14 S^v^^miwc^^Vwo^ Summer's Loveliest Wash | Light Weight Summer Silks Dress Weaves Attractively W I n Beautiful Styles in €» Snpr* ia 1 •■■ Ivj'CVA 111 CX n i a -\ j u J c • A'S .'MM ( \\\\H'*' ground. This is a $1.50 quality, 40 inches wide, at, vard. .19e ' Colored voiles and rosebud crepes form an impor- (T U >' lS Another good value is a 24linch Foulard at !.... 39\ tant part of this week's special wash goods showing. t TlmiV I White Habutai, 36 inches wide— Attractive values include: jl■ \ 20c colored voiles, 36 inches wide, in effective floral pat- * \ <-< terns and stripes for summer dresses. Special, yard ... Viv* WW .JIHHk / lIWWX 75c stripe Habut a i36in c heswidevard.. ••■• • *®J I MlHm ' .%j I'iW.fV /|II 1 l\\\v S Satin stripe tub silks, 32 and 36 inches, yd., 89f and SI.OO l-,„»c Rates Ginghams, in many styles. Special, yard, | - J %m fij ti'fg* -\ i 1 1 ii\\\\\V p.' Tub crepe de chine, neat printed designs and satin stripe?, \2y 2 c voiles, on white grounds: Special, yard 9* jr—i „H\M fX 11 ll\ \ 1 \\\\v IS? 32 inches, yard $1.50 8c colored rosebud crepes on white. Special, yard .. mMjjW |}J| * 25c disc pattern awning stripe and coin spot voiles. Special, ti ' 1 »' |\ V 1 X*' 'I Broadcloth the heaviest tub silk woven, oyster yard I tyrf. Washable Messaline, white, 36 inches, yard $1.50 Seeded voiles are among the most popular of the Summer I \ V *W§ W l P White crepe de chine, 40 inches, yard ..' $1.25 and $1.50 weaves and are now in much demand for dresses. Yard .. 25? ///*) Cl?\ JL White Pussy Willow, 40 inches, yard $2.00 44-inch Columbia voiles, in rose designs of various colors. I ( jr* j U Vr:\ White and flesh Georgette crepe, 40 inches, yard ... $1.50 Yard 69? y L \1 Silks For Commencement Dresses "Wash silk and cotton weaves, 36 inches wide, on colored Crepede chines in beautiful sheer quality in pink, light blue, grounds. Yard 50? Nile, lavender, maise, peach and sand, 40 inches, yard, Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, Street Floor. { rfltlfP StAPIT SllltC Q *"» H AOtC $1.25 and $1.50 -7U.1 J—/IllllC? OIULxIV VJI OLlllO CtllUL Taffeta Suitings in new awning stripes, chiffon finish, 36 inches, yard $1.50 A Sale of O'Cedar Mops In the Annual May Clearance D ""' P ° m "° y *"•"* 3 '"" F '°"' and Polishes in Time for f& 5 ° a i> d SIK 0011 2^ 00 Suits X Hn,K P $20.00 Suits, *PIO.UU [Reduced to *PIO./0 Toilet Goods for 39c I 1 iUUbt? values of a character not presented heretofore this season are included in the ' Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart annual May clearance of Women's and Misses' Suits, 3 regular 10c cakes Palmolive Soap l^Q now in progress . 1 regular 50c bottle Palmolive Shampoo...( 1 liere are many styles to choose from, in sizes for small, medium and large women. The , r ' im most exceptional value colors include Belgian, putty, sand, navy, green, black and club checks. or 50c jar Palmolive Cream tor 39c mt -i,Jssia3asSb£k\. that has been presented this »18.50 na\-y, Belgian and green gabardine suits in $25.00 Prince chap suits in navy, green, Belgian . | laN c t ' l ' S com hination to sell at lll i s special JK Ii • , .. . several very good styles with silk collars and cuffs. and shepherd checks. May Clearance Price ..$18.75 price and no more can be secured when the lot has been dis yJS®L_ "-''-I-'-—*-*"' eai ,n ,loor mops and polishes MaJ . Clearance Prlce sls oo 137/I 37 /. 0 and . J39 - 50 ,an ' nav v and Belgian blue posed of. So come early and get your share of this unusual i« now available in a cnprinl gabardine suits; in exclush !s with yoke or plain ' . df/rftritt'H'te-tyX 1 1,1 d !, P eclal »25.00 naw and Belgian blue suit* with flarine circular skirts. May Clou Price $30.00 value. rnimm lSm f<* i» th. m P ,.,„ „ r ;„, ;i"* r r J»z ssrv * ->»•■ WsVi ' 'l» I basement. J' oke and circular. May Clearance Price $18.75 Clearance Price $30.00 (f " ' ~ ch^ s . uncommon va,ue sn " A Group of 75Coats for Street fa, Evening Wear Reduced One O'Cedar Oil Mnn ' ' l . Cre are s^a P' e styles as well as the more fancified modes, in fine quality poplin, r\ /-»•/-> j i-> i- i- »» Complete gabardine and whip cord weaves in this Annual May Clearance. The values are out of the ordin- One O Cedar Polishing Mop ary. One Sample Bottle O'Cedar Oil |jK | N ' av >' unllned poplin $ 18.50 fancy whipcord coats with , White and brown broken plaid Two 52-inch Handles MaTClear tVn'nn ! si,k <° U " r | chinchilla coats for summer even- Dives, Pomeroy ■& Stewart, Basement. ance Price iIU.UU ance Price 3>14»5U ings. May Clear- Slfi 50 Black and white large check $18.50 navy and black poplin i ance Price coats with wide belt on back and coats, with silk collar and messa _ green silk collar. May <t 1 O Cfl line lining. May (ig f\f\ Dives, Pomerov A- Stewart, THE SUMMER FASHION BOOK c '"" n " """ U ~ Pn " sls 0 ° 1 ,he Tictor.al Opening Display Summer Millinery JsSr. REVIEW ..... . . ... J PATTERNS 1S prevailing Counter. and-white and an excellent Summer Fashiom. white hats with airiest lace j 1 i/\ wherTpurchated with Welcome to this opening ll V \ one 15 cent pattern. display of Summer Millinery, >uN^k'/ JUNE PATTERNS I tomorrow! W® On sale. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Second i . ===== JJ father ipl J°f!« jy contains the exact kind of nourishment needed by those who have lung troubles and are weak and run down. That is why it is best for colds and as a tonic body builder. No weakening stimulants or dangerous drags. Runaway June and the $25,000 Hope-Jones Unit Orchestra at the Victoria Today To-morrow f "The Outcast" | Try Telegraph Want Ads MONDAY EVENING, SENIOR CLASS OF THE CENTRAL HIGH SCHOOL ONE OF THE LARGEST IN ITS HISTORY W^BtSßmKS^^^m^^^^SSS^K^SSmSßßlßßßi^mt£^BSSl^^^^KK^Ss^tßMKS^SKSSMSf^r^' Flioto by Musser. h«r. wtll^oivi^rif 88 at I!!' Centr * l Mgh '"j 11 ® 0 ' Ti n - e OnP of the Iar * eßt thftt has « Vfir b « e " graduated from that institution. About 166 mem bers will recet\e diplomas this year for completing the four-year course. The class is slightlv larger than the one last vear which had about /s bers. Final preparations are being made for commencement which will take place on the afternoon of June 18, in the Majestic Theater Three Kunkel Brothers Win Honors at F. and M. Judge and Mrs. George Kunkel's three sons at Franklin and Marshall | College distinguished themselves on the occasion of the eighteenth annlver- ' sary of the Dlagnothlan Uterary So- ) clety. which was fittingly celebrated 1 last Thursday In the presence of.a large ______ ' CASTORIA Fnrlnf-jntsanrt Chilrtror. B*sri tho __/i /f f> '— > 'The Kiri You Have Always Bought audience comprising parents and i | friends of the students and alumni. The exercises were held in the audi torium of the Lancaster Young Men's Christian Association. There were sev eral excellent addresses by student members of the society. Interest in the i event to Harrlsburgers lies in the fact that Minster Kunkel was the pre- ! siding nffli er and discharged his duties most acceptably. Hanlel 11. Kunkel, his brother, gave an analytical address mi i the late 'William I'hler Mcnsel, ami I HARRISBTTRG TELEGRAPH I George Kunkel, Jr., the eldest of the! j trio, receiver] the first prlne for hlf | | unusual address on the Interests of the ! people—"The Third Party." He said j ! that the third party was not, as one j might suppose, (he Progressive party, : but the Interested third party or by- j ' stander, as it were. As In the strus- ' | pie between rspltsi nnd labor, It Is the j consumer, the third party, who pays in the struggle between two kings. It j Is the people who suffer, and who.often i mske their power felt, and In the struggle between nations It Is the neu tral*. the.third party, which ajjaln is affected and must be considered. FARMER SERIOUSLY (INJURED Duncannon, Pa., May 10.—Walter Beers, aged 22, of Allen* Cove, Penn township, wan kicked by a mule and run over by a heavy wagon on Satur day afternoon and is in a serious con dition. FIRE AT MARIETTA Marietta, Pa., May 10.—Fire of In cendiary origin this morning partially destroyed a building owned by John A. Mouk, in Second street, and ten anted by Hayard S. Herr as a pool room anil bowling alley. MAY 10, 1915. Mother Paid Tributes in All City Churches In a majority of churches yesterday congregations far above the ordinary in numbers gathered to show their ap preciation of Mother. Ministers deliv ered special sermons and churched were decorated with many white blooms. The aged and infirm of the congre gation of Covenant Presbyterian Church were taken to the morning service in automobiles. A sermon was delivered at St Paul's Methodist by the Rev. R. H. Colburn on "Women's Rrights." Preachers everywhere made some reference to Mothers' Day and hundreds of persons wore white car nations or some other flower in re membrance. Many attended the first anunal ob servance of Mothers' Day by Harris burg Lodge. No. 12, Benevolent and i Protective Order of Elks, yesterday afternoon. The Elks distributed hun- i dreds of white carnations. Air Tight Compartments Blown Open by Torpedo; London, May 10.—Cornelius Horri gan, a waiter aboard the Luslt&nia. testifying Saturday evening at the opening of the coroner's inquest over the bodies of five victims landed there, said it was impossible to launch boats on the starboard side owing to the steamer's list. He went down with the ship but came up and was rescued. Vernon Livermore, the ship's bug ler gave evidence that the airtight compartments wpre closed but thought the explosion must have burst them open. To Repair Gap in Front St. Asphalt, Says Lynch Definite assurance of a satisfactory solution of the repair problem, grow ing out of the sagging of the curbing from the asphalt in Front street, south of Maclay, was given to-day by City Commissioner William H. Lynch, super intendent of streets and public Im provements. "The city and the contractor will get together on the matter shortly, and you can be assured that the matter will be fixed up." declared Mr. Lynch. LUSITANIA'S DEAD ARE BEING BURIED [Continued from First Page.] . ___( through the streets by British sailors the crowds uncovered. Cheap brown coffins contained the bodies of Charles I Frohman, Isaac F. Trumbull, ofi Bridgeport, Conn.; Mrs. Henry D. Mac Dona, of New Tork; Charles H. Stevens, of Atlantic City: Dr. F. S. Pearson. New Tork: D. Walker, New Tork: Dr. Pearson's secretary. Mrs.! Bride: Hugh Compton, 17 years old: r. T. Broderlck, of Boston: Herbert! Ellis, of New York; and Mrs. Spill-! man, of Detroit. Mr. Frohman's sec- j retary arrived to take charge of his employer's body. Another Identified One of the survivors to-night identi fied the body of Mrs. R. D. Shymer. of New Tork, the American widow of an English nobleman, who subsequent ly married an American and had been living In New Tork. She was on her way to London and her name probab ly will be added to the list of Amer ican dead. Her body will be sent back to the United States as well as those of the others, some of them starting to i night. I. A whole company of British soldiers to-day completed the digging of three huge graves, each 30 by 20 feet, in which the one hundred and forty odd i unidentified dead will be buried to- j morrow. The moving of bodies up the ! hill to the cemetery will begin at 9.30'. a. m. and continue until 1.30 p. m.' Then as the last ten or a dozen—the I number to be determined bv the hearses available—moves to the ceme tery the funeral procession will form and march to the grave*. Mounted police, soldiers and civilians will par ticipate. There will be a Joint ser vice, clergymen of all creeds Joining In saying prayers. Children In Morgnc* I Many children and little bahles #t.lll | lie In the morgues like so many dolls, i The townspeople covered them with ■ flowers to-day and It Is prohnble »h«-«e : little ones will be placed ' • 1 together. i Some on crutches, many limping i I end nearly sll bruised, the survivors l"ft their hotels in silent groups I 1 throughout the afternoon. There were ' some Americans, many Canadians and English. The presence of so many children on the Lusitanla was due to , the fact' that Canadian women were going to England to Join relatives while their husbands were at the front. Not a single body was brought in 10-day from the spot where the Lusi tanla disappeared but some bodies may yet be found if a storm does not seal ter them. There will not be so great a number picked up, however, as was the case in the North Atlantic after tlie Titanic disaster, for that vessel remained afloat so long all on deck had ample time to carefully adjust life belts. t I M VW Belding-Hall "Notaseme" STONE Refrigerators | are the best stone refrigerators j made in America. Our low prices I enable every one to have one of these Ice-savers and money-savers. Our special 70-lb. top loer, worth 928.00. Specially tl 7 QC priced at All other styles and sir.es at low | est available prices. "Join our Re ! frigerator Club." j ''The House that Saves You Money" HCHAS. F. T) o o V E JK j FURNITURE COMPANY j 1413-15-17-19 N. 2nd St | j' To Make Your Figure Slim and Attractive If you are one of the many who suf • fer from obesity you know only too well the humiliation and discomfort one suffers when they are too fat. The cause of obesity Is undoubtedly due to faulty assimilation. Too much of your food is turned Into fat and too little in to strength and vitality. To correct this i eat sparingly of starchy foods and get f from any good druggist a few oil of koreln capsules and take one after each meal and one before retiring, at night. They cost little, act quickly, are pleas ant to take and are perfectly safe. After starting treatment weigh your self, once a week and do not skip a single dose until you are down to mal. This Is such a simple, safe and reli able way to reduce one's weight that it readily appeals to everyone burdened with superfluous fat. —Advertisement.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers