14 Dives, Pomero]) An Exposition: Exquisite Early Summer Silks , . Shantungs Pongee ■ Corduroy Kakahi Kool Iku jUj i-'TJ Easter has come to be known as the festival which jmfllL M JeIL-- . * 7* V f -jS—fr s - - ™ arks the en< J of the cold Spring days and the begin- lp the process of the changing of the seasons comes Several Hundred Women's and yv Y| i desire on the part ot women who lollow fashion s | ' whims, to lay aside the frocks of early Spring days and XJT * f O " CM • f weaves'of SumnTcr." C °"' er MISSCS bUItS in Si bhOWltlg Ot A Charming Display of Lovely Silks Is Ready Unusual Importance Shantung in imported grades with new awning stripes; 33 | Sport silks a new tnh w ««vi. with «*ir.. n | n » u i • ) inches wide. Yard . .... $1.75 36 indies wide Yard ... . * £\ P p TJIGH-GRADE SUITS, of fine quality gabardines, poplins, serges and silks, entcr Owtr white shantung for suits, 33 inches wide. Society satin in the best qualities of flesh and white for tin- a special after-Master suit occasion to-morrow in the Dives, Pomerov & Stew- Satin stripe tub silks in 15 patterns; 33 inches wide. Yard' ches dreSSCS; 3 ~ ,ncllcs wide, yard. $1.39. 36 in- art outer apparel section. Women who wear size .?(> or 38 as well as women and ... L 95* "Kakahi Kool," a rich all-silk weave for soort voats • lioavv misses who wear size 16 will find many garments of uncommon attractiveness at patten, " YaT * chrat *"> " ,k » ; 33 inchM -n " co^ ul '°- v: '« '"° "••«« <•' and Satin habutaiVii inches' wide*.' Yard* *. *. #I.OO and sl*2s 1 imported shantung; M inches wide. Yard. ' . . . , ana to j.."50 I' l this special occasion will be found many reproductions of recent trench 11 rm/ f- 4- C OI * creations which have been copied in worsted and vclour checks as well as in solid UlOy r Or oporr dnd Separate okirts colors; the styles feature plain tailored lines with braid or silk trimming and semi- Awning stripe corduroys in white ground with green, brown, rose, straw and hclio stripes- 54 / ' \ JreSS nlotlels with touclies that arc full of irresistible charm. inches wide. ard ' • r _. /\ All worsted shepherd check suits Navy blue and black all wool Lovely suits in late style types, of JJio.OU t ; \ I In a belted style with a collar of serge Norfolk suits with yoke back men's wear serge, velour checks, t aildy stripe corduroy in white grounds with colored strines - 27 inches wide YarH 4SI tl ,vSt> ■ A fine quality faille silk and a lining antl front and double collar of all worsted checks, gabardine and silk p.. .... ... . ~ , >BKS? of rich Peau de Cygne: the back of either A!?'of°th. U ftS™ POP«n. maao with .mart" trimming l con til o} m rose, silvei, gold, salmon, peach, fern green, white, Copenhagen, Delft, bronze ° V the coat carries a plait on either and back witli a lattice work of silk ideas on coat and skirt. The tailor li-ittWlii,-. m-1,1 „c,wl, ~>T ,i.» J ir . ' xßrw „ ° side to the waist line and ends in a cord run between the buttons. The Inst in these garments is of a su miucMiip anil lc.iua, _/ inuiCS wide. Yard H l )f anrl on <5 ' / rcMV of self-covered buttons and a lining is Peau de C.vgne and the perior quality and the value is ex ''' y y « o plait. Also shown in navy blue and skirt is a belted model with flwrinK ceptional. Several hundred «ar- Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Street Floor. ° i black all wool poplin 910.50 lines $20.00 I inents to choose front ..... 925.00 Cotton Filled Comfortables ' Summer Cottons of Ftlmy . l <' Dress Sktrts nt liht.-k I afl-.a _ _ _ j «7 | IJlack taffeta skirt, cascade side gore, trimmed with buttons . $9.50 H Of* >r\ri nrf • \/I a n tj- ' T 1 A Ti M 1 , t T~\ • * Full gathered skirt of black taffeta with heading and corded belt $12.50 op I iViany IN6W JL_ JVlOClGrcltGlV r need KU II Kored skirt with tunic back and panel front $11.50 . • */ Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Second Floor. Arrivals With Silk Covering In a Special Showing ( ——— j n this of inexpensively priced The new marquisettes and p~7 t cotton-filled comfortables arc a mini- satin voiles are full of charm- W \ _ ) ( I>er of -very attractive coverings with j ing simplicity, depending alto- ' S v4i555 borders of silk: the sizes run from 72x gether for true effectiveness ( /8 to /-xB4 inches—desirable for three- ion ribbon, stripes and floral \ f ' Ua '.' ei ancl 1u " s ' zc ' ,ec ' s- patterns of dainty designs. V A. XVith the housecle aning time of the All materials in the new \ - vcar not at l> ail d these items will be showing are of fast color dye >Ajtf. ■HftBMMMrfriHI found to be very interesting. stuffs, and will be found to be | a i Spring weight comfortables with cotton filling; sizes 72x78 aS worth y so far as color is inches; with silk covering with 9-inch border $5 OO concerned as any we have sold Spring weight comfortables with cotton fining;' size 72x84; heret °fore. bBIB with silk covering and 9-inch border SG.(K) mar qtiisette in white and /"/ \ ■ u . Cotton filled comfortables; size 72x84 inches; silk on both tinted grounds, with a wide /,/ \\ V sides with a 9-inch satin border SIO.OO colored stripe and an interven- BBEf f' /" ' I \ ; k| Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Basement. * ing flower. Yard, I. ... J S 117 - A j s^r 'P c vo '' e ' n solid colors, with a silk ribbon stripe of We Announce That From Today Until May 6 a dlffercnt co,or - Yard rr,^ • at,n^ tn P c volle > a mercerized ribbon stripe, with floral An Expeit Corsetiere, Representing" seed voiie, inches wideVwhh'fan'c\-\ : oioVed ,^tHpcVand n 11T 1 . floral designs. Yard ucj* ine IVlaKer, Printed voile in colored stripes and floral patterns ar d,. 290 Will Fit and Give Talks On I lllv , or K andie white and tinted grounds, sport stripes a "d floral patterns; 38 inches wide; one-half silk. Yard .. 59«* Two Well Known Corsets- Yard hi . r :"'. ,i ! ts '. * kM ': dr ° sses .. a ". d .'"S* TV/r l t i a . Corduroy in white ground with colored stripes. Yard, 25<-. Mactame ijyra and American Tiadv 1 ted organdies; 48 inches widejin wide-stripes and floral J -Lictuy designs of green, pink and blue on white. Yard T.. 290 Dives ' p omeroy & Stewart-Second Floor. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart. — y DRUNKENNESS IS BAD AS RUNAWAY Commissioner Dixon Makes Notable Comment Upon Over Stimulation Drunkenness, whether from alco hol, the excitement of a crowd or too muph of anything which destroys the normal, Is warned against by Dr. Sam uel O. Dixon. State Commissioner of Health, in the course of a statement on health issued to-day. The Com missioner uses overstimulation as his theme and seta forth some views on the subject wtih startling frankness. In his comments the Commissioner says: "Man's getting drunk is to be likened unto the opening of the draft doors I | ECONOMIZE | !i Our economical plan of house wiring has met with approval of others. | WHY NOT YOU? [ S. E. R. Electric and Gas Fixture Service 1302/ 2 N. SIXTH ST. ] § ', - MONDAY EVENING, i under the fire box of a locomotive and I generating a high steam pressure, | opening the throttle and letting every thing go until the machine is on a mad ' race through town and country, crush ! ln K whatever comes in the way, let it i »e man or beast, or maybe it will smash itself to a helpless mass. "If the tracks are clear, the ma chine may run until its fire box, the ; stomach, burns out, or a steam pipe, | a blood vessel, bursts, or a valve gives ! way, and the locomotive or the human j body becomes a useless wreck and a burden in the way. "In the case of the locomotive the j suffering is confined to the living be ings it runs down, but in man not only the beings he injures or destroys, but he himself suffers after he has irre parably injured his physical body and mental powers. He may lose an arm, cripple his stomach, blood vessels or mind and become a charge on his family or the community. "In the case of the locomotive it is only a piece of uncontrolled, inanimate machinery, but in man it often means setting to run amuck a piece of the most inventive animal life ever re corded in history. When drunk he may spend his last cent on foolish things and leave a hungry family at I his home. He may kill his best friend, violate a trust, throw a bomb, send a great passenger ship to the bottom of ! the sea, or even incite a war of na- i tions. A drunken man is the most danger- ; ous, demoralizing factor in civilized i j , e - The wild beast of the forest is a | plaything in comparison. He sets all laws at naught and becomes an instru ment of the devil. Man crazed by any kind of mental overexertion or drunk- : enness, like a rabid beast, is a menace to every one with whom he comes in contact. "The wild dash of the mind and body during the stage of overstimu lation may be fascinating to the indi vidual. but when the inevitable re action comes, death may ensue, or sometimes that which is worse, re turning consciousness, bring a realiza tion of a horrible crime committed never to be undone. At least bodv and mind are weakened and less able to 1 control the insane desire to exhilarate i again and again until untimelv death 1 ends a life that might have been a boon to humanity in some useful path over which its race might have been r '' n - , Some temperaments become sloth-like and are oblivious to the past aud reckless as to what is to come, i In such the harm to them and others i comes through neglected duties. Drunk : enness is overstimulation that destroys normal conditions; it may even be oc casioned by the psychology of a crowd. There are various stimulants that will make drunk." PROK SHEXK FILES PAPERS Special to llie Telegraph Annville, Pa., April 24. With the filing of his nomination papers last J week as a candidate for representa ; tivo in the General Assembly, Prof. ; H. 11. Shenk of Annville, will run on ! the local option ticket as opposed to i the Republican candidate, Dr. I. K. j TTricli, also of Annville. Both Prof. Shenk and Dr. Urich are well-known throughout the Lebanon Valley and have many friends who will come to j their support which Is expected to cause an exciting contest at the i primaries. FIXED FOR KILMXG DOES Spectal to the Telegraph j Waynesboro, Pa„ April 24.—Benja • min Carbaugh, near the White Pine ■ Sanatorium, who was arrested for • having venison on his premises, parts of the carcasses of two floes having been found in the bushes near his home, was given a hearing before | Squire H. M. Small of Mont Alto on I Saturday afternoon. Carbaugh admit ted having shot the deer and was j fined $l5O and the costs, , I HARRISBURG S&S& TELEGRAPH ! MISS JANE CROSS ni'HIKU Special to the Telegraph j _ Mechanicsburg, Pa., April 24. — ■ I'uneral services of Miss Jane Cross; : were held this afternoon at tlie home i ot her sister. Mrs. William Forward. I | East Coover street. The Hev. Georgei J Milton, pastor of the Presbyterian I Church, of which she was a member, I officiated, assisted by the Rev. K. F. I AfcClean. Burial was made in thei Mechanicsburg Cemetery. Miss Cross, who was 72 years old, was born in [ Mere, Wiltshire county, England, and j lived here the past ten vears. Three ' sisters survive, Mrs. William Forward,! of Mechanicsburg; Mrs. Laishley, of I Southampton, England, and Mrs. ; Wakefield, of Basingstoke, England; also one niece, Miss Bessie Forward, , o>' Mechanicsburg, and two nephews, William Forward, of Beacon, N. Y.,' and Joseph E. Forward, of Harisburg. j I FIND WATCH l/OKT FOR YEAR Special to the Telegraph Gettysburg, Pa., April 24. While | plowing a piece of ground for potatoes a year ago John Livelsperger, of Conowago township, lost his silver] watch. While plowing the same piece j of ground last week Mr. Livelsperger found the timepiece. It was in good shape and running order. W. C. T. t. TO EI.KCT Hummelstown, Pa., April 24.—To morrow evening the April meeting of; ( the W. C. T. U. will be held at the borne ; of Mis. Aldus Itoffcr, in West Main' street. Election of officers will be held, j You Must Purify Your Blood In The Spring Are you simply dragging vodr way through f iufferine tortures from some blood I | malady that nas stolen your health, robbed 1 you of the ability to enjoy life's pleasures. , Mae the future a hopeless uncertainty, and > out a shadow of your former strong, K so, let us warn you to look to your blood, and you will likely find the cause of your trouble. Poisoned blood can be blamed lor more disease and suffering than any f.#lPf'. there qan be no health until the life fluid, that feeds and builds tip every part of the body, is made pure and free from poison. i Whether your bad blood is shown by ma ,ni 'u catarrh, scrofula, contag ious blood poison, or some other blood dis order you can be well, and again feel the bounding bouyancy of health that comes only ; with pure aud well-nourished blood. T greatest hlood. remedy known. t is nature s own remedy, purely vegetable. Home Demand For Reos Too Great For War Orders "Yes, WO did get a Ms truck order j last week," replied It. C. lteuschaw, \ sales manager of the Keo Motor Truck ; Company, in Response to a query. "But | it wasn't a foreign order, as the stock ] brokers reported. "Our order came from the good old j U. S. A., and while it wasn't all written j oil the same order form, it did come ! in the same mail Monday morning. Neither was it from Washington. It ' was from everywhere—and you'd | never guess where the biggest part of •it came from. "When I looked over the morning's orders I exclaimed, 'What are they go | ing to do, move Richmond, Ind., across j the border into Ohio, or what?' For ! Richmond, Ind., had sent us an order for 12 2-ton trucks in one batch. I "That's the kind of orders we Reo | folks like." continued Mr. Ruesehaw — i "orders from Richmond, ind., and Warren, Ohio, and fort Atkinson, Wis., ] and other similar metropolitan cities jof which there are thousands, and which, in the aggregate, absorb about SO per cent, of the Reo product. And ! i! is our pride that the Reo motor j truck factory is running day and night | and that we have orders for forty days 'ahead of the factory output and that every one of those orders is for do mestic use and for peaceful purposes. "We turned down two big orders j from the war zone recently, and, while I we are throwing no bricks at those ; who have accepted them, we are preen ing ourselves and strutting a bit with pride that our own country absorbs all i the Reo trucks we can make." Frank E. Thompson, Coal Merchant of Carlisle, Dies Special to the Telegraph Carlisle, Pa., April 24. Frank E. 1 Thompson, a prominent grain and 1 coai merchant here, died at his home I last night from paralysis having suf j fered three strokes recently. Mr. ' Thompson was a Mason, a member of St. John's Lodge, of Carlisle, a past j high priest of St. John's Commandery ! and a member of Lulu Temple of .Shriners, of Philadelphia; he was a 'member of the Odd Fellows, and was Isecretary of the lodge here for 2."> i years; he was a director and vice i president of the Carlisle Trust Com i pany and a member of the Good Will | Fire Company. Mr. Thompson was 67 years old and is survived by two daughters, Mrs. La verne Rice, of j (Carlisle, antl Mrs. W. 1... Swartz, of Pittsburgh; also two brothers, J. Mar | lin and J. Miller Thompson, and two I sisters, Miss Harriet Thompson and 1 Mrs. Anna Heckert all of Carlisle. | ILLUSTRATED TEMPERANCE LEC TURE Mechanicsburg, Pa., April 24. There will be a temperance meeting at the Church of the Brethren, Fred crick and Simpson streets, to-morrow evening at 7:30 o'clock. A short pro gram will be given by the children and a lecture by F. F. Holsopple, sup erintendent of the Anti-Saloon League ( of Harrlsburg. I It goes right to the seat of the trouble, destroy i the germs that fee