14 /£ ' ——— —— ft = Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart r* SpringClothesForßoys--FineShow-«J La Camille Front Lace 1 i n g of Suits With Extra Pair Trousers Corsets | At & 3 - 95 > $ 4 - 95 and & 6 50 Spec j! l Fittings v f; They are see and appreciate good La Camille Corsets have /il\ " 4V' 1 style in clothes. )ac ' < ' *' lc correc t hip / *' ; ' ; -*v ' Good style is one of the attractions of our / y yy// v \ line, the slightly higher bust I clothes for b °ys- Parents are invited to in- /X V. V\jc •\ \ tU • • .?i • , // \l llffi®\ rv • . Q . 1 T • 1 vestigate the unusually sturdy quality of / \ \ nip in at the waist /J I mjgf\ s P rin S suits and their moderate \ which are features of the if J 1 j cost ' / /V"VHs4 new corset stvles. In addi- // I|| Hi Hats For Little Girls 1 h°r- °' s ' y ' es iS '" ge e "°" gh """" any CO] AL-5& tion ' this front lace corset VW) <»roy scotrii mixtures j ninck an^|y || g reat varie,y nf designed spcc-iaHy fnr v m „, c face, ~-o r S« SS SSfflESh I CSSST-*-. jf I * I from thVsptae «d 'p™ I\l\ Y I the little -iris arc dainty mushroom shapes all bright and H v bactamTwo and ILetbnUons, Jf * a fr cc circulation of air and Mill// ! with pretty ribbons and floors. a„d for their older sisters are OS* nl" : «- and old rose, trimmed with blaek velvet ribbon and tinv pearl buekles ' * Other models to I j, |9 Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor. Rear. . kittle poke shapes of yellow braid and pink ribbon with wreath of C "1 pp small flowers around crown $1.05 Pokes of tasral straw In blue and corn, trimmed with old rose rib- ! MOB I 1 f f\ Ck X* M f~\ McV» ■ 1 /2k O O bon and small rosebuds si.in W VJ. d 1 1 VJ 110 11 Small turndown hats in brown and corn with brim rolled on left side and trimmed with narrow ribbon $2.50 A T T-> 4 • -j One bucket white fish SOef'j boses 5c sardines ioc Medium size drooping hat of pink, braid trimmed with black velvet /\ Q I LJ fwl■* qUt p 4 lbs, rice 25c !:! lbs. raisins 27 C . and pink roses faced with pink messaline $2..">0 J. Y.O 1 I i V-ZjlxoXAvl/w 3 ltis - P° a bea,ls 25c p packs currants 17c Mushroom hat of white braid trimmed with tiny cord of blue silk I ,! lbs " lima beans 25c | 2 Packs Not-a-seed raisins ..., aic blue flowers and long ends of black velvet ribbon <•»!»% I/ / \ O'PrtylM,. ,1~ a. at i- , , 3 lbs kldne J' beans 25c ) boxes Toasted Corn Flakes ... 2Sc l.arge drooping hat of leghorn and vellow b.aid 'facTng U/ ■ 1 J d ° eS " 0t C ° VCI " tllC d,, ' L ° r & ralll ' but 3 " PnchPS lhS " " ry peaS wit'i roii.ng brim '* < ""'jl cleans as it polishes and brings out the original beauty of SrlS Sir. \?;*Z rrr w I,h , ribbo " banox • sar< '' nes 25c Sunshine Easter eggs, per dozen. 10c r > „ o „ [» • • tjtie box 18c sardines 15c,Sunshine clover leaves, pkg. .. 10c Di\es, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Floor. Uives, Pomeroy & Stewart Basement. j Dives, Pomeroy and Stewart—Basement. = If WAKE IIP FEEUNG FRESH AS A DAISY Get a 10 Cent Box of "Cascarets" for Your Liver and Bowels. To-nigTit sure! Take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowel cleansing you ever experienced. VILLE FLEES BEYOND AMERICAN FORCES [Continued From First I'aire.] points within the broad zone that ranges from the Rayon country to the Benito Juarez district. The last Mex- j ican report was that he was south ' of Satevo and heading for Parral, but this could not be confirmed. The dif ficulties of the pursuit have multi plied because of the misleading in- ' formation given by Mexican peons to General Pershing's men. Army men here believe that as Villa moves southward, with his trail well covered for the time at least, it will be necessary to establish new army liases and strongly guard the line of communications. Large reinforce- ! ments of American troops will be needed, the military authorities say. Meanwhile the use by the American army of the Mexico Northwestern railway for transportation of supplies j "DON'T USE FACE CREAM," SAYS BEAUTY DOCTOR, "IF YOU WANT TO BE GOOD-LOOKING" Rngllah Beauty Sptclnltal Givn fome Good Advice To American Women. Many women seem to think that the use of an ordinary face cream is an aid to good-looks and beauty, said a noted Kngllsh Beauty Specialist, when, as a matter of fact, a great majority of I the grease creams sold now-a-days con tain animal fats which are positively I injurious. Greaselesn creams are equal ly bad for they are made generally i from Stearic actd which dries chaps and wrinkles the skin. Creams of this kind drive the blood away from the surface of the skin, giving it a pale sallow look and often clogs the pores, produc- I Ing pimples and blackheads. Every woman realizes these days that beauty' Is her greatest asset and it is her duty to enhance her beauty by every means at her command, however, common sense must ba her guide. No woman would think of eating Stearic acid or common lard to nourish her bodv yet thousands of women apply them to their faces daily. Thev know their skin requires nourishment of some kind, but few people know what to use. Tf you have facial blemishes of any kind, are pale or sallow, freckled' <>r wrinkled, or If your skin has a tend ency to be dry and flabby, you owe it to yourself to make the following test which will require no special skill or expensive toilet requisites. Take vour hand mirror to the window and exam ine your face closely, noticing care ' 'illy the size of your pores. the depth of your wrinkles and vour natural tendency to freckle or facial blemishes. Next, apply a generous amount of Am o-nlred Cocoa over the entire face and neck, leave 011 for five or ten minutes and then remove by wiping with a soft, dry cloth. A delightful surprise will I ftwalt you. I have seen htinet Cascarets liven your liver and | clean jour thirty feet of bowels with- I j out griping. You will wake up feeling ! | grand. Your head will be clear, breath I right, tongue clean, stomach sweet, eyes bright, step elastic and com plexion rosy—they're wonderful. Get a 10-cent box now at any drug store. Mothers can safely give a whole Cas- | caret to children at any time when they become cross, feverish, bilious, I tongue coated or constipated—Casca rets are harmless. becomes more important. I Reports received here to-day from , Mexican sources supported the story | brought from the interior yesterday by a Mexican to the effect that Villa, with a few of his most trusty follow ers was far to the south of Satevo and nearing Parral. One report said that j the bandit had already reached that town but it was generally believed I that this was at least premature. There is little question any longer ion the border that Villa is heading! for Torreon in the neighborhood of, which city he will find Canuto Reyes, I one of his most trusted lieutenants. ! Reyes has successfully defied the Car-1 ranza forces for several months. He! has ravaged North Durango and is be lieved to have several hundred men in his command with many smaller j guerilla bodies operating in con-' junction with him. If Villa can ef- ; feet a junction with Reyes sufficiently j in advance of his pursuers to attempt ! a concentration of the bandits, it is! said that he can muster two thousand j I pores and freckled, pale faces entirely remove these blemishes and more than double the beauty of their com j plexions, simply by using a little Am o-nized Cocoa once or twice daily as I have explained above, and this, after they had in some cases been treated by expensive Beauty Specialists without obtaining any benefit. In many in stances women can make themselves look from 10 to 20 years younger. Many a woman lias obtained high social po sition or secured advancement in busi ness ahead of her unfortunate rival who did not understand the power of beauty. Again, the woman who nelects her self must continually fight an unequal battle with her younger and better i looking sister. ' Beauty may be only skin deep, but • the woman who has improved her com plexion and kept her face soft, white and free from wrinkles by the use of Am-o-nized Cocoa has an attractive skin that suggests a refinement which places her in a higher class than that occupied by the careless woman who has been indifferent to the development of her personal charms. Beauty is Woman's birth-right and nature's greatest gift to enhance this charm is Am-o-nized Cocoa Cream. ; Note:—Am-o-nlzed Cocoa recom mended above by Winifred Grace Kor »tli* note, l English Beauty Spe cialist Is one of the newer forms of cocoa cream. Unlike the older pro ducts it is pleasant to use, has a soft, fragrant odor and is used almost exclu flyely for massage and facial treatment' in the Knglish Beauty Parlors. Anierl- 1 i can women who arc treated by Beauty I Specialists should Insist that "no other! emollient be used on their face for massage Superfluous hair and ruined complexions too often result from the use of cheap massage creams. Am-o- I nized Cocoa can always be obtained l from any first class Druggist and is so easy to apply that the average wo i man has no need for the services of a, i Beauty Specialist J men at least. While Mexican bullets have not liken the life of a single soldier in I tne American expeditionary forces and have only wounded four the Mex- j lean climate has been more incon siderate. 150 Troopers 111 In the neighborhood of 150 sick American troopers have been brought I back from the front suffering from i various ills due to the climatic eondi- j lions of the Sierra Madre. Eighteen, arrived yesterday. To date two have died. Lieut. Joseph W. Allison and a private, Jesse P. Taylor, both of the Thirteenth cavalry. The base hospital at Fort Bliss in! normal times provides ample facilities for the treatment of eighty men. Since the expedition in Mexico began its resources have been overstrained. ! An entire barracks next door has been transformed into a hospital. There rs ! an overflow in the isolation hospital j and three additional pavilions are! crowded. More Troopers Are Sent Into Mexico to Protect Line of Communications Washington, April 4. General, Funston advised the War Department ' to-day he was sending more troops I into Mexico from Columbus to protect! the line of communication with Gen eral Pershing. He did not state whether any additional troops had 1 been sent forward to the military base. ! So far General Funston has not.' suggested reinforcements of General , Pershing's forces, except merely to | protect the extended communication lines and there was no confirmation' to-day of border reports that exten- ' sive additions to the fighting column j would be required. Late reports to the War Department I say parts of the Fifth and Eleventh cavalry and the Twentieth and Twen ty-fourth infantry were stationed at Columbus. General Funston did not state' whether some of those troops had j been sent across the border, or whether others had been brought from nearby stations. More Sronts, Too Nineteen Apache scouts and trailers have been ordered from Port Apache Ariz., to General Pershing's column. Captain Hazzard of the Tenth cavalry ; who was with General Funston when he captured Aguinaldo left with the scouts for the border to-day, but he will not accompany them into Mex ico. The army censorship to-day veiled the number and personnel of the ad ditional troops which have been sent across the border. Major General Scott, chief of staff, said the extra l troops had left Columbus two days' ago but no word of the movement hndi been allowed to leak out. It was be-1 lieved that the Fifth cavalry recently sent from Fort Myer, Va.. Fort Sh"ri'- dan, Ills., and Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, were drawn upon. Caught Up With Bandits by Taking Straight Road At the Kront, March 31, via nero-1 plane and Courier to Columbus, N. M.,' April 4.—The strategy whereby, afteri two weeks of pursuit, the Villa band under General Elisieo Hernandez was overtaken by American troops and dis persed, was revealed here to-day. The plan was to sen the American column In a straight line along "the string of the bow" while Villa was taking a longer route along the "arc of the bow." Coupled with this man-! euver was a general order: "Spare nothing except horseflesh." I Villa Commander at Torreon Reported Ready to Give Up Torreon, Mex.. April 4.—General Canute Ro.ves. commanding the Villa forces in this locality, has sent a letter lo General Trevino, Carranza com mander, offering to surrender with nil his forces if given amnesty. This in formation was given out to-dav bv General Erevino. Carranza authorities here say thatj_ KARRISBURG TELEGRAPH the surrender of Reyes would break i organized resistance to the de facto i government and end the hopes of ! j Villa. There is a disposition, however, | to accept his offer conservatively, and it was declared that six weeks will be | necessary for General Reyes to notify; I all his followers, and there is a pos- ' ! siblllty that this may be a ruse to i | gain time for Villa. It has been frequently reported thati Villa was making his way to the north j iof Torreon in order to effect a junc-' ; tion with Reyes. Washington Hears Villa Is South of Chihuahua Washington. D. C.. April 4.—Private advices seeming to show that Villa has i i definitely been located south of Chi- ! ; huahua were received to-day by the I | State Department and at once turned I | over to the War Department for trans- I i mission to General Pershing, j Two messages came to the State I Department regarding alleged location j of Villa south of Chihuahua, De- j partment officials believe that it was | i definitely established that he was headed to the south. To-day's official dispatches varied regarding the reported injuries of the I bandit chief. At the State Depart ment those in close touch with the ! [ chase doubted that he had been hurt. | They pointed out that since Villa's ! f.glit March 27 with the Carranza gar ■ risen at Guerrero he bad apparently: ! traveled about 200 miles through i mountain paths over roughest country and that, If wounded, such a J | feat would have been almost impos- ! I slble. Gen. Pershing Establishes Camp Near Wilderness; Officers in Ignorance Columbus, X. M., April 4. General j Pershing has established his camp so I far into the wilderness of the Guer rero mountains, beyond the range of j .communication that his staff officers I were obliged to report again to-day | I that they had no knowledge of his I 1 whereabouts. This information came ! in reply to requests from the War De partment for a list of American casual- I ties in the San Geronimo engage- ' ment. Reports of heavy firing on the < American line of communication I : caused some fear that an attempt to hold up a truck train had been made, i Investigation proved that members of j tne engineering corps who tire repair- i ; ing the road from here to Casas j Grsndes had been hunting game. TRY THIS FAMOUS HAIR TONIC FREE Parisian Sage Won't Cost You a Cent If It Doe.snt Stop Falling Hair And Eradicate All Dandruff Right away, to-day, we want you to try one of the most delightful, re freshing and Invigorating hair tonics j the world has ever known. Understand this is not a dve, but a real, genuine, worth-while hair tonic and beautilier called Parisian Sage. If you have dandruff and Parisian j Sage doesn't remove every trace of it i i —money back from your druggist. 1 If your hair is falling or you have terrible scalp itch, Parisian Sage will t I stop both or money back. |1 I There Isn't any two ways about ' I Parisian Sage is one of the most effi-h cient hair preparations, and every < ; druggist without an axe to grind will 11 tell you so. h It aims to prevent baldness by put ting life and nourishment into the' i hair roots, and the first application.; makes your head feel so good that;! you will at once realize why thousands ! of users are so enthusiastic about it. 'i Parisian Sage is women's favorite » hair dressing because it gives to the i hair a softness and lustre that fasci- l nates and compels admiration. A gen- t erous bottle costs but little from H. C. Kennedy who guarantees perfect t satisfaction or money, refunded.—Adv. i WEBSTER GRIM ENTERS CONTEST Not on Democratic Slate For Delegates-at-Large, lie Runs Without Consent Webster Grim, Democratic candi-' jdate for Governor in 1910, to-day filed] a petition to run as candidate for; ' Democratic national delegate-at-large. , his petition being accompanied by a j pledge to support the popular choice, j Henry W. Fusselman, Macungie, filed | a petition to run for Democratic na i tional delegate in the Thirteenth dis trict, and Oscar D. Deckard, Richfield, | in the Seventeenth. Senator W. C. Connell, Sliamo kin, filed a petition to be candidate j for Republican renomination in the j i 27th district. I House nominating petitions were filed as follows: ' John J. McGowan, Re publican, Democrat, 3rd, Luzerne; Morgan M. Williamson, Republican, i Democrat, 7th, Luzerne; Charles E. Starr, Republican, 4th, Schuylkill; Edmund Tyler, Sr., Republican, 15th, | Philadelphia; James F. Turner, Dem l ocrat, Clearfield; Wallace B. Renn, j Republican, 10th, Allegheny; John F. ! Polleck. Republican, 2nd, Lehigh; An drew W. Smith, Prohibition, Jeffcr- I son; Oswin A. H. Jacobs. Democrat, | 2nd Berks; Edward C. Lacock, Re ! publican, 7th, Allegheny; James Ber g.v. Republican. Juniata. Governor Brumbaugh to-day grant-\ ed a respite staying the electrocution ! lot Thomas Chickarelli and Gasparj i Marturana, Cambria, from this week I I to the week of April 24 to permit ap- I [plication for a rehearing to be made! I to the State Board of Pardons. George W. Smith, Essington, was , to-day appointed justice for Tinicum I township, Deleware county, and i 5 Krank P. Ake for Bedford borough, i The Public Service Commission to-' | day heard the complaint of the Penn-i sylvania Utilities company that the' ; Lehigh Navigation Electric company. I had failed to comply with orders of (the commission in regard to utilitiesi in Northampton county. The city of Philadelphia through City Solicitor John P. Connelly stated to the com mission in opening the final proceed ings in the Philadelphia Electric rate case that Mayor Smith had no ob jection to the proposed compromise In rates and the iefund to be made vo thei jciiy for 1915 and 1916. The rest of < the case went on this afternoon. German Pirate Says He Saw King and Kitchener in Vision; at Bellevue By Associated I'ress New York, April 4. Clarence! Reginald Hudson, alias Ernest Schiller' | who took possession of the British I ; freight steamer Matoppo on the high 1 seas, was to-day sent by Police Magistrate Koenig to the psychophatic ward in Bellevue Hospital for observa tion for ten days. The magistrate at the same time held without bail on a technical charge Otto Milleder and George Haller. who were arrested In connection with Hudson's alleged plot to blow up the Cunard liner Pan nonia. When arraigned Hudson told the magistrate that while on board the Matoppo he had visions in which he! saw King George and Lord Kitchener, j "1 saw one vision of King George' at the end of the boat." he said. "I saw a vision of two generals and one was Lord Kitchener. I do not know the other, but he had a white mus-j tachc." Hudson told the magistrate also that he had a mission to start a revolution in Hussia. APRIL 4, 1916. QUIET FOLLOWS HARD FIGHTING [Continued From First Pane.] lias blown up, causing the death or injury of 200 persons. The ministry of munitions declares Ihe noonday fire which caused the explosions was ! purely accidental. Norway, according to a* Copen hagen dispatch, has asked Germany: to investigate whether German sub- ; marines have been responsible for the sinking of the large number of Nor wegian vessels, the loss of which has | been reported recently. The Berlin war office in to-day's j official statement made its first men- ! tion of the recent drive northeast of i Verdun which penetrated the French lines in Caillette wood and nearby. Dutch Mass Troops The statement does not concede the French claim to recapture any part of the territory lost, declaring that their counter attacks made repeatedly with exceedingly heavy forces were alto gether fruitless and cost them heavily in casualties. In the successful offensive in ques- j tion on April 2, the Germans made 754 prisoners and captured eight ma- ' chine guns. The British claim to the capture I of mine crater near St. Eloi south of I Ypres, Belgium, is conceded by Berlin. Home has received reports through What Steero Has That Tea or Coffee Lacks Steero as a beverage is People who drink Steero better than tea or coffee, don't have headaches, nor safer than either, and more do they get nervous if quickly made. Steero is deprived of Steero. f. a *vl yin f K bec f of its Steero is safe, flavor of beef and vege- . . .... tables and gently stimulat- Ju ®£ pour boiling water ing because of its heat. ? n a Steero Cube and your Unlike coffee and tea, bCTer «Sl e > s Steero is not an infusion Try it instead of coffee of beans or herbs, depend- and tea. If the coffee or ing for its effect on drug- tea habit hasn't gripped ging the drinkers with you too strongly, you will caffeine and tannin. like Steero better. Why swallow drugs with Steero Cubes are sold your meals when you can by Druggists, Grocers and enjoy Steero, not only Delicatessen Dealers in j Be Sure You Get Steero Cubes. JB Sohloffolln * Co.. Distributors, Mow York IM STEERO CUBES XT MajebyArnsrlOflfl Kltohon Products Oo„ N.W York San Francisco, 191S Simply Add BoiUnf Water T I Zurich that the German frontier of ! Holland had been closed by the Dutch government and that ail available ! forces of the Netherlands had been j massed there. Former Dutch Minister of War Does Not Think Britain Will Land in Netherlands Amsterdam, via London. April I "I do not for a moment supgest there jis a possibility that Great Britain I intends to land her new armies on j the Dutch coast,' said former Minis- Iter of War Colyn to-day in an inter : I vie.w, regarding recent mysterious ! military preparations In Holland. "We 1 have the assurance of Britain that she will respect, our neutrality and we rely upon that assurance. But the question is what would Germany think of this? "After the Germans begin seriously to be afraid of such a contingency, namely of the landing of British troops in Holland, what influence will that have on Germanys' attitude to | ward us? We must assume that she Is acquainted with our defensive capacity. "I know that against this it may be said that the British will not make a landing in Holland and that if they I tried we are quite capable of stopping a British march eastward or south eastward."