With Spe cial Services in the Technical High School ' The Rev. Harry B. King, pastor of Cal vary Presb yterlan Church, will make the principal address at the fifty-sixth anni .* *li» versary of Pine Street *•' WM Sunday school which I . ' Bm. will be held Sunday • - .*i /"VS afternoon at 1.30 In the Technical high y-MI BUf' school auditorium. ■AliJjHftLfc All departments of the Sunday school will take part In the program, and reports '■' Tr I of the work for the i year will be made by officers of each j department. Invocation by the Rev. Mr. King will open the exercises. The responsive reading will be lead by Henry B. McCormlck. assistant super intendent. John Y. Boyd, superinten dent, will preside. Among the musical numbers will be a solo by Qenrge Sutton and a chorus by the Pine Street Qlee Club. The kindergarten children will sing several songs under the direction of Miss Edna Sprenkel, and the primary de partment will sing under the direction of Miss Ida Stewart. The Rev. John Warden, of Beth any Presbyterian chapel, will make the prayer, and Henry McCormlck, Jr., superintendent of the Bethany Sun day school, will report on the work for the year. Some interesting figures are shown In the reports that will be submitted. The present enrollment in all the Pine street schools and depart ments Is 2,081. These figures include Bethany and the home department. In the main school 1,384 scholars are enrolled. During the past year there was an average attendance of 684 scholars every; Sunday. On ono Sunday, Octo ber I*2, 1,101 were present. The larg est enrollment is in the senior depart ment where there are 1,076 scholars and forty teachers. Total collections during the year from these classes amounted to 12,867.33. The class of ferings in the senior department made up a great part of this, totaling $2.- 227.25. WORK ON NEW CHURCH Work on the new $20,000 church and parsonage to bo erected by the Bethel Afro-Methodist Episcopal con gregation at Ash and Briggs streets, will begin early in March, It was an nounced to-day. The four houses now on the site of the new church will be torn down and foundations for the new structure will be laid. The par sonage is to be completed by next Oc tober; the church will be finished by April 1, 1915. Some time ago, the congregation sold its church building in State street to the Capitol Park Extension Com mission for $33,000 with the right to use the stained windows, furniture and carpets In the church in the new building they intended to erect. The church and parsonage will be built under one roof. The church will be Gothic In style and of red bricks trimmed with Indiana lime stone. The interior will be finished in oak. The choir platform will be placed back of the pulpit, and steam and [electric light plants will be installed. [The church will have a seating capa city of about 500. The Rev. Dr. Ulysses G. Deeper, pas tor of the church who now lives at 123 Balm street, will move Into the new parsonage on October 1. The present parsonage will be rented. Itnllroadnieii In Charge.—A group of railroadmen, led by Harry C. Hoff man, will have charge of the evan gelistic services at Ridge Avenue Methodist Episcopal Church this even ing. The pastor, the Rev. John H. Daugherty, is ill and the railroadmen will take his place. The annual elec tion of trustees of the church will ho held this afternoon from 3 to 7 4K I'lnlnfleld Man to T«lk. Samuel Ridout, of Plainfleld, N. J., will speak this and to-morrow evenings, at 7:30 o'clock, at the Gospel Hall, 1216 North Third street, under the direction of the Plymouth Brethren. OBEDIENCE ONE OF ES SENTIALS OF^WIFENOOD [Continued from First Pn bar aßsociatllon is true; that the music was of a class peculiar to the bar association alone is equally true: that i flftepn-plece orchestra aided and abetted In this to perfection IF another truth; furthermore, there were speeches. All these features are little stories in themselves. The Beginning The nfTalr formally began at 1 o'clock, when the lawyers and their guests were received In the assemhly room downstairs, and they marched up to the banquet hall. William M. Hain, the retiring president, was toast master and he called upon the fol lowing: William H Earnest, who discussed "Torts and Torches;" J. Clarence Funk who discussed the "White Slave Traffic;" Harvey E. Knupp. whose sub ject was "Apples;" Job J. Conklln "The Bankruptcy Laws," and Paul A. Kunkel, "Social Injustice." Others were called, but these few were chosen. The Diners The guests of honor were President Judge George Kunkel, Dauphin County Court; President Judge Charles V. Henry, Lebanon, and John C. Bell, Attorney General of Pennsylvania. The members of the bar Included: Lyman D. Gilbert, S. S. Bowman, W. F. Darby, J. B. Patrick, J. H. Musser, S. B. Care, Ed. F. Doehne, O. G. Wlckersham, Job J. Conklin, Harry B. Saussaman, E. M. Hershey, Guy Davies, George L. Heed, B. F. Umberger. C. H. Backenstoe. William M. Hargest, Benjamin M. Nead, James i M. Lamberton, Paul A. Kunkel. Cas-I per Dull, John A. Merman, Victor I Braddock, Harry M. Dress, Harvey E. Knupp, Horace A. Segelb&um, Robert T. Fox, John R. Geyer, Frank Roth. Frank E. Ziegler, John B. Fox, Charles C. Stroh, Charles H. Bergner, John T. Brady, William Boyd, James G. Hatz, S. S. Rupp, A. E. Brandt, M. W. Jacobs, William H. Muaser, ! Elmer E. Ehler, Paul G. Smith, W. H. Earnest, Charles H. Holllnger, W. S. Snyder, Philip S. Moyer, John C. Niss ley, William K. Meyers, C. L. Bailey, Harry M. Bretz, Arthur H. Hull, Scott S. Lelby, J. Clarence Funk, Frank Snodgrass, John H. Shopp, E. E. Beidleman, Philip T. Meredith, B. Frank Nead, Thomas S. Hargest, I Daniel S. Seitz, F. J. Schaffner and Michael E. Stroup. HOPELESSLY BEHIND I My diary is thick with dust And now I find. On looking over it, I'm Just Two weeks behind. What did I do in these two weeks? On harking back, In vain my cerebellum seeks Tlfl nd the track. In vain I mop my clammy brow So damp and dank, I can't fill In those two weeks now; They are a blank. —W. S. Adklna, in Pittsbugh Post. - • u ——————^ To Renew Complexion Without Cosmetics L (From The Dermatologist.) , If the excessive user of cosmetics only knew the impression her artificial ity really make!" upon others, she would quickly sepk moans of gaining a natural complexion Let her acquire the mercollzed wax habit, discarding make-ups entirely, and «he will soon have the kind of complexion that women envy and men admire. It's so easy to get an ounce of mercollzed wax at any drugstore, use nightly like cold j cream and wash It off mornings. And I the results are so remarkable Gradu ally the lifeless cuticle peels off. In almost invisible flaky particles. In a ! week or so there's a brand new com- I plexlon, clear, velvety-soft, of girlish , color and texture. The treatment la so simple, harmless and marvelously effective, the wonder Is that every I woman whose skin Is withered, discol ored, rough, chapped, freckled or plm* I pled, has not already adopted It. I Let wrinkled women quit pastes and i massage creams which mar the skin i still more and try this more sensible .treatment: Dissolve 1 oz. powdered saxollte in % pint witch hazel; use as , a face bath. Every line will quickly disappear.—Advertisement. Try Telegraph Want Ada. 5