12 Dives,Pomeroy ft Getting Ready For School! \\ When the school bell rings next Monday morning Harrisburg's il \WP>'' army of boys and girls will be happy in the possession of new things 7// to wear and use. But a lot of prep-aration will be necessary, so these /\ will be busy days, this week, for fathers and mothers who have not /sh^ £=:^i AJ \\ made earlier provisions for their youngsters' school needs. 1 LJ \\ The logical place to turn for boys' and girls' school requirements is the // \®K yl 1] Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart store because its many departments give as much /( _ii LCL Li attention to the things that little folks wear and use as they pay to grownups. II The Popular Anderson Ginghams School Dresses of Serge or Gingham For Girls' School Dresses Scores and scores of the famous D. and J. Anderson and William Anderson If a little girl's school dresses are to be of real service to her then the Ginghams —two of the best grades of ginghams made in the world—are shown dresses must have some common sense ideas about them; they must be good in richly colored plaids, checks and other patterns. These are greatly favored looking without being elaborate in design. for school dresses because of their fine quality and beautiful styles. Our stock of school dresses is admirably complete. There are scores of D. and J. Anderson Ginghams, yard ...: 450 styles in serge and gingham—all at moderate prices. Wm. Anderson Ginghams, yard -SOO ..... r>nmoi-r. x, st.w.rt street vinnr Children s gingham dresses, In plaids and bray with collar, cuffs and belt of fancy Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart. Street Floor. stripes; trimmed with white piping and stripe material; sizes 6 to 14 Oo buttons. Skirt has large patch pockets; Children's gingham dresses, in large "XT Ci 1 _ ® sc plaids; with vest effect and tunic; sizes 6to J\joW bCnOOI JTIcILS -T 01? -[joys Childrens dresses, in plain color cham- 14 $1.25 to $1.75 At 500, 69$ and 980 are many good styles in mixtures in the popular Serge Dresses of Quality helmet effects. ffi . na Children's serge dresses, made with large braided collar; full plaited skirt; .in wine, Tams of serge and corduroy at ...... navy and Copenhagen $j.95 and $5.00 Velvet and imported velour hats at #2.25, $2.50 and $5.00 ~wC hiJ d re! l 8 J 51116 ser S® dresses, made with large collar; plaited skirt and trimmed r with red satin buttons . . $5 50 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Second Floor, Front. „ v Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Floor. Hats For Every Girl of School Hosiery That Will Wear or fWIIPfTP A crp mL 1% Splendid Qualities For Boys and Girls v/X —' v_x 1. J. Vy X /Si Children's black lisle ribbed hosiery, seamless hose, with double soles, in I Specially priced at 15c black, tan and white; sizes 6 to 9^4. One of the most satisfying collections of trimmed, ready-to-wear Children's silk and lisle roiled top Special, pair 25c and sport hats for girls will be found in our Millinery Section. There so ™f; ln ,^' hite or Boys' blck h *avy cotton seamless , r j• .• .• , • i j t • r* v l Misses fine quality ribbed silk lisle hose, sizes 7to 10. Special 12^c are hats of a distinctive type—girlish and charming. School hats | Dlves Pomeroy & st ewart-stre e t Floor. and dress hats in ever so many youthful styles. /tSyflBR Felt bchool hats in many shades with silk bands and ends $1.50 Educator and E. C. Skuffers Are School Shoes With a 33 IIP Reputation For service White and colored velour hats $4.95 {■■ , Educator shoes in tan willow calf. E. C. Skuffer shoes in patent colt. Velvet and corduroy hats 98c 9BH gun metal calf, patent colt skin and gun metal calf and tan willow calf. Large velvet hats for college girls, black and blue with line grosgrain ■ ■ black vicl kid, button style— button style with heavy soles, Good bands; some styles have velvet brim and hatter's plush crown. .$3.95 and $4.95 11 Sizes 5 to 8 $" 00 year stitched— Trimmed hats, in dainty poke effects and new mushroom shapes in vel- ' sit tn ii *•>'- Sizes 5 to 8 $1.65 vet for little faces $1.75, $1.95, $2.25 to $7.50 Sizes 11V4 to 2 !!!'.!!! '.52!?5 Sizes t0 11 * 225 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Floor, Front. _ m,. <. Hrir , Sizes 11% to 2 $2.50 1 1 „ t? op ,fv £ 8 for children, Children's tan willow calf play Xp nnn I G oody ea r weited soi es BhoeSi broad toe lasts . heavy 9tltch Til T T i T~k T ■ kJv/AiWUI and spring heels, tan and black down soles, button and lace styles— Send the Youngsters Back to 8£5W::::::::8S: TjVll IOC Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Street Floor, Rear. School in Good Shoes fsSffSaS Sturdy Shirts and Blouses That good wearing shoes made to fit growing feet are not ex- j etg to 250 pensive is attested by these moderately priced school shoes for boys School bags with BOVS , outside pocket, _ , , Boys Shoes— Girls' Shoes— 500 and 750 Percale coat shirts, in band style with separate soft collar, in Tan elksktn school shoes, blucher Gun metal calf shoes with solid Bags with pocket sizes 1- t° 14, are 500 and 750 style, bellows tongue, double soles, leather soles- and drinking cup, 590 . Percale with military collar attached; sizes 12 to 14. Goodyear stitched $2.50 Slzes to ii";; to fezo Leather school bags Priced at 500 and 750 Tan elkskin scout "hoes with eik cal? e ""• uu an " s - 00 heavy oak leather stitched soles— fnmnaninnc style or with collar attached and trench fold cuffs; sizes 12 to 14, Wine calfskin shoes, solid leather Sizes 6to 8 .... $1.05 to $2.00 " _ .' A at OH stitched soles SI 95 Sizes 8% to 11 .. 2.00 to 2.78 00, 100, 250 .* jpi.wu _ '* D s j ze ! J*? 2 • • W-5® Pencil boxes with Blouse waists with collar attached; in stripe percale, plain blue Gun metal calf school shoes, button Patent coltskin shoes with leather 1 cncH noxes Wltn i , , j„„i_ , -I\M. and blucher styles, Goodyear welted or cloth tops, button style, heavy pens, pencils, erasers, cnamDra .V ana dark stripe madras and OUO C sizeg B fi'foT . $,.0 t„ sibo sharpeners and rubber . Ban ? st y lc blous J e wa . ists to w f ar with white colla r; plain and Gun metal calf school shoes, button Sizes to ii .. n.25 to $1.75 hands tn stripe chambray and stripe percale 500 and blucher styles, heavy stitched Sizes 11% to 2 .. $1.50 to $2.50 r \i" -i School Neckwear Fnr Rnv? soles $1.50 and $2.00 Tan willow calf shoes, button and Leather pencil cases _ , iNecKwear ror coys Tan elkskin blucher shoes, double toT' y stltch down ., so k with supplies for High , oma " a " d ° mbre stn P cs and P lam colors ,n French reversible standard fashioned soles $2.00 sires 8% to ii'!!!!!!!!". i!ss students 500 and Broad-end shapes, are 2>)o and >OO Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Street Floor, Rear. Rear, Street Floor. Dives. Pomeroy & Stewart, Men's and Boys' Store. A Stylish Well Tailored School Suit For Boys Is Our Leader at $5.00 Our stock of Boys' Clothing offers a greater variety of styles in suits than Dictionaries and Other School Room Needs ever before and one of (the best suits made to-day at the price is Our Leader at Our stationary department has never been better equipped to supply high Oft Tts t-iilnrinrr chr> c tl n h*r,A • v * and graded school pupils than it is right now. The list of school room needfuls *o.OO. Its tailoring shous the hand of the specialist. runs into the hundredS) so we have selcctcd only the most important oncs {or . Trousers have full-lined taped seams. Coats to-morrow. , , _ Universal self-pronouncing dictionaries— are in smart pinch-back effects with detach- „ lgh BChool dlc t lona rtes, cloth 90c Crayons; bo* 5,- tn SI.OO able belt Sizes fi tn 18 venrc Hiffh sch <>ol dicUonary, % leather. .SI.OO Eraser* 1- t„ 11.. aDie Den. csizes Oto 18 \ears. Common school dictionaries 65c lc to 15c ■p ~ - , Popular school dictionaries 40c olate pencils Ic ratterns include — Handy edition Universal dictionaries, 25c Lead pencils Ic to 5c Brown Tweeds, PhVfe°° W ° rdS ° ft "ntuk of MONDAY EVENING. sonal appearance the geniuses and the tramps. Clothes reflect the man's mind. Some of the most threadbare clothes I have ever seen were powerful evi dences of a great personality. A silk shirt is often the covering for a skin that needs a coat of tar soap and a rough brush. It Is the refinement of clothes and not the richness of dress that indicates the individual worth of a man. The barber shop reveals the brown streak Just above the sllk-shlrt collar. To put the situation perfectly plain, the fancy-dressed fellow has a fancy mind, more often than not. The over-dressed man has his finicky flight!, his feverish fancies. The well- groomed individual is orderly, efTlcl- aloof from people who after all are ent and well-balanced. The Silent our brothers and sisters, and fellow t artner. travelers on life's highway. The THE TACTFUL SCHOOLMA'AM Only a short time ago a young, QUESTION'S OF COURAGE school teacher heard that she was That the most intelligent are the misunderstood and disliked by a cer- , braveß t In battle is the view express tain family. Deliberately she cultl- [ ed by Dr- charles Rlchet> the dlstln . s rr r " , " ic,an home. Cordial appreciation of a fel- j w "° " a3 " a d many opportunities to low Christian took the place of cold study the subject since the outbreak disdain, and ultimately led them all of the war. Dr. Richet's observations into the Church. How much better t . . . ~ , Is such a conciliatory disposition than l ' m £* ve palm for bravery the worldly rule of tit for tat, dislike to the cultured, refined man of ner for dislike, holding onesalf haughtily j vous temperament, wiio Is able to HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH control his fears by the exercise of his will. The ignorant and the stolid may exhibit bravery simply because they lack the imagination to foresee the dangers by which they are con fronted, but their courage, Dr. Hlch et holds, does not permit them to perform such deeds of valor as are possible to their comrades of a finer fiber. Another brand of courage In war. Dr. Richet finds, is due to fatal ism. Religion plays little part in the matter. The atheist faces annihila tion as bravely as the Christian, who considers death the gateway to a better life. SEPTEMBER 25, 1916. THIRD TOUR WILL START TOMORROW Largest Party of Series Will Follow the Governor to Southern Tour Governor Brumbaugh's third tour of the agricultural regions of the State, which will close the series, will start to-morrow morning from Market Square. It is expected that over fifty cars will start and that more will join the party on the way. The interest in the trip Is heightened because of the meeting of the State League of Clubs in York and the fact that the tour will cover the Lincoln and Will iam Penn highways. On Tuesday morning stops will be made at Lancaster at 9.15 o'clock, at "iork at 10.30 o'clock and at Gettys burg for lunch and a noonday meet ing. In the afternoon there will be a stop at Chambersburg at 2.10 o'clock and a visit to the county apple show. Short stops will also be made at St. Thomas and Fort Loudon. From McConnellsburg the tourists will run six miles to Websters Mill, in the agri cultural section of Fulton county, ar riving there about 3.30 o'clock. Stops will be made at Everett and the night will be spent at Bedford, where the officials will tender a public reception. Leaving Bedford at 7.45 o'clock on Wednesday morning, the first stop will i J at 'he Somerset fair, where elaborate arrangements have been made to welcome Governor Brum baugh. From Somerset the tour leads to Johnstown and on to Ebensburg, where lunch will be served and the noonday meeting held. In the after noon there will be short stops at Holll daysburg at 2.50 o'clock and Altoona at 3.15 o'clock. At the Maple Kroft Farm of D. Shelly Kloss, near Tyrone, a community picnic which is expected to be attended by 1,000 farmers will be held from 4 until 5 o'clock. The night stop will be made at Huntingdon, where Governor Brumbaugh will be host to the tourists at a dinner at Juni ata College at 7.15 o'clock. In the evening there will be a meeting and public reception in the Huntingdon courthouse. On Thursday the start will be made from Huntingdon at 10 o'clock and luncheon will be served by the Ladies' Aid of the Lewistown Hospital at Burnham Park. A big noonday meet ing is expected at Burnham. Stops will also be made a Miffllntown at 2 o'clock, Millerstown at 3 o'clock, New port at 3.2 5 o'clock and New Bloom field at 3.45 o'clock. Coyote Attacked a Child; Almost Dragged It Away Fallon, Nev., Sept. 25.—A coyote attacked the little child of Gottlieb Frisch the other day on the Dudley ranch, on Old river near Fallon. The children were playing In the yard, when a coyote attacked the smaller child, biting It several times on the head. The older child rushed into the house and notified the moth er, who came out of the house, and was horrified to see the coyote drag ging the child away. The animal persisted In dragging the child after being kicked severaf times in the ribs. The coyote was killed, and the head has been sent to the university for examination for rabies. Muskrat Farmers Raised $25,000 Crop During Year Madison, Wis., Sept. 25.—How li censed muskrat farmers of Winne bago county and vicinity got 58,435 of these animals during the year end ing June 30 and sold the hides for $25,220.60 is told In the records of the conservation commission. The business of muskrat-raislng is a unique one, and this year Is the first recognized under the law passed by the government for the licensing of specific premises for this purpose, the taking of the animals to be re ported to the commission. The farmer doing the largest busi ness reported the sale of 12,125 muskrat hides, for a total of $5,- 303.60. TOO PROUD TO LOAF We're camping on the Uio Grande With nothing much to do But wash our shirts and darn our socks. And darn the insects, too. We want the world to understand We'/e not too proud to fight, But draw the line at loafing here With things that sting and bite. The rattlers are a friendly lot And visit us by scores. Tarantulas prefer our tents To sleeping out of doors. We've learned the horned toad is but A harmless little oaf. We're not a bit too proud to fight, But how we hate to loaf! In napping in our shoes and hats The scorpion persists, And we did not enlist to be A bunch of naturalists. We're not too proud to fight the foe No matter when he comes. But are ashamed to wait around And loaf, and twirl our thumbs. While we are valeting for mules And building fences here. Some other fellows have the jobs We held for many a year. We're not too proud to fight—fact We'd glory in a fray, But we're too busy just to sit And loaf our time away. O! this is not a soldier's life, This slugging sand and sun, Mosquitoes, fleas and all the pests That crowl and fly and run. We're not too proud for Freedom's sake To fight and bleed and die, But loafing will not help to keep Old Glory in the sky. —Minna Irving, In Leslie's. A MASTER OP PROPORTIONS An eager young teacher was re viewing the Sunday school lesson in a mission church In Brooklyn. The subject was Moses and the bush that burned without being consumed. The boys of 10 or 12 had been greatly In terested in 'the story and were now eager to expose their knowledge. An swers followed her question with the rapidity of a machine gun, according to the Youth's Companion. "Now, Harry, it's your turn." "Yessum," was the confident an swer. "Tell me what there was about this burning bush that was different from any bushes that have burned since." Tho boy knew—you could tell from the snapping of his eyes but he paused to formulate his words. "Why, ma,'am, you see this here bush it burned up—but It didn't burn down!" Tho teacher could not have explain ed it better herself. ASK FOR and GET HORLICK'S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Ctoap substitutes cost YOU Mmt prfoa. "The Cold Stor> age Egg" is not always above suspicion. Popular imagination ascribes great food value to the egg—but it is not a muscle-builder. There is more real body building nutriment in a Shredded Wheat Biscuit than in the same weight of eggs or beef-steak —and it costs much less. Delicious for any meal with sliced pitches or with fruits of Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. WASHING DISHES NEEDS MUCH CARE Dr. Dixon Makes Some Com< inent Upon the Necessity of Watchfulness Commlssiolner of Health Dixon itf the course of a talk on health and hygiene to-day urged that people ex ercise the greatest care In washing dishes especially because of the dang ers of contagion which are always present. The commissioners talk i< very straightforward and is as fol lows: • "Common tasks are Important, be cause they are common. For example, washing dishes. Everybody may nol wash dishes, but they eat from dlshei that someone has washed. "To properly cleanse dishes and eat ing utensils, they should be washed and rinsed in boiling water. Washing in lukewarm water, even with soap, ia not sufficient. "There are numerous communicable diseases caused by germs which ara present In the mouths of those who are afflicted. People In the various stages of tuberculosis, diphtheria, syphilis, etc., may transfer disease germs from their mouths to eating utensils. Unless these are sterilized by boiling water they are a source of danger to whoever may use them sub sequently. "Forks in particular, because of their construction, are difficult to cleanse thoroughly and should ba washed with care. "In public eating houses exceptional attention should be given to the steril ization of eating utensils and drinking glasses. Care In the choice and prepa ration of food is easily offset by care less handling of the service." WINE AND ABSIXTHE France is the surprise of the war. One hears little in Trance, but maj see much. And I found a temper ance movement there that presages as great a moral revolution as has taken place in Russia. Before the war Marianne regarded her light wines as a safeguard against the repulsive drunkenness which shocks the sensibilities of travelers Ui some other European countries, and she saw no relation of cause and ef fect between the prevalence of wina and the increased consumption of ab sinthe. It had not occurred to het that her national problems—congen ital disability, lowered birth rate, in- Jfant mortality, tuberculosis, tha alarming growth of criminal violence whose Increase for twenty years pa si has been In startling accord with th Increased consumption of alcohol, were In any way attributable to hei vineyards, winecellars, private stilll and the universal drinking customs of her people. Even tnough It had cost her more in men ana money than tin present war, she hart faced with but slight alarm an increase of thirteen hundred per cent in the consumption of alcohol since 1870. The Chris tian Herald. . THE LAW OP COMPENSATION" A mature and splendid Christian worker who has suffered many dis appointments in life says frequentlj to his friends: "When God takes any thing away from me, I always say, 'Well, Lord, what have you got for now? I know that you took this joj away from me in order that you might give me greater Joy.' " Th Christian Herald. GET THIS DIETIOOIT - Food ia as important to the sick per son as medicine, more BO in most cases. A badly chosen diet may retard re covery. In health the natural appetite is tha best guide to follow, in sickness the ap petite is often fickle and depraved. Proper food and a good tonic 'will keep most people in good health. Dr. Williams' Pink Pills for Pale Peopla are the most popular tonic medicine in the world, harmless, non-alcoholic and certain in their action which is to build up the blood and to restore vitality to the run-down system. For growing girls who become thin and pale, for pale ; tired women, for old people who fail in strength Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are an ideal tonic. To enable those ■who give these pills a trial to observe intelligent care in the diet the Dr. WiU liams Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. 1 Y., will send on request a free diet book, "What to Eat and HowtoEat." It is full of useful information and whether you are well or sick it is a good book to have. A postal card re quest will bring it. Sena for your copy today. Get Dr. Williams' Pink Pills at the nearest drug store. If they are not in stock send fifty cents to tha above ad* dress for a full-size box. Y< Doing One il, W/ Thing and | 1 w! Doing It j/J I WM fj HOLMAN'S | Yi, FIFTEENS 1 | 228 Market St. V