22 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Here's a Lot of Men's $20.00 Overcoats The Early Arrival of New Hats For From Regular Stock Going Out To- Our Spring Opening Next Week Gives i morrow fit Half Price Us a Notable Showln g For Saturday /A # XV/ W CXI A lclll JL A i.V>V> Easter comes late this year but never lias there been such in- • - Qr> w '- ■ viiX AC-C-w terest manifested in Spring Millinery so early in the season. ''"AT\ Th ' S ' S about the last Winter cleanu P announcement that will come u^idy > b prip»Vation teS IHHI r/I jm \ from the Men's Clothing Section. These reduced overcoats were taken ® ty,e cve " t * sh . owin £ 01 incom P arable fashion scope. Dozens and | | 3 1 dozens of hats have been coming in, each bearing its message of r ' I I ! f/\ '\\ from regular stock and prices were cut in two. There are Balmorals and some new mode inspired by Pans millinery geniuses. w I J II I V ) r The new hat fashions are as dainty, gay and varied as the j v "f7 j// I loose-fitting overcoats in models for men and young men. The styles include: flowers in the field. No one particular place or period can claim J / ' JV . these charming styles. The quaint pokes have been borrowed from S / /' \ Grey Scotch overplaids. Brown mixtures. d a y S Q f 1830, the huge hat with soft undulating brims has been Grey mixtures. Plain Brown Velours. inspired by Gainsborough's art, while the perky little turbans and r q , 1 1 . other smart effects cleverly pinched into chic "turns" and "corn- I urey acotcn eneexs. • ers „ belong . who |i y to pre sent-day origination. \ The New Spring Suits For Men and Young Men Are Coming in 1 1 gg jg 95 and s6 50 v So Fast That We Must Make Mention of the Many Styles hats finds the stock well prepared with attractive and becoming models. Never has their superiority over other trimmed hats at these prices been so readily apparent. That Are Already in Stock. Hundreds of New Straw Shapes 98c, $1.95, $2.95 to $lO lhe new one-button etiects. Ihe new belted back English models. ,\ n ynequaled display of new trimmed hats for girls $7.50 These are the smartest styles we have ever seen tailored expressly for young men. Dives, pomeroy & Stewart. Handsome two and three-button models with soft roll lapels with plain or patch pockets, many suits quarter lined. ~ New double breasted models. , New Curtains to Beautify Women's Quality Gloves A variety of rich patterns and weaves to satisfy any taste. J v Prices of suits. *IO.OO to $30.00. The Hottl© This SorinC M p OU f T f r .f. Bon best quality real kid gloves iU 1 lUUIC *lllO upilllg with P. K. stitching; 111 black with white and | jj gw BCr i m curtains in ecru and ivory trimmed with white with black. Pair *2.25 TX * 9 C O Wri+U ,a "ew'crrr Si P B ti«Rh"d Trefousse La France two-pearl Clasp best qual nr)VQ tl Cf VV 1l M I I « edge or lace trimmed, white and ecru .. .$1.50 to $2.50 it} real kid gloves; with P. K. and overseam I—' WV O WL/1 lllii LAX lOj ▼ ▼ It AX I—/i\lX CI A CXXX A 1 WtiOv.lO) I Double printed etamine curtains with hemmed bor- stitching'' in black with white Piir «•>•>'» X U e I der, yellow, pink and blue; yard 25c ! f r c . ti ~ , ••• __ White rice cloth with fancy border and colored dots r etOUSSe oans L areil two-clasp real kid CO Qt VT (J kl 1 m pink and yellow and blue; yard ... 25c gloves, with P. K. and overseam stitchine • black vVy I Cretonnes in tapestry effects, 36 and 50 inches wide; With \\hlte and white with black. Pair, *2.00 L 1 yard ........ ...... s 50c. 75c ami SI.OO A\ r omen's two-clasp kid eloves in black white v Curtain edKings in white, ecru, ivory and colors; yard anr i rn l nr c J.V Jiv Dives, Pomeroy A Stewart, Men's clothing, Second Floor. . _ ® c to 10c Dive# Prlisr >V ai], "i" o. ™ Sp.v.OO Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Third Floor. | es - Pomeroy & fetewart. Street Floor. Hundreds of New Shirt Men, Wear Educator Shoes Oxfords i Hosiery For Every Member Patterns For Men and Ge , Rld of p oot Trouble of the Family A Representative Showing , Mens heavy cotton fast black, seamless socks ... 12>^ 1 Educator shoes are made over special footform lasts. They correct in due time all foot troubles • Vlen s "cavy wool seamless fast black and natural grey .Men s fast color woven striped madras negligee shirts with caused by the pinching pressure of narrow pointed shoes. They are the most sensible shoes a person so | f' J Women s heavy cotton hose launJ^?d C cuffs. P ¥pecfal ° at Sh . l r! S ..^! t t h .'.'ff. ?!^ P s9c Mens Educators *5.00 fast black cotton seamless hose, fine ribbed 9c novpftv^°i,Mn nama rep netf " Bee shtrts wlth French «"• and Children's Educators *1.75, *2.00 and *2.50 rhildren's fast black wool llolc; heam'iess and fine ribbed'.'.*'.'. Percale coat shirts with laundered cuffs'; black and colored stripes I XT O * CI "T7 lIT colors"^" 18 ' r ' bbed caßhn,erc hosc: Hi,k heel " and hlack IJOYB' NEW BLOtSE WAISTS 50C IN 6 W OOfing OiIOCS 1 OT W 0111011 and Sto™"! . COtt ° n . Tapeless waists with collar attached; in light and dark striped I ' O UNDKRWEAIt FOR MEX AND WOMEN niadms; p^al n bWhUe madras and white i White Nubuck high cut lace shoes with plain toe Havana brown kidskin button shoes, plain toe last. Mon; s heavy cotton fleece lined union suits SI.OO M'SI'EMIKRS IX XEW COLORING* laßt an white lv <>ry soles anfl Louis heels SO.OO Goodyear welted soles, high French heels $6.00 j Men s heavy natural wool shirts and drawers; each SI.OO Battleship grey, regimental blue. Palm Beach, Ki'llarney green and French bronze high cut button shoes, bronze pearl bufton^anH 1 "l?i2 "."'l' "'T T l ' " nish , k,d S,loe • S • in e yl cotton' fleece^lned suit^^ 1 f ' ee ° e " nCd: e " ' 50c rainbow lavender; matched end. and tnmmings; extra quality webbing buttons, hand welted soles and Louis heels So 00 French heels * Goodyea '- welted BoIPS ''" d heavy cotton rlbSed ves'ts" Se linid !!!!! i!!!!!!! »9c Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Men's Store. I m j Women's heavy cotton fleece lined union suits SI.OO Dhes, Pomeioy & Stewart—Street Floor, Rear. I # Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Street Floor. A Book Sale of Bewitching Styles in New Spring Apparel That Will Captivate Groceries Unusual Interest ; Every Woman Who Visits the Outergarment Section Tomorrow ; » Clearance of Publishers Remainders i u tans peas -•*- 'brings the best values in books offered in j A representative gathering of all-wool poplin suits with linings of choice Peau de Cygne will be shown hi a new display to-morrow at pound/'^hosS Vour choice of scores of titles of fiction; pub- j c °l° rs are na\j blue, tan,.]jelgian and black, lhe coat is made with a faille silk collar with belt ending on either side of the i jar mustard i«e 'i®^^ 8 prices 50c u> 11.50, at . 25c l front in a large silver buckle. i jar syrup io« m'.;'"',"™ pVK.rs JS??X£nJ?rte»2: .:,' « a , f elf '°, every t; ' pc of " pm 15 of fine ,|l,ality wHn b. the «««•, b«, «**». The b«* « with „ „«i qo( . ! g SK.-:::::::::::::::::::':::::::::::::: \Z Sn Grea r tauc S 'of ti.e Wori.i'' r„,h vWi,',^;Vn* " * P of sdf matenal lending from the collar to the waist. The front of the coat is finished with buttons and'a 2 cans "•"«! v n ics or the w €>i Id. Each \ olume is fullj a l «« .vi 'j c • n lean baked beans 10c illustrated, containing sixteen half-tone plates welted seam on eitlie. side. Specially priced at $18.50 J pound lima beans frontpiecc. '' ton< mk ' ' in,i a »re Serge, poplin and black and white check suits in a group of styles that cannot well be matched i-. 1 pound kidney beans i«c Florence Cairo Genoa Venice at the P rice - with li,lin g s of rich Peau dc Cvgne and skirts of unusual attractiveness in sizes for fTri - 1 box IHl,i, " s 10c Publishers price sl.oo. Our Sale Price....7sc >T-jK women and misses At iu , 1 box pancake flour loe ( hiiuu the Country mul ||,s People. The present j ' * Sp.vO.OO 1 box buckwheat flour 10c races ?s*most°t?meiv'^mibii^ha?!i o nrfci^ionr /I l\ ■ °P. lin ' ser P c - black a "d white checks, in materials that have been adopted from French ere- 2 pounds soft su K ar i:«c Sale I'ri.'e .. .:. . p . * ~05 i / Y ations of extreme lovliness ' l pound xxxx sugar io,t \llcnnif.s Wild Fricii.is, by' Mason A.' Walton; i /./U, ]fk \ The showing of suits at s'is.ran ' l publ,sher ' 8 I\\\ ' LA anH " are gabardine poplin serge and checks in navy, black, green, grey and black Dlveß> Po meroy & Stewart, Basement. Onyx Series, by Carolyn Weils'. JJ ™ sues, ranging from 14 to 47, including several sizes for stout women. Former prices Christmas Carolin' Pleasing Prose to Specially priced to-morrow $7.50 to sl6 50 \ e e-eoho fiub riß and The Eternal Feminine s '^ o ?^ dium wejght coats in three length styles, in sizes 16, 18, 36,' 38 Children's Embroidery Class Publishers price of the books 50c. Our Sale . . ' Matei ! a,s including solid colors in serges and Melton cloths and fancy striped coat- Mutimi Ooniics." a series'of i' 2' booics riiied w'th «,')] mgS '«im spe . c ' a J. c . l "™ ce , t o- I f rr j ow $3.50 and $4.50 \j p • meets Saturday afternoon from after-dinner stories, toasts, conundrums, jokes, \ MAliJUin I ■ , an broadcloths, duvetyne and wool velour cloths: sizes 16 to 42. Specially ''V /: "pum,...,, „„„ s „0. 5 .,. PMC . '■ mP"« d •« •• • ■•; #9.50 and #18.36 | st „ wlrt Thlra F ,„„ Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart. Second Floor. V uives. Pomeroy &. btewari. xnirti v ioor. l Our Library TableJL EW MiNUTW W * TH^ THE BOOKS «• MAGAZINESA^^S^SA The Spirit of Man, an Anthology, by Robert Bridges. ' (Longmans, Green & Co., New York and London, pub lishers, $1.50.) Scholars and those who possess a love of the beautiful and are interested in thiags other than those of the com mon. work-a-day world are urged to read—no, to bathe, rather—in the waters of literature which literally I'ow through the pages of this the best anthology in French and Knglish that we have seen, rt is taken from the CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears _ Signature of MuS FRIDAY EVENING, HARBISBURG TELEGRAPH MARCH lU, 1910 philosophers and poets and connected tip without titles into a readable whole by the poet laureate of England, Rob ert Bridges, who dedicated his work to Kins: George. Its main implication in the sequence of thought which is to a more or less degree followed out is that spirituality is the basis and foun dation of human life." The temperament of the poet is seen throughout all the book, which is as sembled In a desire to interpret life in the light of higher things and sub ject to the rule of the spirit; a hopeful turning away from the scenes of horror and bloodshed to the region of souls "where all is pure." The anthology is prefaced with a paean of praise for and glory in the honor and nobility of the British sol diory. As befits the poet laureate, It Is gotten together in masterly fashion, with the cream of the best thought of thin and other ages crystallized . into poetical sequence. One Is whipped quickly from.the titterings of Plato to the dreamy and hypnotic poetry of Rabindranath Tagore. One is slid quietly from the penetrating philoso phy of the French of Pascal to the beautifully simple and sublime English translation of the Odyssey. Read and one may safely guarantee with Long fellow that . . . "the cares that Infest the day Shall fold their tents like the Arabs, And as silently steal away." Heroines of the Modern Rtaire, by For rest Izard. (Sturgis & Walton Co., $1.50.1 Herewith Is given a book that abounds with biographies of the best known actresses of the Enrrlish and American stage to-day. Continental actresses who have international repu tations are likewise included as being of interest to the English-speaking public, and in the last chapter are grouped those American actresses who have made distinct contributions to our stage, but. In the opinion of the author, insufficient to qualify them for a full chapter devoted exclusively to their biographies. The book is interesting for refer ence, but primarily to give the reader n new insight into the lives and char acters of these women upon whom the quality of our theaters has depended in the past and is depending for future standards. Ouu instinctively syuipu thizes with them In their effort* and acquires a greater appreciation of the art of acting than ever before. . Complete chapters are devoted to the biographies of Sarah Bernhardt, Ada Rehan, Helen Modjeska, Mary Anderson. Ellen Terry, Mrs. Flske, Gabrielle Kejane, Julia Marlowe, Eleanora Duse and Maude Adams, with a portrait of each. Honorable , mention is given, among others, to the following American actresses: Mar garet Anglln, Marie Doro, Billie Burke. Ethel Harrymore, Margaret Ullngton, Elsie Ferguson and Helen Ware, PICKED AS ONE OF THE FAVOR ITE BOOKS A short time ago a contest was held in Chicago and Boston to obtain lists of the bejit books for boys. A list of twenty-four was prepared by the chief librarian of the Chicago Public Library, who confessed that he could not pick the twenty-five. Of the hundreds of participants in this contest, "Freckles," by Gene Stratton-Porter, was voted one of the most popular to fill the va cant place along with "Pilgrim's Prog ress," "Black Beauty," "The Last of the Mohegaiis," "David Copperfleld" and "Silas Mamer." Tlic Martyr's Return, by Perclval W. Wells. (Bartlett Publishing Co., $1.00.) In one word the thought and sub stance of this volume can be expressed. "Preparedness" is the subject which has the country in debate as no other has had for years, and that is the real message of the book. Not a fiction preparedness wherein the author has had to draw upon his Imagination; not a theoretical preparedness wherein he advances many of his views; but a sound, logical preparedness which he discusses with President Lincoln, mar tyred and returned In the spirit to talk with General Hazard, a veteran of the Civil War. The author has gone back over the centuries and shown how na tions victorious have become subjected to their own licentiousness, the after math of victory. He traces carefully the history of nations relative to their naval power and brings Ills lesson home through our national experi ence in the wars of 1812 and on through the Spanieh-Ameiican war. The entire book is written in the form of conversation, the Martyr but briefly responding at Intervals. The negro and social questions are touched upon, but give place to the aubjcct which hag J become dinner table conversation in practically every American home. "A DRESSCESSIONAL" Girl of the Future, feared of all, Chasing the far-flung Fashion line. What awful things may yet appal, Hung on your human form divine! Girl of to-day, stay with us yet, Lest we regret! Lest we regret! The tunic and the peplum dies. The plaiting and the flare depart; Oh. what must we next saerilice To future of a fearful art? ! Girl of To-day, stay with us all, Lest worse befall! Lest worse befall! The blouse and bodice melt away. Forever fades the silhouette; Lo! all the mode of yesterday Is one with puff and pantalette. Girl of To-day. stay with us, do! Lest worse ensue! Lest worse ensue! If drunk with mad designs we loose Wild styles that hold no art in awe— Such clothing as the Fijis use, Or lesser breeds without the law— Girl of To-day, stay here with we. Lest worse may be! Lest worse may be! For foolish maid who puts her trust In French tailleur or smart modiste,, In valiant men of mien august, Without discernment in the least— For frantic fads of Fashion's whirl, Have mercy on us. Future Girl! * —Captain Wells, in Harper's Magazine for March. YOUR FRECKLES Xced Attention In March or Fact May Stay Covered I Now is the time to take special car* ! of the complexion if you wish it to look well the rest of the year. The March winds have a strong; tendency to bring out freckles that may etay all summer unless removed. Now Is the time to use othine—double strength. This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful that it is sold by druggists under guarantee to refund the money if It falls. Get an ounce of othine—double strength, and even a few applications should show a wonderful improve ment, some of the smaller freckles even vanishing entirely.