No Longer Is It Possible To Do Without MUSIC in the HOME SOONER or later you will assuredly buy a piano, player-piano, Victor-Victrola or Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph. Music in the home is the question of the day. Why not settle it to-day? You can. Never will there be a more favorable opportunity to secure an instru ment of unquestioned leadership at such fair prices and on such reasonable terms. There is no reason why you cannot own the instrument of your choice-there is every reason barrier has fallen in this store from the best of musical instruments. No matter whether you desire a fine Grand Piano, player-piano, Bp! ¥ piano, Victor-Victrola or Edison- | ,] Diamond-Disc, this store, with its large cash buying facilities and enormous output, can change | your desire into realized From a Display of America's Best Instruments---Se'.ect Select the Right Which Shall It Be ? The Player-Piano PIANO Victor-V ictrola You Want Is Here Human nature differs as to tone, Columbia-Grafanola Most piano houses you know fea design, construction, etc. What is Edison-Diamond-Disc ture one player piano, confining you the ideal piano for one home to a single choice. Here, in this wouldn't satisfy the wants in Only by hearing them demon- store we present no less than eight another strated side-by-side will you be able makes. , • . . •. to decide intelligently which pleases 1 e- :>y-si e comparisons best in tone, reproduction, etc., The Angelus easy to choose the right piano liere. f or they are aU different. AutOtOtle Autopiano Chickering, Playotone Everett Hardman, Is the Only Store and others - every one of them ononinger, in the Cit equipped with every advantage and r'ooie, n.siey, J improvement, and guaranteed. Bush & Lane, displaying a complete stock of all Ydu can bear one after the other Kimball Merrill, styles of these three different in- bein ß" played, or you can play them Sterling, struments. yourself; we'll gladly explain their Harrington, Hensel construction, and others. We want you to hear them. We Another advantage this store of . . . , , , , invite you to come 111 and make f ers player-piano buyers, is mem- Companson of the best before comparisons in our private tone- bership to a music-roll-library of you buy means ultimate satisfaction testing parlors. Demonstrations q 000 rolls Yours to play and ex afterwards. . will be gladly given whenever you change at'lOc each. Be sure to ask See the new 1914 styles, in every find it convenient to call.,k n nt„ t finish of wood. . . > Prices, $225 to SBSO. Prices, sls to $250. Player-Pianos, $455 to $1,050. Convenient and confidential terms of payments, spread out in monthly pirts to suit you, with only a small amount down, will send the instrument of your choice home, at once. There are no interest charges. Privilege to exchange any instrument—within a year—is yours. A guarantee from the maker, as well as our own, thus doubly safeguarding your purchasers yours also. Certainly can have music in your home—if you but will. Visit the store, as hundreds of others do, no obligation will be incurred. The J. H. TROUP MUSIC HOUSE Troup Building, - 15 South Market Square HIUHUDERS HUE WORKING FOR KUIiEL [Continued from First Page.] the required number of signers In every county of Pennsylvania. GIRLS! LOIS OF BEAM. HAIR NO DANDRUFF-25 CENT DAHNF Hair coming out? If dry, thin, laded, bring back its color and lustre Within ten minutes after an appli cation of Danderlne you cannot find a single trace of dandruff or falling hair and your scalp will not Itch, but what will please you most will be after a few weeks' use, when you see new hair, fine and downy at first—yes— but really new hair—growing all over the scalp. A little Danderlne Immediately dou bles the beauty of your hair. No dif TUESDAY EVENING, The committee this morning received . the first of a series of petitions circu lated among railroad men of the i Northern Central and Philadelphia and Erie branches of the Pennsylvania by I volunteers who desired to show their appreciation for the fair and unbiased! manner in which Judge Kunkel han-1 died the "full crew" case when the constitutionality of that act was at-! tacked in the Dauphin county courts. Judge Kunkel sustained the consti tutionality of the l'ull crew law and the Supreme Court sustained Judge ference how dull, baded. brittle and scraggy. Just moisten a cloth with Danderlne and carefully draw it through your hair, taking one small strand at a time. The effect Is amaz ing—your hair will b e light, fluffy and wavy, and have an appearance of abundance, an Incomparable luster softness and luxuriance. Get a 26 cents bottle of Knowlton s Danderlne from any drug store or toilet counter and prove that your hair Is as pretty and soft as any that it has been neglected or Injured by careless treatment—that's all—you surely can have beautiful hair and lots of It If you will just try a little Dan derlne. —Advertisement. • Kunkel. The first of these railroad, I petitions came from Northumberland county and was numerously signed b> :fhe men of Sunbury and vicinity. At j the same time it was said that three I other petitions of the same character i were in circulation In the same dls- I tiict. Another Northumberland county pe , tltion was received at headquarters this morning from H. W. Chamber lain, a well-known attorney of Milton, and it was signed by 115 well-known voters of Milton and vicinity, including ministers, merchants, manufacturers, bankers and men In all walks of life. George Cockill for Kunkel One of the first signers of a petition received from Cloyd Steininger, of Union county, is George Cockill, the well-known manager of the Harris burg Tri-State baseball team, who, casts his vote at Lewisburg. The pe tition is also signed by G. T. Biehl, county treasurer; R. T. Baker, regis ter and recorder; Benjamin K. Focht and more than 100 others. The upper end of Dauphin county is represented by a petition from Millersburg, headed and circulated by J. D. Seal, and con taining over 200 signatures of well known Millersburg citizens. Cumberland county has already sent in several petitions and this morning the number was Increased by ont» from C. P. EAter, of Mount Holly. Prothonotary Harry F. Holler, of Hummelstown, also brought in a nu merously signed paper from that thriv ing community and says that Judge Kunkel IB practlcaHy certain of a solid vote throughout the eastern end of the town. Other petitions received to-day were &AKRISBURG TELEGRAPH i, from A. W. Duy, of Bloomsburg, Co lumbia county, signed by more than 120 prominent people of that com munity, and another from George C. i Davison, of Tyrone, Clair county. This petition is in addition to that received from Altoona last week and contains the signatures of about 125 voters of Tyrone and vicinity. i Deaths and Funerals MRS. EIVTHA MAY HITMAN Mrs. Eltha May Hutman, aged 45, died yesterday aftertAoon at her home, 61(2 South Twentieth street. She is survived by her husband, Harry Hut man, four daughters, one brother, her mother and thirteen grandchildren. Funeral services will be held Thurs day afternoon at 2 o'clock. The Rev J. A. Sellers, pastor of the Park Street United Evangelical Church, will offi ciate. Burial will be made in the Har risburg Cemetery. MRS. ALICE WAI/IXJX Mrs. Alice Walton, aged 38, died at 1 o'clock this afternoon at her home 528 Camp street. She had been sick about one week. The funeral arrange ments have not been completed. FIRE APPARATUS EN ROUTE City Electrician Clark E. DJehl re ceived word to-day that the fltew re peater for the firm alarm system had been shipped and in all probability would reach Harrlsburg the latter part of this week. UTILITIES NO IRE! HOLD 010 "PUBLIC BE MM" POLICY George B. Tripp Declares Compan ies Are Looking After Inter- ! ests of Those They Serve WELCOME SERVICE BODY! Says Stockholders Do Not Want Dividends at Expense of Efficiency In a paper on "The Utility Corpora tion and Its Duties to the Public," i George B. Tripp, vice-president and | general manager of the Harrlsburg | Light and Power Company, and presi-1 dent of the Chamber of Commerce, f last evening discussed before the Har- ■ risburg Society of the Bell Telephone j Company the development, operation, duties and responsibilities of the puis - I 11c service company and the mutual | relations of it and the public. Among other things brought out I were: Old "publle-be-damned" Idea, the | policy of Home of the utility com panies In their earlier alstory hax i been altogether supplanted, and to- ] day the modern and efficient of ficial or employe ha* before his mind at all times the word "ser vice." important factor of utility service la frankness In dealing with the public through the press. Slo more Important feature of service can be mentioned, one which In many cases has been abased. Every utility corporation Is made np of two factors i the plant and property, nn<| the franchise. A partnership therefore exists be tween the company and the munici pality. Certain responalbllltlea and obli gations reat upon either party. Commercial success of any com pany depends upon Its efficiency of service In all particulars. Stockholders are anxious for divi dends, but not al the expense of service. Coming of the State Public Ser vice Commission Is welcomed. I'enasylvunla Railroad Company an example of what utility corpora tion did In 1013 to Insure safety to patrons and employes. Paper Feature of Society Meeting The paper was the feature of the telephone society's meeting and its various phases were discussed by Ed gar Z. Wallower, superintendent of th> electric light company; Robert W. Hoy, commercial manager of the same concern; H. P. Porter, the Bell's plant superintendent; J. F. Hope, plant su pervisor; G. S. Reinoehl, division man ager and S. S. Eberts, district man ager. Officers were elected by the society as follows: 13. G. Mateer, Altoona, president; L. B. Carson, city, vice president; W. A. Kershner, city, sec retary; R. M. Leonard, city, treasur-*; R. E. Smith, local manager, Lancas ter, and H. W. Springer, plant super visor, Altoona, were elected direc tors. Just prior to Mr. Tripp's talk G. E. Gable, copy manager of the Bell's publicity department at Philadelphia, drew a lot of amusing sketches in crayon of the men in ihe audience and of the officials. The keynote of Mr. Tripp's paper was "service" to the public and the d<--elopmept, of this idea among the successful utility corporations of the country was strikingly illustrated and emphasized throughout his talk. The Effect of the Commission The effect of the establishing of the public service commission of its ad vantages to both public and corpora tion were pointed out and commented upon. Another feature of Mr. Tripp's paper was the figures he quoted on the results obtained by the Pennsyl vania railroad in 1913 to Insure safety of patrons and employes and which Mr. Tripp characterized as "the greatest record ever made by a util ity corporation in its service to its patrons." "Not a single passenger out of 111,- 000,000 carried by the Pennsylvania Railroad Company in 1913 was killed in a train accident," quoted Mr. Tripo from the Pennsy's information bul letin. "Reports for the past six years show that almost 600,000,000 passen gers—a number equal to more than one-third of the whole world's popu lation —have been carried by the Pennsylvania railroad and but sixteen of them lost their lives in accidents to trains; nine were killed in one acci dent." "Maximum Service: Minimum Price" Mr. Tripp In emphasizing the de velopment of public utility service compared the present day needs and requirements with those of the days of the Inventor of the telephone and the organization of the Bell Company. "To-day." asked Mr. Tripp, "what do we find? A demand upon every util ity company to furnish the maximum of service at the minimum price." The change was not brought wholly by the opinions, criticisms or requests of the consumers, the electric com pany's head pointed out, but by the companies themselves. Thus the re sponsibility of the utility company was inorea&ed. A check of some kind was necessary to guard against condi tions which might have i continued. Demands would have become so In sistent and without substantial reason and the companies would have in i creased their facilities to such a do- COMBING WON'T RID I HI OF DANDRUFF j The Easiest and Best Way Is to Dissolve It The only sure way-to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve It, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvon; apply it at night when retir ing; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in geijtly with the finger tips. Do this to-night, and by morning most if not all of your dandruff will be gone, and three or four more appli cations will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dan druff you may have. You will find, too, that all Itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. If you want to preserve your hair do by all means get rid of dandruff' ! for nothing destroys the hair more quickly. It not only starves the hair and makes it fall out. but It makes it stringy, straggly, dull, dry, brittle and lifeless, and everyone notices It. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store It is Inexpensive and never falls to do the work.—Advertisement. MARCH 24,1914. ;»TTTTTT , »'TTy'r l » W ¥ » T VV TT '▼ ▼ T * * ' ; CALL 1991-ANY "PHONE. ■#>* 1 JSXHCf/JUMIv y MABPWBURa'S POPULAR DERMVTMKNT 3TOM < * The Craze For Ribbons ■ | \ Is Growing Greater! • <. y Roman Stripes are in- C~~~d3f&s. A 4 ► creasing in demand. The & Wk£S& I 4 ► fascinating colors of this J I 4 ► peculiar design seems to I * ► harmonize with any sort of jlj i * garment. Plain colors in H * \ * rich hues of Tango and fa?l < * -others are equally wanted. |H| V\ r e show a new line—em- < bracing all the -desirable r < k widths from 4 to 9 inches, * ; 25c to $2.50 a yd. ► On the. Main Floor—Bowman's. » f 4 ► Last Week of the Demonstration < ► of Wearever Aluminum Wear ; ► Mrs. Yerkes will be here until Saturday to show the ► ladies of Harrisburg the features of Wearever Aluminum < ► Cooking Utensils. The advantages of Wearever Aluminum < ► over other kinds of cooking utensils is well known to women < ► who have used them. Mrs. Yerkes will show how to roast meat without a drop of water in a Wearever utensil. ► Demonstration Special consists of 1-qt. Lipped Sauce- < pan and deep stew pan and preserve kettle, ( y total value $1.69, all for 98^ In the Basement—BOWMAN'S. ► i ► p ; 2,000 yds. Lonsdale Muslin, 10c - Regular price is yard. Cambric at the same price. ; 65c to 90c Sheets, 55c . having a small tear along the selvage. ; Shaker Flannel, 5c yd. ; Shaker Flannel, specially fine for skirts and children's wear. This lot is in 10 to 20-yard remnants. Only 5c a yard to-morrow. On the Math Floor, Rear—BOWMAN'S. gree not commensurate with the costs for services rendered, that a result would have ensued which would have been disastrous to both patrons and the Industry. "Therefore," declared Mr. Tripp, "we welcomed the coming of the State ■■ —■... i. _ , i : - L. - - ■ ■■■■ ■ '■ » IJ {fmmmmmmammmmmmmammmmmwmmm Fit Out Your Wardrobe Here and Sa S Of course your first consideration in purchasing 1 your Spring wear is style, and we are prepared to offer J you what any other store will offer. It is in point of 1 price, however, that we are able to outdo other stores | and a tidy sum is to be saved by the woman who will fill her wardrobe needs here to-morrow. Special prices for the day as indicated. I New Balmacaan coats made of the new Donegal mixtures, '] worth $lO to sls. Wednesday, fc/l QQ AQ i one lot / •ft/O ] Ladies' new kid gloves, worth SI.OO. Underprice I Wednesday / OC |i New Easter tailored suits, why pay $12.50 to $22.50. Here • the same kind, $7.98, $9.89, $14.89 i Couch covers, fancy rich colors, fringed. AQ !j $1.50 value «/OC jj Women's new dark percale house dresses, worth I SI.OO. Wednesday Ut/C I Outsize tailored suits for stout women, worth AA | sls. Here, Wednesday, newest spring styles ... R Girls' new Spring coats, sizes to 15 years. $5 OAQ 8 all-wool coats. Wednesday i Ladies' 16-button length, all silk gloves. Real gft SI.OO kind. Wednesday 0«/ C Remnants lj4-yard wide, 20c quality, table oil cloth, A white and col duroy pants worth $1.50. Wednesday 4%J C Extra values, boys' knicker pants, sizes to 17 years. Pair, • 75c, 98c, 59c, 49c Wednesday special, 2 to 3 p. m., ladies' deep em- AA broidered and lace flounce petticoats C Wednesday, extra special, to 1 p. m., ladies' new black silk hose, all sizes, with lisle garter top, worth 39c, Q pair IOC SMITH'S, m Public Service Commission." "Public service commissions," ho continued, "are a product af the in tensive conditions that surround the business of gas. electricity, telephone and transportation, of a community and were necessary." ■— - 1 '« 3