YOUR SICK CHILD IS CONSTIPATED! LOOK AT TONGUE Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons from little stomach, liver, bowels. Give "California Syrup of Figs" if cross, bilious or feverish. No matter what ails your child, a gentle, thorough laxative sh-uld al ways be the first treatment given. If your little one is out-of-sorts, lialf-siek, isnt resting, eating and act ing naturally—look. Mother! see if tongue is coated. This is a sure sign t hat its little stomach, liver and bowels ere clogged with waste. When cross, irritable, feverish, stomach sour, breath bad or has stomach-ache, diar rhoea, sore thiWt, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of tigs," and in a few hours all the con stipated poison, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. Mothers can rest easy after giving this harmless "fruit 1 stive," because it never fails to cleanse the little one's liver and bowels and sweeten the stomach and they dearly love its pleas ant taste. Fu'l directions for babies, children of all ages and for grown-ups printed on each bottle. Beware of counterfeit fig syrups. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bottle of "California Syrup of Figs;" then see that it is made by the "California Fig Syrup Company."—Advertisement. j ! Get the Habit of ~1 ; Drinking Hot Water Before Breakfast i Says we can't look or feel right | with the system full of poisons. I Millions of folks bathe internally now instead of loading their system with drugs. "What's an inside bath?" you say. Well, it is guaranteed to perform miracles if you could believe these hot water enthusiasts. There are vast numbers of men and women who, immediately upon arising in the morning, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of lime stone phosphate in it. This Is a very excellent health measure. It is in tended to flush the stomach, liver, kidneys and the thirty feet of intes tines of the previous day's waste, sour bile and indigestible material left over in the body which if not eliminated every day, become food for the mil lions of bacteria which infest the bow els, the quick result is poisons and toxins which are then absorbed Into tho blood causing headache, bilious at tacks. foul breath, bad taste, colds, stomach trouble, kidney misery, sleep lessness, impure blood and all sorts of ailments. People who feel good one day and badly the next, but who simply can not ?et feeling right are urged to ob tain "a quarter pound of limestone phosphate at the drug store. This will cost very little but is sufficient to make anyone a real crank on the sub ject of internal sanitation. • Just as soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, so limestone phosphate and hot water act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. It is vastly more important to bathe on the inside than on the outside, because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel pores do. —Advertisement. SAGE TEA TURNS GRAYHI DAI It's Grandmother's Recipe to Bring Back Color and Lustre to Hair. That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brew ing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sul phur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mars the face. When it | fades, turns gray, streaked and looks i dry, wispy and scraggy, just an appli- | cation or wo of Sage and Sulphur en hances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic; | you can get from any drug store a 50- cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sul- ] phur Compound," ready to use. This ; can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color, thickness and lustre of your hair and remove dand ruff, stofl scalp itching and falling hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponfte or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair has disappeared, and after an other application it becomes beauti fully dark and appears glossy, lus trous and abundant. —Advertisement. STOMACHUPSET Get at the Real Cause—Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets That's what thousands of stomach sufferers are doing now. Instead of taking tonics, or trying to patch up a ; poor digestion, they ace attacking the rem cause of the ailment—clogged liver and disordered bowels. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets arouse the liver in a soothing, healing way. When the liver and bowels are per forming their nutural functions, away goes indigestion and stomacn troubles. If you have a bad taste in your mouth, tongue coated, appetite poor, lazy, don't«care feeling, no ambition or energy, troubled with undigested food, you should take Olive Tablets, the sub stitute for calomel. lir. Edwards' Olive Tablets are a purelywegetablf compound mixed with olive oil. You will know them by their olive color. They do the work without griping, cramps or pain. Tske one or two at bedtime for quick relief, so you can eat what you like. At 10c and 2f>e per box. All druggists. The Olive Tablet Company, <'olum l«us. O. , WEDNESDAY EVENING, FINDS SAVAGES ORIGINATE "400" FADS 46GS P. Al. WQO£>S. MRS. P. M. WOODS Sun Francisco —The lap dog fashion originated among: tRe savage Negritos ol thp Philippine Islands, according to Mrs. P. M. Woods, wife of a United States army officer, stationed at t'avite, Philippine Islands. Mrs. Woods, her husband and a bodyguard of soldiers recently spent more than a month among these half-naked natives, studying their customs. "The Negritos carry the cutest little dogs with them wherever they go," said Airs. Woods upon her return to her home here. "Men and women both carry the doss and the habit is just the same as the one which) holds the so ciety women of this country. The only difference is in the appearance of the people and the dogs." ROTARY CLUB HAS HERSHEY EVENING Moving Pictures and Story of Chocolate Town; Prizes For Ladies The Harrisburg Technical High School auditorium was crowded to the doors last evening by members of the Harrisburg Rotary Club and their friends to witness a moving picture demonstration by the Hershey Choco late Company as to how the delicious chocolate which that tlrni manufac tures is made. In the absence of the president. Arthur D. Bacon. George W. Mumma. the vice-president, presided, and introduced Ezra K. Hershey, seere tarv ol the Hershey Chocolate < om pariv. and a prominent member ol the Rotarv Club. Mr. Hershey in turn pre sented K. C. Lightner, one of the bright young men of the Ilershey Coni pany, who took charge of the illus trated lecture that followed. Colored lantern slides Introduced the audience to the coc9a bean in its na tive haunts, so to speak, and followed all the way from Its tropical home to the pretty tittle town of Hershey where It sheds it.- shell and is prepared to become the toothsome tidbit known as Hershey's chocolate. These pictures were interesting but not. nearly so much so a.-, the three reels of "movies thai followed, depleting the various de partments of the big plant at Hershey, the Hershey farms, the town ot 11-r --slioy and interesting features thereof. .Mr. Hershey was heartily congratulated upon the success of the entertainment. During the brief business session <>f the club the announcement was made that the officers hope shortly to have as guests and speakers Governor Brumbaugh and Warren M. Manning, the park expert, to speak on the Capi tol Park extension and its relation to the city. , , , As a concluding feature the club awarded by drawing nine prizes to ladies present, donated by members of the club. The winners were Mrs. "N . M. Robi son. box of chrysanthemums; Miss Nellie Gourley, water color painting; Mrs. H. D. Delmotte, boj. of station erv; Mrs. A. \V. Myers. $5 worth of flower bulbs; Mrs. .1. P. McCullough, ton of coal: Miss F. M. English, ten pounds of coffee: Mrs. !•". K. Downes, ten-pound box of prunes: Miss Florence Davis, set of dishes: Miss Mary Bev ard, box of stationery. The donators were I*'. E. Reidenhour, E. B. Black. Holmes Seed Company, Howard C. Fry, Robert Lyon, Harris burg Telegraph. )*V. S. Usslck, and the Moxie Company. The next meeting of the club will he on Tuesday evening, December 7, in Devine and Youngers shoe factory. North Sixteenth street. FAMOI'S CHEMIST DIES London. Nov. 17. Raphael Mel dola, professor of organic chemistry in the University of London since 1912, died here yesterday, aged 66. He was one of the most famous chemists in the world. Deaths and Funerals MARY E. SHULTZ DIES Miss Mary E. Shultz, aged 84, died yesterday at the State Hospital. Pri vate funeral services will be held Fri day afternoon at 1.30 o'clock at the home of her sister, Miss Emma Shultz, Paxtang, the Rev. Mr. Riter, pastor of Shoop's Church, officiating. Burial will be made at Shoop's Church Ceme tery. SERVICES FOR HARRY WALTERS -Funeral services for Harry A. Wal ters, president of the Dauphin County Poor Board, were held this afternoon at - o'clock at the home, the Rev. S. Edwin Rupp. pastor of Otterbeln I'nited Brethren Church, (Officiating. Private burial was made In the Har risburg Cemetery. Pallbearers were John R. Geyer and Charles L. Boyer, of the poor hoard, and two members of the lied Men lodge.* CASTORiA Forlnf'intsand Children. The Kir d You Have Always Bought Memorial Serivces Held Here For Mr. Washington Memorial services for Hooker T. | Washington were held in Bethel A. M. ; K. church. Forster and Briggs street, 1 under the auspices of the local branch :hi Ihe National Association for the I Advancement of Colored People at 2 jo'clock this afternoon. Dr. C. Lennon Carter, president it II lie branch opened the services with a few remarks. The invocation by the ' rtev. U. G. Leeper, singing, "Swing j IjOW Sweet ("harlot," by' the combined i schools of all the colored school chil ! dren of the city and scripture reading I by the Rev. G. A. Hay followed. | The Rev. M. ttlaylock, spoke on j "Our Memory of Washington." "What Washington Stood For," by the Rev. j B. M. Ward and the singing of the | hymn "Lead Kindly Light," led by the I liev. S. Is. Cunningham, preceded the 'two main addresses of the afternoon : which were made by W. Justin Carter land Prof. J. P. Scott, principal of the ji'alder building. Singing by the school j children by the Rev. A. J. Greene, [the reading of a poem "Our Washing ton," by the author. A. Dennee Bibb; I remarks by Arch Deacon Henderson, | and the closing hymn and benediction j marked the close of an impressive I program. ! The committee In charge of ar i rangements for the services comprised !A. Dennee Bibb, chairman. Dr. J. j Steven Lewis and Dr. H. Edwin Par : son. | The following letter from Governor | Brumbaugh was read at the meeting: j "Dear Mr. Auter: I T krtew Dr. Booker T. Wash ington very well. Frequently lec tured with him in many cities, lie was a great educator, a great | man, a high-minded citizen. It is tit ting that you meet to join with thousands of others to do him honor. I crave the privilege to add my word of appreciation and to hope his influence and his life will be. j cherished by all of us through i the years to come. Very truly yours. M. G. BRUMBAUGH. Dawe to Be Shown City's Improvement Strides . Samuel Kunkel, who will preside at the luncheon meeting of the Harris j bfrg Chamber of Commerce on Frl- I clay has named the following as mem -1 hers of the Reception Committee »o receive G. Grosvenor Dawe of Wash ; ington, D. C., who will address the i members: ■ Charles W. Burtnett, Joseph Wal ! lazz, Vance C. McCormick and John | C. Herman. After the luncheon the committee i will take Mr. Dawe over the city. ! Then Mr. Dawe and the committee will go to the Harrisburg Academy where Mr. Dawe will address the pupils. The Harrisburg Chamber of Com merce will take cognizance of "the dis cussion of making Third and Fourth streets one-way thoroughfares of hav ing a committee thoroughly investi gate the matter and report to the hoard of directors. Committee ap pointments will soon be announced by President Bowman. There is nothing in this world so utterly ridiculous as woman's vanity. Men are often vain, but not to such a degree that they will allow their over alls to shame them to shelter whenever they are caught working. But the gar ments that women set aside for their scrub hours are not always becoming. Truly the transformation of the little dears from angelic decollete the night before to the scrub woman the morn ing after is dazzling!—9* rtoons Maga zine. Bears the HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH GOVERNOR ENTERTAINS I MANY AT DINNER^ I Continued from Fir>l l*a«ej The Governor's Speech Among other things the Governor said: M.v immediate interest, as you know, grows out of the fact that In the very near future the Capitol Extension Park will have been acquired com pletely by the Commonwealth, and Its treatment will become an important and imminent problem. "It wan my thought that the plan ning commission of Harrisburg, the two boards of the State government, the city officials of Harrisburg, and the gentlemen who in the past have put their hearts and their souls into the planning of a greater Harrisburg,! should come together here, that we 1 might be able to start a series of con ferences that would help the State and help Harrisburg' to work out the proper treatment of the extension of the Capitol Park in harmony with the plans for a greater Harrisburg, to which you have devoted so much of your thought. Those of us who rep resent the State in these matters hope that when the park is finally com pleted, it shall be a thing that all will be proud of, and that it will repre sent a part of the whole park system of the city of Harrisburg, and be a dignified setting for the great Capitol of this State. "My interest in that and Mr. Young, who sits here with me, and Mr. Powell, who could not be with us because he was obliged to be in Pittsburgh to-night, both share that feeling 1 know—is deep, and we are j anxious at all times to meet with those of you in Harrisburg who have this matter at heart, in order that there may be no mistakes, no crossing of purposes, no conflicting of ideas, and therefore no delay and no mis take in the working out of the addi tional ground that the State holds In the heart of your ctly. "Another thing I had broug-ht to my attention to-day when with Mr. Todd I walked over that piece of ground. There is the State street bridge which hardly adequately now portrays its quality, because of the buildings that surround it. The mo ment the State removes the properties and bares that iniquitous sight, you will how absolutely impossible It is going to be for the State to work out its problem with that great mass of stone impinging upon an essential part of tne park. "I want to go Just a litter further into the park extension question. The other day you had an election here, and your good people voted another loan to put humps over the landscape, a thing that ,«rujt Store. Thirteenth and Market Sts. ' Adults: 50 Cents Special School Ticket* For Young People of School Age. 25 Oeuta No Reserved Seats 180,000,000 Mile Trip for Fifty Cents Do You Dread the Cold? Some people enjoy cold weather, take pleaaure In winter sports and th« keen air calls the pink to their cheek* and the red to their Hps. Others shrink trora cold and turn blue at the least exposure to frosty air. The difference Is In the blood. Rich, rod blood warms the body. Every long breath of pure cold air increases th« oxygen It carries to every part of thf system. Thin blood is unable to tak» up the life-sustaining oxygen. Th« body lacks nourishment and the suf ferer is always cold, takes a chill eas ily and is miserable all winter. Thin blood Is largely the sufferer .« own fault. It results from neglec-t. because the blood can be built up. l)r. Williams' Pink Pills supply the ele ments that the blood needs to make It rich and red and to enable it to carry more oxygen. Building up the red portion of the blood is simple but because thin blood does not call attention to itaelf it Is often neglected. Have- you seriously considered taking a course of treatment with thes« blood-making pills? If you are in doubt write for Information. Tour own druggist sells Dr. Wil liams' Pink Pills and the Dr. Wil liams Medicine Co.. Schenectady, N. V., will send you a booklet "Building Up the Blood" free on request.—Ad vertisement. REPORT OF THS CONDITION OF THE Mechanics Trust Company. of Harrisburg,, No. 301 Market street, of Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, nr. the close of business November 11, 1915: RESOURCES Reserve Fund: Cash specie and notes, . . . $92,889.95 Due from Ap p roved Re serve Agents.. 182,564.13 Legal secur ities at par, .. 55,000.00 Nickels and cents 25.1"? Checks and cash items, .. 15,486.5t Due from Banks and Trust Cos. noit reserve,. 6,889.03 Assets held free viz: Commercial pa- , per purchas- v ed: Upon one name $48,726.67 Commercial pa per purchas ed: Upon two or more names 290,632.22 Loans upon call with col lateral 294.882. 7* Time loans with collateral, 61,382.67 Loans secured by bonds and mortgages 15,700.ml Loans without collateral.. . 117,1)88.54 Bonds, stocks, etc 356,588.uu Mortgages and Judgments of record 158,866.2'fi Overdrafts 360.4H Other assets not included in above 207,7(1 Book value of reserve se curities above par. .... 602.00 Total $1,694,762,118 LIABILITIES Capital stock paid in $300,0004>C Surplus funds 300,00u.0fi Undivided profits, less ex penses and taxes paid, . 17,122.8 4 Individual deposits subject to chock (Exclusive of Trust Funds and Sav ings) 547,974.97 Demand Certificates of | Deposit. (Exclusive of Trust Funds and Sav- I ings), 755.50 ! Time Certificates of De posit, (Exclusive of Trust Funds and Sav ings) 337,270.50 Deposits. saving fund, (Exclusive or Trust Funds) 72,297.28 Deposits, Commonweath of Pennsylvania 20,000.0f Deposits, municipal 65,000.01 Due to banks. Trust Cos., etc., not reserve 12,722.8; Dividends unpaid 109.5« Treasurer's and certified checks outstanding 12.08:1.61 Other liabilities not In cluded in above 7,43*. II Book value of reserve se curities below par 1,987.5(1 Total $1,694,762.6* Amount of Trust Funds invested $206,950.71 Amount of Trust Funds uninvested 13,295.1 1 Overdrafts 68.0(1 Total Trust funds $220,313.8? CORPORATE TRUSTS Total amount (I. e. face value) of Trusts under deeds of trust or mort gages executed by Cor porations to the Com pany as Trustees to se cure issues of corporate bonds, including Equip ment Trusts $105,000.0(1 State of Pennsylvania, County of Dau phin, ss: I. J. C. Motter, Treasurer of the above named Company, do solemnly swear that the above statement ts true to the best of my knowledge and belief. (Signed) J. C. MOTTER, Treasurer. Subscribed and sw*>rn to before me this 17th day of November, 1915. (Signed) EMMA A. KEENNY. (Notarial Seal.] Notary Public. Correct —Attest: (Signed) JOHN H. TROUP, (Signed) DAVID KAUFMAN, (Signed) PENROE C. ROMREROER. Directors. 7