14 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart VSS Spring Hats Are Introducing Many New Ideas That Combine Added Charm With Unusualness 'THIE OUTING HATS—yes. they are here, and how different. The keynote is struck in their high colors and rich combinations. It is not a whit too early to talk about them,, for these da}'s new millinery styles are launched and worn regardless of the calendar. In this category are the smartest outing hats imaginable from such famous designers as Phipps, Burgesser and Rawak. There's a big sailor faced with wide striped blue and white silk at $0.50, and a stunning awning stripe hat of the sailor type in Indian shades of brown, red, etc., at $6.95. Other styles arc not so daring and show softer blues ,old rose, violet and other shades in satin and braid. Yes, a Veritable Garden of Spring Hats in Bloom With More Than 200 Models on Display Scores of new dress styles at $4.95, $5.95 and $6.50. maintaining as ever the style leadership of our popular-priced millinery. These styles mirror the latest trend of correct hat fashions, featuring among other important things the vogue of ribbon trimming, the new high crown turbans, the new crowns of interlaced ribbons, the introduction of English walnuts as a hat garniture and other style features of importance. A superb showing of smartest pattern hats at SB.OO ,SIO.OO, $12.00 and $15.00 gives this early display an interest that will repay your visit to the department. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor, Front. Arrival of New White Dress Goods OUR SPRING import order of fine white dress goods is here and is rich in its variety of match less novelty weaves. White voiles In wide stripes, cheeks and fancy Xew cord, ottoman, oxford and basket weave skirt weaves, in all new patterns; yard, 75c, 85c to 51.25 )ng . vard 59 „ % Embroidered white voiles in new patterns: yard y ° , " * ' * SI.OO, 91.25 ami 81.50 Domestic cord skirting, 27 inches; yard 25c Embroidered white organdie; yard 500 Linen suiting, Bf> inches, medium weight, soft White check orgahdie; yard SI.OO finish. Special, yard 50c Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Street Floor. Gloves That Are Essential to the Completeness of a Woman's Spring Wardrobe Tres Bon two-pearl clasp kid gloves, in black Sans Parcil two-clasp kid gloves, P. K. and with white embroidery, or white with black overscan! stitching; black with white embroid embroidery $2.25 prv a,,, La France two-pearl clasp kid gloves with - P. K. and ovcrseam stitching; black and white | I wo-clasp kid gloves; black, white and col embroiderv $2.35 ors $1.19 to $2.00 l>lves, Pomeroy & Stewart —Street Floor. Dress Cottons That Show Radical Price Revisions: Buy Now 25c voiles; white grounds; colored stripes. percales; white and grey grounds, neat Mill and Factory Sale Price, yard 12'/ 2 t figures and stripes. Mill and Factory Sale 25c fancy crepe: solid shades. Mill and Fac- Price, yard " 10'^li tory Sale Price, yard 25c Bedford cords; solid shades. Mill and 8c ginghams in neat stripes. Mill and Fac- Factory Sale Price, yard 150 tory Sale Price, yard 6/4 £ 20c Nub suiting; 35 inches wide; solid crepe ginghams in fancy plaids Mill shades; linen finish. Mill and Factorv Sale and Factory Sale Price, yard 9<! price, yard i2 , A<k 20c ratine suiting; solid shades. Mill and 15c linen finish suiting; solid shades. Mill Factory Sale Price, yard and Factory Sale Price, yard 10^ 18c crepe for kimonos and underwear; 36 in- 25c madras shirting; 32 inches wide. Mill ches wide. Mil! and Factory Sale Price, i2 l / 2 $ and Factory Sale Price, yard 150 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Street Floor. Grocery Economies I 1 For Wednesday An Incomparable Showing of 3 cans pumpkin 25c a cans corn 25c t tt jr . ?S S p °! ai ? B & JN eW MoUITLing 3 bottles olives 250 1 T ■*- J-XA One lb. cocoa 25c 3 lbs. rice 25c M 10 cakes Swift's soap 25c |\ /■ m I S ■* T 0 cans lighthouse cleanser.... 25c I v I I I I I I I C . I V/ 3 bottles catsup 25c ▼ IJ.XIIIIV/1 J '4 lb. tea 25c «/ 3 packs macaroni 25c 7 boxes sardines s . 8oap :::::: ill- Styles That Are Far Removed 3 boxes raisins 25c _ 3 ibs. p p e ru c neV ::::::::::::::: ll<- From the Commonplace: 3 lbs. granulated sugar f0r.... 19c (With pound of coffee) ■* mm /fv 4 tmt /~v XXS»fcIS $1.95 tO sls 00 Lebanon bologna, lb. 20c *• V Dives? Pomeroy &" aiewart- Dlve "' Pomeroy * Stewart-Second Floor. . Basement.. v TUESDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG s£§£& TELEGRAPH FEBRUARY 22, 1916. MAID IN AMERICA AT THE ORPHEUM Witnessed by Large House,] Winter Garden Show Pleased | With Its Novelty A large audience last night thor-1 oughly enjoyed the Winter Garden | Revue, "Maid In America," over at j | the Orpheum. Most extravagant cos- j | turning and staging combined with a large cast of principals and chorus l gave a show such as is seldom seen | here, although there are several | houses in Manhattan which run this j type exclusively. Properly "Maid In | America" is a pot-pourri; melange, j phantasmagoria, call it most any i ! name synonomous to these and you | | hit the truth. For without a plot of i j even the slenderest, the show passes ; I from one spectacle to another in a j purely spectacular way, without once I j aiming at continuity. Several most j unusual diversions contributed to the i Revue; the most striking of which was j the opening of the second act when ! i the orchestra suddenly struck into | Rachmoninoff's Prelude In C Minor ] (and the chorus behind the curtain I sang the accompaniment in the treble ; to the heavy motif In the bass, j To the rapid tempo of this number [there was toe dancing of merit by, Gertrude Mackey and as one curtain j was divided after another there was I seen a stage setting which reminded I ono greatly of a Bakst Scherezade I stage design. Florence Moore, the (head-line incumbent when the j Orpheum opened years ago was the i 'feature of the performance. Miss| | Moore experienced some difficulty In j sending her linos beyond the foot lights, but she possesses the happy faculty of jollying her audience into ; a get-together spirit, after which | everything is lovely for Miss Moore, iTo her credit must go the only thing! j which in the show might have of-; j fended the aesthetic-minded in the 1 house. Much more delightful was the| J performance of Minerva Coverdalc in | several of her songs and dances. Retlte and clever. Miss Coverdalc 1 1 in her first appearance won her way j into the good graces of the house. The i I best comedy element was offered by \ John Sparks and Sam Adams, two ex- j iceptionally good black-face charac-1 ters. Novelty dancing received its 1 best exemplification through Googan j !and Cox two eccentric dancers who | ! twisted .and distorted themselves j .through almost the Impossible. Taken all in all, "Maid In America" ! is amusement of the unadulterated type—in fact a show of the type of | that over-worked misnomer, a "tired j ! businessman's show." MAX ROBERTSON. WIFE MADE HIM WOO ADOPTED CHILD f Continued From First Page.] ! her adopted daughter, Yvonne Gou | raud. Miskinoff, who swore he had a right jto his title, is suing his wife for a separation in order, he says, to ascer tain the whereabouts of a daughter I born last Spring and spirited away. Mme. Miskinoff has countered with a j suit to freo herself from the prince. The pawn in this strange marital ; game is Yvonne, a girl of sixteen, but | old for her years. Clad In a black ; walking suit, a mite of a turban top ! ping her golden hair, she toyed with her fox neckpiece and cuddled close ; to her foster-mother as the prince told ! his story yesterday. Now and then her j violet blue eyes snapped and she | tapped the floor with her high-heeled I tan boots. When tho prince, who is thirty-six, ! stepped to the witness chair he but i toned his single-buttoned cutaway coat, saw that his gray-striped trousers ; would not bag at the knee and said he would speak in either Russian or ! French. He used the latter language ! through an interpreter. Led by his counsel, he told of his ' marriage in June, 1914, and tlien HOW HE QUIT TOBACCO #Thls veteran, S. 1 B. Lamphere, was i addicted to the ex- j cesslve use of to- ! liacco for many I years. He wanted to quit but needed^ fr< e book t! lal t ••! 1 s ' about tobacco habit and how to con quer it quickly, easily and safely. In a rcfent letter he writes: "I have no desire for tobacco any more. I feel 1 1 like a now man." 1 Any one desiring a copy of this book I on tobacco habit, smoking and chew -1 ing, can get it free, postpaid, by writ- j i ing to Edward .1 Woods, 92 G. Station I K, New York City. You will be sur- j , prised anil pleased. Look for quieter | : nerves, stronger heart, better diges- I tlon, improved eyesight, increased vig- | or, longer life and other advantages If j ; vou quit poisoning yourself. QUIT MEAT WHEN BUCK HURTS OH KIDNEYS BOTHER —T I Says Uric Acid in meat clogs Kidneys and irritates Bladder. j A glass of Salts is harmless way to flush Kidneys, says authority. If you must have your meat every | day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted au i thorlty who tells us that meat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes the | kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. Tb-y become slug gish and weaken, men you suffer with ! a dull misery in the kidney region, • sharp pains In the back or sick head ache, dizziness, your stomach sours, i tongue. Is coated and when the weath -1 er is bad you have rheumatic twinges. I The urine gets cloudy, full of sedl i ment, the channels often get sore ; and irritated, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. To neutralize these irritating acids, |to cleanse the kidneys and flush oft the body's urinous waste get four | ounces of Jad Salts from any phar | macy here; take a tablespoonful In i a glass of water before breakfast for I a few days and your kidneys will I then act fine. This famous salts is I made from the acid of grapes and 1 lemon juice, combined with Uthta, and ! has been used for generations to flush ! and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it 110 longer irritates, thus ending blad der weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in jure, and makes a delightful efferves 'l cent lithla water drink.—Advertlse -1 ment < Mexican Manikin, 2,000 Years Old Discovered Wmm i 0~ 8 H v mpHSstßeaaEsnnmi H|(P P mammjj*.irjn Here is tlie oldest American antique known, a stone manikin, dating from 100 B. C., and found by a Mexican peon ploughing his fields in tlie district of Sn Andres, Tuxtla. It is of conical shape, in jade or nephrite, about 6% inches in height and 3% inches in diameter at the base. On it are carved the glyphs or symbolical figures which were the writing of the ancient Mexicans and by means of which they recorded in stone the history of their race and achievements. But they give no clue to what this figure represents. With the upper part of the head of a man, it combines the bill of a bird, and wings cover its sides. It is an idol, probably, of these ancient people, whose forms of worship are still unknown. launched into his tale. lie said his J wife had forced him to make love to Yvonne and that, he was compelled to to agree to a divorce. He described | the alleged night life led by Mine, j Miskinoff, which he vainly tried to ' end. and said he had rescued Yvonne | just as she placed a revolver to her head because of unremitted love for him. Then he described the breaking ' up of the home. "When 1 objected to the princess! going to the Grand Prix race in Paris she said she hadn't married me to stay i at home," testified the prince. "I told her 1 couldn't stand the excessive heat, of the race track and she replied that. ; with her money she could find a bus- ; band who would obey her. X soon ] found that the bringing up of this woman was not suitable for one of my I station." Yvonne was introduced by the ] prince as an assertive, petulant, and i wholly delightful girl, who once, when j she became angry, seized a carving ! knife threateningly. When he com plained he was told that it was he who | had spoiled Yvonr.e. Iteligion of Nudity In the latter part of 1914 the trio i came to New York and took a suite at, the Hotel McAlpin. They had not been j here long, the witness said, before the j princess asked him to join a religious j sect in which she was interested. She ! told him tlie members were interesting persons and "would present themselves 1 in very live costumes, mostly nude." j He laughed at the idea and his wife 1 became enraged. The witness became very intense when the subject of the baby was broached. If such a baby exists, it j will inherit a share of the Crocker [ millions. "Where was your daughter born?" ! asked Mr. Oldmixon. "In a hospital," answered the prince. ! Unhappy Over Ha by "My wife went there April 12, 1915, j and a day or so later I received a tele- ] gram which said. 'Sunday, 4 o'clock, : morning. A daughter.' I went, there j and found my wife in bed. She said j the baby was in another room with its nurse; that she was very weak, mean-j ing herself, but would be out In a few days. She said she 'had taken three 1 treatments of twilight, sleep' and ! feared it might injure the child. A j few days later she returned to the | hotel without the baby." "What did she say in explanation?" ' "That she was afraid her daughter, j Gladys, would sec it—he was to visit ! us in a few days—and make a scandal out of it. I felt very unhappy." I.cts Him With Girl All this time there had been trouble I I over Yvonne, and a series of quarrels! culminated early in June, when, the prince said. Mine. Miskinoff exclaimed: I "I'm leaving this place so you can marry the girl." I "And what did you say?" inquired the attorney. "I said to her, 'This is impossible; T ; ! can't marry your daughter'," replied I the witness; "but she left the Hotel McAlpin just the same. Then, in order j not to be in the hotel alone with j Yvonne, I sent her to a private family. I Madame went to the Hotel Gotham ! and I saw nor there. I asked her to come back. I cried. But she said it t j would be much better if I married Yvonne. She said Yvonne and I ought I , 1 o go into the country, and that dur- . ing that time Madame and I could ! arrange for a divorce. After that I was to marry Yvonne." "Darling Kizi-Kiri" "Are you still in love with Mrs. , Gouraud?" "Certainly; why not? There is love , and love, it depends on the degree of i love you are talking about." "Was your love for Yvonne warm or 1 cold?" The prince replied "medium" and | then identified a note be wrote her on j October 16 last in which he said: "I kiss von a. million times, my darling j Kizi-kizi." And "Utile Bautzoy" The prince admitted that he slipped 1 a note under Yvonne's door in which ! he called her "My little Bautzoy," 1 whatever that is. The attorney tried to find out at what time the prince arose in the morning and finally the witness re plied: "I get up at 11 in the morning, at ?, in the afternoon or at 7 in the even ing. After T left school it was always that way with me. T am a little bit lazy." "Didn't your wife pay for that baby carriage?" asked Mr. l,awrence, sud denly changing the subject. "Certainly." replied the witness with a broad grin. "You see. we were living together, and the money was ours. She pa'd all the bills, for after 1 left Paris I bad no resources." When asked if his love cooled when Mine. Misk'nofT left the McAlpin, the nrince replied: "On" doesn't change his love with his hotel and luggage." The nrince couldn't remember the name of tlie sanatorium to which his wife went, because he had been taken there by the maid, but he was quite certain about his visit and insisted he had called only once. He never heard the names of Madame's physician and nurse. "Did you go to theaters while your wife was in the sanatorium?" de manded Mr. Lawrence. "Why, certainly," responded ihe; witness. "It wasn't T who was ill, you ; know. T went walking, too." The attorney wanted to know if the prince had called Yvonne any "pet names." It was long before he under stood the meaning of the term. Then he said he had used such names, but \ couldn't translate them. A note to the j girl showed that he had addressed her j as "My Little Bit Boutzou." The latter I word meant something: like "sweet- | heart," he said. He denied he had j slipped the note, or others, under the i girl's door. "She put some under my door or in j my room," he said. "I wrote her two. j three, four times. You know how it is i when you are twenty-four hours to- ; gether and don't know what to do." PRIPET SWAMP BRISTLES WITH MACHINE GUNS [Continued l'Voin First Pag-e. ] ing futile in this section at least all Russian efforts to regain lost territory. An Associated Press correspondent, the first to have the opportunity to view the "machine gun front" in and about the Pripet swamps since the Teutons took up their positions in September and October, has just re- ! turned from a trip along several miles i of the swamp lighting line. Bristles 'With Guns Every mile of this front fairly bristles with deadly machine guns, which cover every inch of terrain. Though the correspondent had no i means of ascertaining how many ■ men defend the Pinsk sector the mul titude of rapid-firing guns gives the impression that even a small number of men should be able to hold the line indefinitely. In addition to the guns, millions of running feet of barbed wire entanglements, transform ing each village and house into a veritable fortress, render the German positions, from a layman's standpoint, impregnable—which the military au thorities claim that they are. Forces Deadlocked This impression is heightened by the fact that the swamps, from two to ten miles wide, in the region of Pinsk have not once been frozen over entirely during the winter. Tn fact, the mild weather, with the resultant open swamp land between the Ger man and Russian lines, has made ex traordinary fartitications unnecessary thus far. Probably nowhere on any front is the term "stationary warfare" more applicable than in the Pinsk dis trict, where lonely outposts in block houses erected on tiny islands in the swamp lands and roving patrols give the only real touch of fighting. Kvery Yard Fenced The German lines at Pinsk protrude farthest east of any along the whole front from the Baltic to Gallcla. They project in a semi-oval form. The greatest danger to the forces at Pinsk, therefore is a flanking movement from the north—the swamps afford protec tion from the south. In consequence, the northern lines have been made ex tremely strong. Not only is every yard of this front fenced in with en tanglements 100 to 120 feet wide, but there are supporting points at very short intervals which are verit able fortresses In themselves. They are surrounded by star-shaped barrl j cades of wire. Live in Dugouts \ Each of these supporting points is subdivided into barricaded sections ! with bombproof shelters and with ina | chine guns to fire along both sides of I each point of the stars. As a final precaution each supporting point is surrounded by a single wire, stretched : knee hif?h, on which hang ten pairs of empty bottles, which clink the , alarm the moment the wire is touched ! by any person who approaches. A novel feature of the German de fense in this section is that the troops are composed almost entirely of crack 'cavalry regiments, numbering high ! nobles among their officers. A short ! time ago they would have scoffed at the Idea of being dismounted, but now I they live cheerfully in part or wholly under ground, riding their horses only for sport in improvised hippodromes. The lot of the troops on this north ern flank of the front, however, is happier than that of those east and south of Pinsk, for they have been able to entrench themselves. | Hair Tinting] I Made Easy j Many thousands of woman have pul up with streaked and gray hair be cause they knew of no absolutely «af« way to overcome this robber of youtt and attractiveness. After all, one of the chief pleas ures In life Is that of appearinfW'K as attractive a manner a-s possible. "Brownatone" Hair Stain will hell you In Just this emergency. With It you can touch up the gray spots In stantly—or you can in a few moments time give to your hair that rich, sofi brown, so much to be admired. Or you can make it a glossy black if yot prefer. All this without the possibility of detection, failure or harm to elthei hair or scalp. No previous experience whatever li necessary when you use 'Brownatone.' Just brush or comb it into the hair. A sample and a booklet will be sen you upon receipt of 10 cents. All of the leading drug stores sel "Brownatone." Two sizes, JBc an< SI.OO. Two shades—one for golden oi medium brown, and the other for dark brown or blaok. Insist on "Brownatone" at your hair dresser's. Prepared by the Kenton Pharmaca Co.. 612 E. Pike St., Covington, Ky. Sold and guaranteed in Harrisbu'r* bj Clark's Medicine Stores, 300 Market SI. I 306 Broad St., and other leading deal I era. —Advertisement. Throw Away Your Eye-Glasses! I A Free Prescription You Can Have Filled and l'it at Horn _________ ! Do you wear glasses? Are you t j victim of eye-strain or other eye-weak 1 nesses? It so, you will be glad to know that there Is real hope for you. Manj 1 whose eyes were failing, say they havi | had their eyes restored through th< principle of this wonderful free pre I scription. One man says, after trylnt it: "1 was almost blind; could not sei to read at all. Now 1 ran read every thing without any glasses and my eyes do not water any more. At night tnej I would pain dreadfully; now they fee fine all the time. It was like a niiracl) to me." A lady who used it tmyy. "The atmosphere seemed hazy with o without glasses, but after using thi I prescription for fifteen days everything seems clear. I can oven read fine prin without glasses." It is believed tha thousands who wear glasses can now | discard them in a reasonable tini | and multitudes more will be able tc ! strengthen their eyes so as to b spared the arid expense of eve getting glasses. Eye troubles of manj descriptions may be wonderfully bene' I fited by following the simple rules Here is the prescription: Go to H. ( I Kennedy or to any active drug stor land get a bottle of Optona. Fill a tw< I ounce bottle with warm water, drop ii one Optona tablet and allow to di* | solve. With this liquid, bathe the eye | two to four times daily. You sho'ulc i notice your eyes clear up pereeptib! | right from the start and inflammation , I will quickly disappear. If your eve are bothering you, even a little, tak i steps to save them now before It is to late. Many hopelessly blind might hav i i been saved if they '><ul eared for the! . eyes in time. —Advertisement. Says Rheumatics Shoult Not Drink Whisky Overheat* <lie Dlood and Increase . ! Inflammation In Joints and Muscle* I Don't drink whisky or any alcoholi I beverage unless you want to increas the agony of rheumatism. Keep you l feet dry, wear woolen underwear, am drink plenty of water; lemonade is bet ter. This treatment helps, but If yoi i | really want to get rid of rheumatlsn i with its painful distress, twisted am : swollen joints and perpetual agony take one-half teaspoonful of Rheum; i once a day. Rheuma conquers rheumatism am sciatica; It is the enemy of both. Fo i 1 over five years throughout America I I has been prescribed by broad-mlnde( physicians and has released thousand from agony, pain and despair. Hundreds who thought they wer crippled for life are now leading usefu I lives and helping to support the family H. C. Kennedy and druggists every • where sell Rheuma for not more thai , 50 cents a bottle, with the understand ing that it will drive every particle o rheumatic poison from your system o I money back.—Advertisement. ACID STOMACHS :l ARE DANGEROUS . A I'b.Txlrlnn'M Advice no Cause and Car . I A New York Physician vv.io has mad , a special study of stomach and intcs . titial diseases says that nearly all in testinal troubles, as well as many dls > ; eases of the vital organs, are directl; ! traceable to a deranged condition o f the stomach. This in turn is due abou . nine times out of ten to excessive acid L [ ity, commonly termed sour stomach o , I heartburn, which not only irritates an< inflames the delicate lining of the stoni ' ach but also may set up gastritis am ' In a large majority of cases gastri ulcers are accompanied by hyperacidity It is interesting to note that he con demns the use of patent medicines, am ' practically all medical treament tnat i > designed to act upon the stomach lln r ing. stating that the best results ar r i obtained by the use of a simple ant | add which acts upon the contents . © t tlie stomach and neutralizes the acidlt; !of the food thus removing the sourc " of the trouble. As an antacid he pre " | scribes ordinary bisurated magncsii ''land savs that Irritating medicines am >' | medical treatments are useless, so loni •las the contents of the stomach remain -| acid; remove the acidity and ther i will be no need for medicine —the In I flamed lining of the stomach will the heal itself. Sufferers from acidity, sou 5 stomach and heartburn should get i ! small bottle of bisurated magnesli from their druggist, and take a tea [spoonful in a quarter of a glass of ho 5 lor cold water after each meal, repeat 3 Ing In fifteen minutes, if necessary, thi >• being the dose which the doctor ha » ! found most efficacious in alj cases.- , | Advertisement. : Alkali in Soap r .\ Bad For the Hair ! . j ■ II Soap should be used very carefullj i"! If you want to keep your hair " I its best. Most soaps and prepare! I shampoos contain too much alkali I This dries the scalp, makes the hai g | brittle, and ruins it. -! The best thing for steady use is ,lus f ordinary mulslfled cocoanut oil (whicl ' is pure and greaseless), and is bette 3 | than the most expensive soap or any s i tiling else you ran use. R One or two teaspooufuls will cleans J the hair and scalp thoroughly. Stmpl moisten the hair with water and rub i " in It makes an abundance of rich R creamy lather, which rinses out easily M removing every particle of dust, dirt ? dandruff and excessive oil. The hai r dries quickly and evenly, and It leave * the scalp soft, and the hair fine an v silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and eas y to manage. y You can net mulslfled cocoanut oi '• at anv pharmacy, It's very cheap, am " a few ounces will supply every mem j ber of the family for months. 1 [ Try Telegraph Want Ads
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