18 & ■ Dives, Pomeroy& Stewart I Women's Suits of ' & Distinctive Types y A Broad Showing at Moderate Cost _/ Tli e woman who will pay s , from sl6 5Q to S3O (X) for her A 1 CI 1 f* T7l 1 1 winter suit will find in this WS4B Our Annual bale of Fall S _ yr •-I -| • /-x -p which she may make a selec- &3Frf\ Millinery Opens lomorrow fra pfftv • others are plainly fashioned for (As Vi "ISa Wr/ _ _ . the woman who prefers to wear |l Clearance Groups of Trimmed Hats Chiffon broadcloth suits, in a tailored \ |\\ model, finished with bands of self trim- \ 4 i i i ' 1 T~fc • 1 t eTtx -4 r\ r rts *-v *-\ mlng- and black velvet collar and cuffs; / M ' \ \ Attractively Priced at $1.95, $2.95 ' ' Poplin suits, in navy and brown; the. |IW \ \ \ coat has a plaited back and Is belted X\l- ' . | \ '\ Ch f\ E? QJ* /i C\ l T 1 ffli /" C nt thG w 'aist, finished with larjje self cov- VPa, > n , ''/ I.i f, 2%. so.yh y s4.yo ana so.dU r&r d . ,ha : 1 , wua Jr:-- AW Suits, in poplin and gabardine; the \i v""^ coat ls made with a full circular skirt, I lip 17/1 iLjl Close to 500 Trimmed Hats give this sale an interest quite in keeping with rro'm u,e W ride to the importance of these I r all clearance events. c°ai tt at a "f. bon ® bu . u " n . trh ™"\ l ?ff>2o P w> / \ Yv- Suits of Kabardine and poplin in navy jk The variety of styles may be imagined when one considers the number of the "nd Usemi-beftedT'the^ona? I ' nnlshed ** hats involved in the sale. To the disposal groups taken from regular stock has been wlth a "arrow band of seal. Special^ added a special purchase of 100 trimmed hats bought at a fraction of what they were Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Floor made to sell for. __ ~ The appealing feature of this sale is the opportunity afforded hundreds of OH. & P&1I* Of "fcllG DOCtjOI* women to buy new hats at reinarkab.e savings. For instance: A . Reed CUSMOn SllOe End The $1.95, $2.95 and $3.95 Hats were formerly $3.95, $4.95, $5.95, $6.50 and $6.95. Enjoy Real Comfort The $4.95 and $6.50 Hats were formerly priced up to SIO.OO and of $12.00. every ohe of his five toes, without the slightest sacrifice of style li or smart appearance. This is the only store in town where you Fine Drew Shane S of Velour Snort Hnt e in can buy this comfortable and Ipng service shoe. P J 00000T — ~~]aoooo lOUi opOFl liQtS M ]f y OU favor our Shoe Section by trying on a pair of the Dr. Lnons Velvet Reduced i"" ~~a BlackfrColor* Rpdnrpd A - Reecl cushion shoe ll P on >' our ncxt visit to the store > wc believe uyviib \tutl neau tea | _ z niaCKOCLjOlorSneaucea you will instantly sea- the advantage of adopting them for ttoe To $4.95 ° - I bination last $0.50 c 11 i i i- S/I&T/k t it.- e r , Steel calf blncher double sole shoe, practically impervious to bmall, large and medium s § rou P fine velour water . ... s' buckle; sizes 2to C. S P ec ; al ,••••••••; ••.*, , SIO.OO c , , . - vears $5.50 to $5.9. Ciolden oak china closets; 36 inches wide and 60 inches hierh: grey, oxford and navy; sues 2to 5 • children . s coats in bUck p / s i s "to 6 shelve, and mirror i„ top shell #28.50 SJ.3O to $ ..0 years; belted model with fancy buttons, $0..">0 Golden oak china closets, 40 inches wide and 60 inches high; Children's coats in wide and narrow wale Children's velour coats in flare model; collr.r bent glass door; bevel edge glass panels on each side ... $35.00 corduroy with wide belt and pockets; colors and cuffs are trimmed with bands of seal; col- Nine-piece golden oak diningroom suite; buffet and china are brown, navy and green; sizes 2to 0 years, ors are green, brown and Burgundy; sizes 5 closet, extension table, five side and one arm chair; in period $4.95 to s(i.."o and 6 years SIO.OO design $95.00 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Second Floor j Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart, Third Floor. JJ WHAT TO DO FOR A COLD , Under the heading of "Things To Do" for a cold, a bulletin of the Life Extension Institute, of New York City, 1 condenses into a table these valuable hints on emergency treatment: "On the first sign of a cold, a hot foot bath, lasting half an hour, and a drink of hot lemonade or, better 1 OLD-TIME COLD j CURE-DRINK TEA! : liet a small package of Hamburg Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it, pour through a sieve and i drink a teacup full at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the I pores, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a i cold at once. It is inexpensive and entirely veg- I table, therefore harmless. I Watch the Bell Telephone Search light For Election Returns A powerful searchlight mounted on the roof of the Division Of fice Building of The Bell Telephone Company of Pennsylvania on Market Square, will tell you who leads for President. When the returns favor President When the returns favor Mr. Wilson, the light will point across Hughes, the light will point over the river to the west. the State Capitol dome. When the returns indicate a close contest, the light will point straight up in the air. |/2\The Bell Telephone Company/X\ of Pennsylvania MONDAY EVENING, , still, hot linseed tea (one-half ounce of whole flaxseed to a pint of boiling | j water, flavored with lemon peel or ' licorice root) —will often break its force. "A brisk purge is also advisable. "A mild menthol-oil spray may be used occasionally in nose and throat. "Neck and chest and nostrils may be rubbed with camphorated oil. "If the throat is sore, a gargle or spray of peroxide of hydrogen, one part to three parts of water, may be frequently used. "Also, cold compresses to the neck, or gauze pads saturated with equal parts of alcohol and water. "An alcohol rub-down is also good as a first aid measure. Used extern ally, alcohol is a real friend. Intern [ ally, it is a dangerous enemy. "The spread of septic sore throat ; and other germ diseases by milk is i very common. Pasteurized milk is safest during epidemics. I "If there is severe headache, face ache, earache, pain in the chest, sore ——l I u -I. u u*PJ.,' I jpiiL mm m 11L . ■iw 1 1111. HAJUUBBCRO Ufift&L TELEGFJLPH throat, or high fever, there should be I no delay in calling a physician." (The World's Work for November. WHY COLDS ARE PREVAIiENT IX WINTER "The reason why we don't have |so many colds and so much pneu monia in June as we do in November lies in our lack of ability to live as rationally in November. We cut down on our supply of fresh air. We take : less exercise. We subject our bodies to extremes of temperature. We shut (ourselves up in crowded places where infection has ideal conditions to pro -1 pagate itself. In June we were in ! the open air a lot, went walking and ; swimming and driving, kept the win dows open and needed no cocktail to give us an appetite. Sad is the con trast now, and we pay the penalty, i We take no more open air exercise j but we eat as much as ever. Wo j work harder but sleep less, for the social season is on. Only an hour or so a day are we in the open. For the rest of the time we are in sealed houses, stuffy subways and street cars, 111-ventilated offices, restau .rants, theaters, and ballrooms, breath | ing heated, humid air that has a high |' i percentage of infectious microbes. At j a season when our resisting power is j lessened by our way of life and the | changes of the temperature, we keep ] ourselves most of the time in places j ideal for the spread of breathed-in infection. Under these conditions our ! internal allies haven't a fair chance j to put up a fight for us, and 'season able ailments' multiply. But don't i blame the season. Don't blame germs, j It is up to us to meet the emergency. And we can! By simple precautions we can lessen the risks of infection i from disease germs, and by right liv ing we can increase our powers of I resistance to their attacks." The | World's Work. Mother Drowns Two Children and Attempts to End Her Own Life i Wilmington, Del., Nov. 6. Appar- J ! ently insane, Mrs. Irene Stopka, 30 years old, last evening took her two little | daughters, one Ave and the other seven I years old, to the pier of the Wilming- i ton Yacht Club, at Gordon Heights, ' where she threw them overboard and then jumped into the river to follow I them. Both children were drowned, but the mother struck shallow water and | then waded to a launch close by Into I which she climbed. She waa found sev eral hours later unconscious from wet j and exposure. Diplomacy at Home Every now and then wife urges i husband to buy some new clothes for | himself, but if he is a pretty good , talker he can get out of it without j making her mad.—Fort Worth Star. Thousands Take this mild, family remedy to avoid illnes% and to improve and protect their health. They keep their blood pure, their i livers active, their bowels regular and I digestion sound and strong with _ BUCtWIS PILLS Lara i>t Sal* of Any Medic in* la tIwWwML | Said trcrfwbtr*. InboxM, 10c., ZBc. Kaiser's Daughter Decorated by Father t ' ■ i DUCHESS OF BRUKSWICK. Taris, Nov. 6. The Duchess of Brunswick, formerly Princess Victoria Louise, only daughter of fhe Kaiser, has been decorated by her fatheiS She was awarded the Red Cross medal for her services In nursing the wounded and otherwise furthering the work of the Bed Cross. The Duke of Bruns wick is heading a regiment at the front. SHEEP SHEDS SHOULD BE DRY In the open sheds provided for the winter housing of sheep at the Penn eylvania State College troughs are placed under the eaves to prevent water dripping into the pens from rain or melted snow. Doors on the exposed Mde, hinged from above and held to the ceiling by hooks, make it possible to use the pens for lambing and to keep out snow during Bevere storms. The shed is equipped, also, with feed tacks and lamb creeps. The Tampa Tribune says that the Florida Times-Union is "the most en thusiastic Hughes paper in the United States." In this instance praise from a Democratic organ is praise, indeed. — Philadelphia Inquirer. NOVEMBER 6, 1916. CHRISTMAS SHIP FOR ARMENIANS Destitute Syrians Will Also Share Bounty of America Now York. Nov. 6. America's Christmas ship to foreign lands, which this year will be the navy collier Caesar or a collier of the same type, is being relined by the government for carry ing food supplies to destitute Syrians and Armenians. It will leave New York December 1, carrying a capacity cargo of foodstuffs and new clothing for Beirut, Syria, from which port re lief will be distributed by American | Red Cross and Ited Crescent agents, \ aided by United States consuls and i missionaries. The American Committee for Ar menian and Syrian Kellef has Just sent $208,000 through the State Depart ment to various distribution centers to be distributed immediately by the committee's agents direct to the most needy survivors of the Armenian de portations and the Syrian famine months. This money will purchase grain, blankets and clothing, giving the sufferers within the Turkish em pire a foretasto of the Christmas cheer which the United States Navy boat will bring. As a necessary preliminary to the sending of the Christmas ship ar rangements are being made for collec tions in tho churches of the entire country Thanksgiving Day, the re ceipts of which will be used In com pleting the cargo. The ship will carry | tiOO.OOO pounds of rice, 200,000 pounds I of lima beans, 400,000 pounds of crushed wheat, 2,100,000 pounds of whole wheat, 500,000 pounds of sugar, '.,000 cases of condensed milk for chil dren, 10,000 barrels of flour, 50,000 gallons of petroleum anil 25,000 gal lons ol' cottonseed oil. Military regulations forbid the car rying of any except new clothing. Hundreds of cases of warm underwear and sweaters and light shoes for men, women and children, stockings for women and children, cotton and woolen socks for men, blankets and blanket shawls, gray cotton and woolen cloth in the piece, unbleached musltn, and cotton thread, needles and pins will form a part of tho cargo. Con- j tributors to the cargo and churches j which are raising money are sending their gifts to W. A. Staub. the Red j Cross representative in charge of the i Christmas ship, at the Bush Terminal, Brooklyn, N. Y. Navy otiiclals and prominent church men of all denominations will join the I ceremonies to be held at the Christmas ship's departure, adding to its cargo the holiday good wishes of one coun try to the stricken races of another. The money collected on (he two days recently proclaimed by President Wilson as Armenian and Syrian relief! days having been cabled for immediate relief, more than a quarter of a million dollars additional must be gathered to freight the Christmas ship. The funds already collected, It is believed,' will be supplemented to this amount in hundreds of cities in which the proclamation days were used merely as the beginning of local campaigns which will last until after Thanksgiving. There Is little doubt, however, that even after the response of the country to the appeals of the President and the committee has been registered fully many of the most elemental needs of the deportation victims, to j relieve which Henry Morgenthau, ex ambassador to Turkey, estimates $5,000,000 is necessary, will still be uncared for permanently, and that America's assistance to the sufferers of the Orient must continue. Character (New York Sun) There was intelligence in Woodrow I Wilson's request for a Carnegie pen sion, but was there character? There j vas political intelligence in his re- I pudiation of the friends whb helped j make him Governor and President, jbut how much character? I There was intelligent perception in | President Wilson's reluctant dealings I with Germany. He perceived that he | must do something, but was there (character in what he did? Was there j backbone? Did he mean what he isaid? Did Germany think so? j There was intelligence in President Wilson's flop on Panama tolls, on ; child labor, on preparedness. But was there in any of those belated turns to jthe right a trace of upstanding char acter? I There was intelligence—the Intelli gence of fear—in Mr. Wilson's deal ings with Mexico. Was there charac ter ig them? To mean what you say, to do what j you say, is to show character. Who | will assert, on Woodrow Wilson's rec ord, that he has it? AGED WOMAN Run Down and Feeble Made Strong by Vinol : So many people in Harrisburg and vicinity are in Mrs. Wlckersham's condition we ask you to call at our ! store and get a bottle of Vinol, and if [ it fails to benefit we will return your i money. In her eighty-second year Mrs. John \ Wickersham, of RusselMille, Pa., says: | "I was in a run-down, feeble condition and had lost flesh. A neighbor asked me to try Vinol, an dafter taking two bottles my strength returned; I am gaining flesh, it has built up my health and I am feeling tine for a woman of my age, so I get around and do my housework." The reason Vinol was so successful In Mrs. Wlckersham's case was be cause it contains beef and cod liver peptones, iron and manganese pepto nates and glycerophosphates, the very elements needed to build up a weak ened run - down system and create strength. Right here in Harrisburg we have seen such excellent results from Vinol that It is a pleasure to know it is doing so much good for old people in other parts of the country. George A. Gorgas, Druggist; Ken nedy's Medicine Store. 321 Market street; C. F. Kramer, Third and Broad streets: Kitzmlller's Pharmacy, 1325 Dtrry street, Harrisburg. Also at the leading drug stores in all Pennsylvania towns. you caw HAVEna^rT BEAUTIFUL Jf&.k HAIR HT? If you will do what j thousands of have done IQ the pat nBWLg 20 years—nee aJto—rwni > ?TOess INSTANTANEOUS HAIR COLOR RESTORER I will change gray or faded hair Inataut j ly to any desired color, with one appll -1 cation. Easy to apply. No after waahlng. One Dollar Per Box. • Deicriptive Leaflet on Requeit. J | At Oforgc A. Gorgan| Dives, l'omrroj & Stewart. NO (CIO STOMACH, • 501 NESS, GASES OR JOIST! In five minutes your sick, sour upset stomach will feel fine. "Pape's Diapepsin" acids in stomach and ** starts digestion. Take your sour, out-or-order stonr. aeh—or maybe you call It indigestion, | dyspepsia or gastritis, it doesn't mut ter—take your stomach trouble right with yoiv.to your pharmacist and ask him to Won a 50-cent case of Pape's Dlupepsin and let you eat one 22-grain trlangule and see if within live min utes there is left any trace of your former misery. The correct name for your trouble is food fermentation—acid stomach— food souring; the digestive organs be come weak, there is lack of gastric juice; your food Is only half digested, and you become affected with loss of appetite, pressure and fullness after eating, vomiting, nausea, heartburn, griping In bowels, tenderness in the pit of stomach, bad taste in mouth, constipation, pain in limbs, sleepless ness, belching of gas, biliousness, sick headache, nervousness, dizziness or many other similar symptoms. If your appetite is fickle, and noth j ing tempts you, or you belch gas or If you feel bloated after eating, or your | food lies like a lump of lead on your j stomach, you can make up your mind that at the bottom of all this there is but one cause—fermentation of undi gested food. Prove to yourself in five minutes that your stomach is as good as any; that there is nothing really wrong. Stop this fermentation and begin eat ing what you want without fear of discomfort or misery. Almost instant relief is waiting for you. It is merely a matter of how soon you take a little Diapepsin. Start Tomorrow and Keep It Up Every Morning Get In the habit of drinking a glass of hot water before breakfast. We're not here long, so let's make our stay agreeable. Let us live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, and look well. What a glorious condition to attain, and yet, how very easy it is if one will only adopt tho morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, split ting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, Instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system each morning and flushing out the ] whole of the internal poisonous stag nant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone , phosphate in it to wash from the . stomach, liver and bowels the pre s vious day's indigestible waste, sour | bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleans ing, sweetening and purifying the en ' tire alimentary canal before putting , more food into the stomach. The ac -5 tion of hot water and limestone phos , phate on an empty stomach is won \ derfully invigorating. It cleans out J all the sour fermentations, gases, , waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. While t you are enjoying your breakfast tho , water and phosphate is quietly ex , trading a large volume of water from , the blood and getting ready for a . thorough flushing of all the inside organs. The millions of people who are . bothered with constipation, bilious . spells, stomach trouble; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and > sickly complexions are urged to get a i quarter pound of limestone phosphate . from the drugstore. This will cost very little, but is sufficient to make . anyone a pronounced crank on the subject of inside-bathing before breakfast. "Making Frantic Efforts To Get CoalSSupplier's r ' When you read such head lines as this in the day's news there must be something wrong with the coal supply. SCARCITY OF LABOR SHORTAGE OF CARS are two of the factors that are threatening a serious con dition this winter. If you delay you may not i be able to get the coal need | ed to keep your family com fortable this winter. H. M. KELLEY & CO. Office, 1 North Third 1 Tarda, Trntli nnd State FLORIDA * "BY SEA" Baltimore to JACKSONVILLE (Calling at Savannah) Delightful Sail Pine Steamera. Law Farea. Beat Service Plan Your Trip to Include "Finest Coastwise Trips in the World' 1 llluatrated Booklet on Bequest. MBit CHANTS 4t MINGHS Tit AN M. CO. \V. P. TL'ItNBH, G. P. A. Balto.. Md. Use Telegraph Want Ads r ■