16 Cf Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart Clearance of Suits For Misses Women's Silk and Fibre Silk —^ and Women Involving Sweaters, $3.50 to $29.50 li E2\ A/Tj-inV LOVPIv i1"Vl These beautiful garments are in the latest styles in belted | U0 S I = —I j j - \ t/ J J and full sash models in rose, Copenhagen, canary, azure blue, |J K ' jl \ '•! , Women and misses who apricot and green. Made of finest silk and fiber silk, E99SI9!^ • cloth suit until the season's Children's styies, 4K1.50. fe >1 == = J final reductions were an- Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart. Balcony, Men's Store. j, j fl '©, I 1 "' nounced will he vitally in- | "Tk — i eel the annual Ma\ Coi set r 1 lttmgs By an Lxpert Inviting Freshness to * clearance in the Dives, Many women do not know how to select, adjust and wear __ •' i 7i 7~c ] [ corsets so as to secure correct style with utmost comfort and YmiV TTrkWlO Pomeroy & Stewart outer- durability. ± <JUI lIUIIItJ garment section this week. To impart this knowledge, we have arranged for one Spe- To make the home cool and inviting is the one idea of all ? More than 150 Suits are in- cial ,ns . truction Week, conducted by a member of the Nemo the new merchandise that is pouring in to us by freight and ex volved in tliis final outpouring Hygienic-l'ashion Institute, New ork. with special reference press. of refined styles; the sizes are to the latest models in Nemo Corsets. You are cordially invited A large section of the Drapery Section on the third floor as complete for large and a\cr- to attend. is devoted to a special showing of exclusive curtains and cre age size women as they aie tot In our Corset Department this week. tonnes for boudoir and bungalow. And the designs arc as fas small women and nusscs. Til • .. a ... „ , , , , . . Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor. dilating as artful minds Can make them $20.00 shepherd check suits, with flare skirt; bound in white silk & aIVC «■»«*•»»• braid; collar of Faille silk; May Clearance Price s ls.oo Charming in their supreme daintiness arc these $25.00 shepherd check and navy serge suits in Norfolk style; Faille „ . . . , . collar and cuffs; circular skirt. May Clearance Price $18.50 f TVTT TT "W" "By y ■» - ~«r- , »■ t ■ < ocotcn madras curtains, in colorings of pink, blue or yellow; 2% $27.50 tan. Copenhagen and black suits of gabardine; belted flare I ■ B |yl ■ I I 9 ■* H /%' I lj' yards long. Pair $•» 00 and S"SO " I Price™ 6 . I?.". 1 ?. 8 " k . 1 1 JIVJ-1 lilt/ JT Hj A,,over P«"erns in ecru and white in curtain net; yard.soc to *l!oo $30.00 tan gabardine suits with green moire collar; full plaited urta ' n r* 1118 " 11 1" white; patterns are dotted, figured or $42. suit of blue serge and biack taffeta; gathered P P I I Cretonne and chintz for porch cushions and swings in striDes' -ind blouse and wide embroidered belt with ribbon running through em- ■ BBBKHr •*** ' ▼ ▼ checks with touches of black- vnrrt ... , broidered eyelets; finished with deep plaited taffeta; lining of blue and ® lr ■ cneciw wiin loucnes of black. >aid 25c and 39c white figured silk. May Clearance Price $27.50 ▼ filet net curtains in white and ecru with brown trimmed edge; 2 $37.50 navy and tan serge suits; full gathered blouse, finished with IjyjgggßßaH •Ejsfcgpr- " ■ ) WW yards long; pair $2 50 and s'loo buttons and rose trimming; rose collar of Faille silk; May Clearance Bobbinet curtains in white and ecru with trimming of Cluny lace; F rice S3O• 00 p fti r Fine Quality Warumbo |j W I Silk aurora curtains for doorways; in green, brown and blue; pair || Chinchilla | F || Two Interesting Millinery current wcek an exce p' io,,al opportunit - v in Palmuliv<; TTi i lif \ Um ] \ toilet preparations, as follows: ■■ | Diningroom Furnishings will take on ibH ' 111 I nil ■( .. ... ■■ 6 Ten-cent Cakes Palmolive Soap 60c Sale of New Untrimmed AQ _ o Straw Shapes at 4yc & \joC \ 1 *« service matched per- tt . « Fifty-cent Jar Palmolive Vanishing Cream ... 50c Sale of 49c, 75c and 98c Flowers IQ. 1 Fifty-cent Bottle Palmolive Shampoo 50c at • ;••••• iyc SHERATON and GEORGIAN Tolal value ~ Several hundred stylish shapes in hemp, hemp and satin, designs in crepe, lisere and novelty straw braid came to us as the result All XT , rvT » TVinc* of a maker's clean-up and the values arc unusually good. fOMMTTNTTV VFP PT A TPT xTLII J? UI OVL, X IliO VV fcJt/K At 49c —shapes in black and colors that were formerly 98c, $1.50 Uviui*HJi>ll J. OIXJ V JJjXV -t IjAIIIj At 9Sc—shapes in black'and colors that were formerly $1.95. are faithful reproductions of the motifs of these old masters as Stores in many cities ad\eitise this Palmolive special as ' r i'i«r« u ln l i e fn l , a n f tock " odds a " d ends" of $4.95, $0.95 and $«.50 embodied in their best work. an actual $1.90 value, indicating that the soap is sold regularly hemp, lisere and imported, straw braid shapes. Special at #2.05 I » • . . . .• ..... . o rowers—flowers—flowers ' A special demonstration and showing is in progress in the at 15c a cake. We sell the same s'.ze cake through the year At l»o - large variety fresh new flowers that were 49c, 75c, 98c Store this week r Special clean-up of mussed flowers, at 1 00 1 slu,c 15 vvcir. f or v Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Second Floor. ' J Dives, Tomeroy & Stewart. Street Floor. Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Street Floor, Front. — ■ ' )) Wcstcott Who Made Baltimore Speech to Again Name Wilson By Associated Press Washington, D. C., May 15. —Presi dent Wilson has asked John W. West cott. Attorney General of New .Jersey, who made the speech nominating; him nl the Baltimore convention, to make the nominating speech at St. Louis. Mr. Westcott has accepted. The President did not know that the New Jersey delegates on the same day had selected Governor Fielder. It is ex pected the Governor will withdraw. AUXILIARY TO MEET The Toadies' Auxiliary of the Harris burs Polyclinic Hospital will meet to morrow afternoon at 3 o'clock in the | Birectors' room for a special session. Urs. A. J. Miller will preside. Cheap Paints si Cost Too Much! ilii J| When you paint, use good paint. Cheap paints don't cost enough to be good. The materials that make good paint are as standard in value as gold. You can't buy gold dollars at 69c. You can't buy good paint at low prices. There is so much misrepresentation in paints—so much chance to mix materials of inferior quality into so- > called 'good paint" —that there is just one safe way to buy paint: See that the name of a responsible f manufacturer is on the can. £ The Maker and We, Too, Guarantee j You Complete Satisfaction in /QCJI They' re made as good as paints can be made lllllUS The materials used are proved not only pure, but up to the standard, by most-rigid tests. Sixty-four years' experience goes into every Lucas product— made in the largest, best equipped paint factory in the country, under the eyes of men who have been 25 to 40 years in the business. Before being put into cans, each batch of Lucas Paint is proved standard by chemists, practical painters and color experts. Lucas Paints never vary in quality or color. They always make gofod—always outlast any other paint you can buy—always are the most economical in the end. When You Need Paint*, Varnimha». Enamel or Anything of the Kind. Let Ut Fix You Up With Laca» Good, Henry Gilbert & Son —219 Market Street MONDAY EVENING, | Transcontinental Flight For Rich Prizes Planned New York, May 15. A transcon tinental aeroplane competition, for which prizes amounting to SIOO,OOO prohably will be offered, has been de i cided upon by the Aero Club of Am i erica. The plan, which has for its | object, it was stated, the develop ! ment of the aerial defense of the country, was signed by Ralph Pul- I itzer, of this city, who has donated a | trophy for annual competition, j In a letter to the club Mr. Pulitzer : declared that "it seems the irony of fate that the country of Langley, the W'rights, Curtiss and other pioneers who may be said to have given the I world wings, lags last where it ought I to be first." ! The route for the transcontinental flight and the date will he announced later. HOSE CO. MUST REMOVE REFUSE Hcilv Firemen Ordered to Clean I'p Rubbish Left by Carnival Co. Request will he made by the city school authorities to the Reily Hose company that the refuse and paper left at Third and Reily streets, by the carnival company located thero last week, must be removed. The carnival company exhibited here for the benefit of the firemen and upon leaving the city, left wast paper lying loose which blew over many of the streets in the West End. J The Rev. George P. Schaum, pastor j of the Harris Street United Evangelical i Church, facing one of the plots, occu- I pied by the carnival, was foremost in I registering protests to the school | board, owners of the property, because of the untidiness. The order to have ja elenn-up made at once was sent out J shortly afterward. Other church or ganizations in the neighborhood also [protested, and complaints were made of the noise made in loading and un j loading of the carnival equipment. Mr. j Schaum also served notice that an ac count of the objectionable character of the carnival he would protest against I other performances of the kind. C. C. AND S. CO. ELECT At the annual reorganization meet ing Saturday of the Central Construc tion and Supply company the follow ing officers were re-elected: president, frank B. Bosh; secretary, H. B. Tay lor; treasurer, Charles Covert. TO BUILD $8."» SHKD Simon Bonowitz today got a permit to build a single story frame shed at | 216 South Cameron street for SBS. ; » For Good Looks a woman must have good health. She can do her part by helping nature to keep the blood pure, the liver active and the bowels regular, with the aid of the mild, vegetable remedy— BE P?LLS MS i Lars eat Sale of Any Medicine in the World. Btld •Ytnrwtor* la box**, 10c., Shi HARRISBURG t&SfSb TELEGRAPH REAL ESTATE LEADS STATE IN BUILDING GAINS Harrisburg Operations in April Show Record Increase; Fourth in U. S. Only three other cities in the United States showed a greater percentage of increase in building operations for April, 1916, as compared to the same month a year ago, than did Harris burg, according to statistics compiled by the American Contractor. Figures from 105 of the principal municipalities of the country are sub mitted and of this number Wichita, Kan. leads with a gain of 972 per cent, Holyoke, Mass., is second with 763 per cent, and Nashville, Tenn. fol lows with 674 while Harrisburg is next with a clear gain of 291 per cent. These figures are considered espec ially significant among builders and contractors in view of the fact that in thirty-seven cities there were consid erable percentages of decrease in op erations. For instance New York shows a clear decrease of five per cent New Orleans 29 per cent, Wilkes-Barre 42, Scranton 61, Troy, N. Y., 10, To peka, Kan.. 42, San Antonio, Tex., 53. While Harrisburg, of course, leads all the cities in Pennsylvania a few of them show pretty good gains. Allen town gained 153 per cent, Altoona 24, Erie 32, Huntingdon 171, Philadelphia 80, Pittsburgh 28 and Reading 61. REALTY CO. ASKS DISSOLUTION At a brief hearing this morning be fore the Dauphin county court the ap plication of the Independent Real Es tate Company for dissolution was heard. No assets or liabilities are on the company's books. The court took the papers. TODAY'S REALTY TRANSFERS Realty transfers today included the following: W. 1.. Gorgas to Henry Drake. 2218 North Fifth; Ruth P. Fox to A. W. Emerick, 1713 Itegina; D. Goldberg to Rebecca Goldberg. 1010 Berryhill; H. Drake to \Y. IGorgas, 1623 Swatara, $1 each; B. Schmidt to J. A. Baillets. 623 South Front, $1500; Jennie K. Dunkle to C. R. Ilressler, Halifax township, $1050; J. Shoop to R. E. Morgan, Jefferson township, SI3OO. TO APPRAISE ESTATE (>. M. Roniberger and John I). Hart man were appointed by the Dauphin county court today to serve as ap praisers in the unsigned estate of Wel lington Klinger, Ellzubethvlile, at the i request of lsuiaU Daniels, assignee. SPRING CLEAN-UP STARTS ON HILL Dr. Raunick For Spot less Town by Time Work Is Ended Harrisburg's annual "Spring Clean- Up" began early this morning when every available wagon and dart of the Pennsylvania Reduction Company, was sent to Allison Hill to begin the collection of all the refuse and rubbish which accumulated during the winter months. To-morrow the men will return to the Hill district and complete the work, starting on the southern and central districts on Wednesday and Thursday. The last two days of the week will be divided in the West End territory. Next Monday the men will return again to the Hill and go over the same route as this week. Last year a record collection of re fuse was reported and Dr. J. M. J. Raunick, city health officer, looks for a bigger total of wagonloads of rub bish hauled this year. At the close of the "clean-up" week campaign a new schedule will he tried out according to announcement of Dr. Raunick who has been aiding the Re duction company in making regular collections of ashes and garbage. CUNNINGHAM TO SPEAK At the monthly meeting to-night of the Men's Bible Class of Stevens Me morial Methodist Episcopal Church ! —s^—-H-S—5SS—-««5 ShckctlfcuMety! AT STORES AND FOUNTAINS ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Buy It In the sealed glass Jars. The Best is always the Cheapest Substitutes cost YOU —i- POLITICAL ADVERTISING r a Support Edward Dapp For Legislature MAY 15, 1916. Jesse E. B. Cunningham, former Deputy Attorney General of Pennsyl vania, will be the speaker. Border Patrol Will Be Strengthened as New Raids Along Border Are Indicated By Associated Press San Antonio, May 15. lnform ation indicating: a plan for the re sumption of raids across the interna tional line near Brownsville, Texas, has reached army headquarters here, and will, It is expected cause a strengthening of the forces now patrolling that district. ud Bad Odor Inflamed Bunions m » a 1 4 f\. moves the cause by restoring the I -I _I I_ l |MI fM tissues to normal; the results are Vlirl VIViV truly remarkable. Get a 25c pack age from any druggist; he is au- Give<! Instant Rp>U#»f thorized to refund money to any- VJivctj Xiibldnt J\eiiei one not fully satisfied. Workmen's Compensation Act Blanks We are prepared to «hlp promptly any or all of the blanks | made necessary by the Workmen's Compensation Act which took 11 effect January 1. Let us hear from you promptly as the law re ; | quires that you should now have these blanks in your possession. The Telegraph Printing Co. ] | Printing-—Binding—Designing—Photo Engraving ! | i HARRJSBURG, PA. -- Try Telegraph Want Ads Try Telegraph Want Ada SCHOOLTEACHER DIES SUDDENLY Miss Mary Hester Frantz in Ser vice Here Since 1880; Funeral Tomorrow MISS MARY HESTER FRANTZ Funeral services for Rllss Mary Hester Frantz, aged 57, a public school teacher In this city for thirty-six year? who died Saturday at her home, 142 Walnut street, will be held to-morrow morning at 11 o'clock. The Rev. Dr. Ellis N. Kremer, pastor of the Re formed Salem Church, will officiate. Burial will be made ai Palmyra. Miss Frantz suffered a stroke of apoplexy shortly after 9 o'clock Satur day morning while at the Allison Hill Bank. She was taken to her home where she died about 1 o'clock. She is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Isaac Hoft'a, of Reading, and Mrs. C. J. Hershe.v, of Steelton. Aliss Frante was born in Palmyra in 1859 anil began teaching when 10 years old In llie Witmer Academy of that town. Following two yeais' ac tive service in that institution i-he served 'several years as head of the Palmyra public schools. In ISSB she came to this city where she taught in the different schools until 1913. Miss Frantz was the first teacher to instruct a class passing through the special school for gifted children. 11l health forced her to retire three years aao. JOHN BEISTLINE John Beistline. aged 51 years, of Thompstontown. Juniata county, died jl tile Harrisburg Hospital last night, ilr. Heist line's death was caused bv appendicitis. .MISS MIMA K. MARSH Funeral services for Miss Mima K. M;ush, who died yesterday afternoon at. the Maternity Hospital, 22fi Liberty street, will lie held Wednesday after noon at 2 o'clock. She had been % nurse at the hospital for some time. The Rev. Dr. GeoVge E. Hawes, pas tor of the Market Square Presbyterian Church, assisted by the Rev. H. C. Pardoe, will officiate. Burial will bo private in the Harrisburg Cemetery. GEORGE F. M'NEILL Funeral services for George F. Mc- Neill, aged 32, who died Saturda/ morning at his home, 1317 South Twelfth street, will be held to-morrow afternoo nat 1 o'clock. Further serv ices will he held at the Pleasant View Church of God, with the Rev. George Harper officiating. Burial will be made in the East Harrisburg Ceme tery. He is survived by his wife tnd five children. HAROLD KENNETH GARDNER Harold Kenneth Gardner, aged 11 years, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Gardner, 1310 North Front street, died this morning after a lingering ill ness. Funeral arrangements are not complete. MRS. MARGARET MANA UN Funeral services for Mrs. Margaret Manahn, aged 79, who died Saturday, were held at the Hawkins funeral par lors this afternoon. Burial was made in the East Harrisburg Cemetery. Hill BROKEN W. A. Gardner, aged 38, 1338 North Sixth street, fractured a rib this morn ing while working at the Brelsford Packing and Storage Company. HOLD TRAFFIC VIOLATOR Henry Jones, charged wilh driving past a trolley car when passengers were being discharged, was arrested yesterday afternoon by Officer Kautss.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers