14 ? Dives, Pomeroy ■ \ Virginia Turkeys to Gladden Your i Put the Turkey in a Thanksgiving Table Savory Roaster And your 1 hanksgiving dinner will be a success. Savory Specially Priced in the Grocery i" dahu Tl IT ITiifmi ' 1 l Tui'k(\> plJitli'rs, 41 < r; ifi * I plain Items Needed For the Thanksgiving Dinner wl *° —— 85010 $3,75 Fancy dried cherries and blackberries. .25c and 28c Seeded raisins 12c and 13c and p/aTtorr'fmvl roUl 'irtm! mIH" H M New prunes, very meaty 12c, 15c aiul 17c Seedless raisins 15c mod i FSlit! ' T t'4 Choice cranberries, lb 11c Dried Valencia apricots 22c * M Maraschino cherries 12c and 25c Dromedary dates, in packages 18c nundred-plcco dinner sets of best BtKh <. Bg&V SSiJfc^i|ji Assorted candled fruit in boxes 25c and 50c snvmnvp nKrrITS ' American porcelain . .$9.50, $9.98, $12.50 Kfi§£ Rffni Choice grape fruit, 10c; 3 for 25c BISCMTS Onen utook e <n nn KelrLL^^lK F u°l T v ar°ety 1 '. * 22c to 30c Va^tlel!'^ 0 " 8 . f ' aky Wb Aluminum percolator, like cut, colonial Orange and lemon peel and citron, lb 22c Oxford fruit cake, lb ' ' 40c design 98c Bell buoy brand currants 24c Oxford fruit cake, 2% lbs. 950 Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Basement. ' Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart—Basement. A Month-End Clearance of Odd White Ivory Toilet Articles Complete assortment of these dainty and popular gift FSi yr} itnY*P Pippno things m tollet articles - J- Lil 111 LLii. C X ICV>/Vly|o Nall flles ' shoe hooks a "d shoe horns 25c and 50c Hair receivers and puff boxes 50c, Bc, $1.25 on,( SI.OB In Which Notable Savings Will Be Found Perfume bottles with cut glass tops 50c, 98c and $1 "5 To provide additional, much needed room for the showing of holiday lines we have <r al hered Jewel and trinket boxe,s $1.25'51.50 to si\so from our furniture floor all pieces of which there are one to three of a kind. Several handsome !!!!!;;;;;; {£s; J£™ £ dining room suites of nine and ten pieces have been included in this special group for quick dis- DlVeS ' Pomeroy & Stewart—street Floor.' posal, beginning to-morrw. Furniture For the Library, Dining Room & Bed Yarns Moved to Third Floor DININGROOM FURNITURE Nine-piece fumed oak diningroom One 4-piece American walnut rt ' t 1 1 r j- 1 J c <^ n \ B < olden e * tenslon tab,e - su| te. with 52-Inch buffet and 48- bedroom suite Specially nricod • ° win £ to changes made for displaying holiday goods the 48-inch top and platform base. Spe- inph ' pncea c . ~ , , r daily priced 817.95 in^ h extension table. Specially SIOO.OO \ arn Section has been transferred to the Art Needlework Golden oak extension tables, pr ce SIIO.OO One 4-piece bedroom suite. Spe- npnarfrnent thirrl flnnr A m mnl <■ * 1 r n .. three to be sold $16.95 BEDROOM FURNITURE ciaiiy priced SOO.OO JJepartment, third tloor. A complete stock of Bear Brand sui\^ P orbuffel d chin°a k cioset n exte" • Golden oak anfl mahogany beds. LIBRARY FURNITURE yarns for all kinds of knitting and crocheting will be found in sion table, serving table, one arm in fu "' sizes - reduced to present day One Crex settee, with cushion. these temnorarv ciuarters and five side chairs, with leather manufacturing cost. Three only to Specially priced sl9 sn ixinpuidiy quarters. seats. Specially priced.... SIOO.OO be sold: each $9.95 One Crex chair. Specially Driced Lady Fair yarn: baU 30c sui'te. in P WlllUm°and n Mary^TeX? Bird's-eye maple chiffoniers. Spe- S6 05 Fuzzy wool for sweaters; ball ]. 33c Specially priced $105.00 cla "y Priced $13.95 9™ Crex rocker. Specially D. M. C. and M. F. A. crochet cotton; ball 10c, 15c, 20c and 30c Nine-piece mahogany diningroom One American walnut bed. Spe- suite, in William and Mary Period, daily priced $19.50 _ ul °" e ma h°Kany library P. F . C . crochet cotton, white and colors- bill I^aL a ny e prtced e \ and .? h ' na rlaYlyVi™^ 6 " Wa ' nUt ***' m," 6 V*!?" sulti/'sVe- D " M " C " and MF ' A ' for slippers anrl oolo'rs;"bali.'. ;$0 c Dives, Pomeroy' & Stewart-Third g ° ra ' WhUe> red> brOW " a " d grCy = baU 25c to Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart —Third Floor Physical Fitness First Essential Forum Is Told The opening session of the people's forum at Wesley Union African Meth odist Episcopal Church yesterday afternoon gave every indication of the lasting impressions created during the season. The attendance was above the average for the opening day and the manifest interest gives high promise of another year of unusual accom plishments. The musical program, participated in by William and Edward Jefferson and Charles Page, of Steelton, was well received. The address of the afternoon was delivered by Leslie Pinckney Hill, principal of Cheyney Institute, Cheyney, Pa. To Cure Catarrh You Must Purify Your Blood Specialists in Catarrh troubles have agreed that it is an infection of the blood. The laboratories of the Swift Specific Co. have proven it. Once you get your blood free from impurities— cleansed of the Catarrhal poisons, to which It Is now a prey, because of Its unhealthy state—then you will be re lieved of Catarrh—the dripping in the throat, hawking and spitting, raw sores in the nostrils, and the disagree able bad breath. It was caused. In the first place, because your impoverished blood was easily infected. Possibly a slight cold or contact with someone who had a cold. But the point is— don't suffer with Catarrh—it is not necessary. The remedy S. S. S., dis covered over fifty years ago, tested, ' ' MaaßHaMßv Bringing Up Father # # Copyright, 1916, International News Service © # By McManusl f THT VJINT A,l f VELL-I'VE ] I ' N , . I [g|7 'I MONDAY EVENING, Mr. Hill spoke upon "Fundamentals Upon Which Races Thrive," dividing his discourse into six distinctive groups. Begining with physical fitness as the first essential to a people, he took up and discussed in order the need of cultivating the "back to na ture" or agricultural instinct, the worth of moral stamina, constructive contribution to the world's progress. Intellectual development and spiritual devotion or nearness to God. Mr. Hill, who took his master's de gree at Harvard, has devoted much study to sociological topics. He was formerly associated with the late Dr. Washington at Tuskegee, was principal of the Manassas Industrial School at Manassas, Va., and has been at the head of Cheyney Institute for the past two years. true and tried, is always obtainable at any drug store. It has proven its value in thousands of cases. It will do so In your case. Get S. S. S. at once and begin treatment. If yours Is a long standing case, be sure to write the Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga„ for medical advice. It is free. They will tell you how this purely vegetable blood tonic cleanses the impurities from the blood by literally washing it clean. They will prove to you that thousands of sufferers from Catarrh, after consistent treatment with S. S. S., have been freed from the trouble and all Its disagreeable features and re stored to perfect health and vigor. Don't delay the treatment. Take S. S. S. at once. I 7 - - ■ :> -• '' ■' ; ' ' " " ' TW- ' - '''r^TP-.i HAJRRISBITRG 1&8SS& TELEGRAPH BEG PARK BOARD TO MOVE STONES Poor Directors Want Gross to Clear Meadowed Land Near Almshouse For Cattle Dauphin County's a ain urged the city Jgf to make some ar —rangements for dis posal of the tons of loose stones that 1 ffiVllll meadow adjacent to 'f ( SREniFISW' Cameron park (|t way and which pre vent the poor direc tors from turning the field over to much needed pas turage for the poor farm cattle. Poor Director Frank B. Snavely has made a personal request on behalf of the board to Commissioners W. H. Lynch and H. F. Bowman. The re moval of the stones is a part of Park Commissioner E. Z. Gross' job, how ever, and he has failed to cart away the rocks until he arranges for their use for rip-rapping the River Front slopes north of Hardscrabble. The rip rapping job is still hanging lire and the poor directors are becoming ap prehensive as to the possibilities of a cleared meadow land during the com ing year. To Defend Murderer. Attorney Robert Stucker has been appointed by Additional Law Judge S. J. M. McCar rell as counsel to defend Vlada Yo vanovic, the Steelton foreigner, who Is one of the half dozen men who must face a Jury during the first week of December for killing a fellow coun tryman. Died Year After Kleetion. —Within one day of a year after his election for a six-year term as supervisor of Wiconisco township, John Dodd died, and the surviving supervisors, John M. Beadle and Adam Palmer, have ap pointed Henry 'L. Kniley to fill the un expired term. Transfer Liquor License. —The Dau phin county court to-day granted the transfer of the Glen House, Lykens, liquor license, from Samuel E. Blyler to Charles C. Matter. Two Suits Against Trolley Co. —Two trespass actions against the Harris burg Railways Company were filed to day by Attorney O. G. Wickersham in which SI,OOO damages in each In stance Is demanded. Mary Stalnecker declared she was injured when she tripped over a suitcase in a crowded car. Isaac Gittlin alleges that his team was battered by the negligent handling of a trolley car. Worshippers Bring One Potato to Church to Be Distributed Among Poor New York, Nov. 27. A harvest of potatoes, gathered at the Church of the Stranger, will be distributed among the poor Wednesday as a Thanksgiving offering. At the request of the pastor, worshipers who at tended the church services yesterday were requested to drop at least one potato in barrels placed near the door. The collection was large enough to pack fifty or sixty baskets. SIO<MM)O FOR POPK Chicago, Nov. 27. Peter's pence, the annual collection for the Pope, taken in Chicago Roman Catholic churches yesterday, will approximate SIOO,OOO, it was estimated by church authorities to-day. CITY BRIEFS Confirmation Dates. Bishop James H. Darlington, of the Harris burg Diocese of the Episcopal Church, has announced the following dates for confirmation in churches of this city, Mlddletown and Steelton, during the winter and Spring, the dates are: February 21, Trinity church, Steelton; 24, St. Michael, and All Angels, Mid dletown; March 18, St. Stephen's Har risburg, and April 6, Mount Calvary, Camp Hill. Pytlilans to Banquet. —John Harris Hodge, No. 193, Knights of Pythias, will celebrate its fifteenth anniversary to-night with a big banquet in Pythian Hall. Bible Conference On. —"The Gospel of St. John" is the general theme dis cussed at the twenty-fifth denomina tional Bible conference which is now being conducted in First Baptist Church, Second and Pin streets, under the direction of the Moody Bible In stitute, Chicago. The Rev. George E. Guille is the speaker. Services were held at 3.30 this afternoon and an other service will be held at 7.30 to night. Similar hours will be observed to-morrow. Trades to Reorganize. —aHrrisurg's Federated Trades Council will reor ganized this evening at 8 o'clock at a meeting of the varoius trades unions of the city in the assembly room of the Pennsylvania Federation of Labor, Commonwealth Trust Building. Bishop Improving. Bishop James Henry Darlington, of the Episcopal diocese of Hariisburg, is improving gradually from an attack of grip. He was able to sit up yesterday. FAU.S FROM iIOXCAR "Frost on top of a boxcar caused Wil liam R. Stroup, 1327 North Sixth street to fall to the ballast. He was injured internally. NOVEMBER 27, 1916. THREE YEARS TO FINISH WARSHIPS Chief Constructor Says It Will Take That Time to Finish Eight Washington, D. C., Nov. 27. None of the eight big warships au thorized by Congress this year can be ready to join the fleet in less than three years and a half. Rear Admiral Taylor, chief constructor of the navy, told the House Naval Committee. Admiral Taylor thought the govern ment faced the same difficulties with shortage of skilled labor and material that confronted private shipbuilders. With the end of the European war the labor situation is expected to be much relieved. The navy has under consideration plans for a forty-thousand-ton batle ship which, in addition to heavier guns and armor, would have also a speed several knots In excess of that now fixed l'or ships of the lighting line. Butler Wants U. S. to Build Four Dreadnaughts Washington, D. C., Nov. 27. The probability that the four battleships authorized in the preparedness clamor which marked the first months of this Congress will not slide the ways until 1920 or 1921 aroused Representative Butler, of Pennsylvania, to declare in open hearing that the American peo ple would not stand for such delay and that he proposed to ask that the United States build its own ships and build them In thirty months. Announce Program For Elk Memorial Service Plans for the annual memorial ser vices for deceased members of the B. P. O. Elks have been completed. The exercises will be held in the Majestic Theater Sunday December 3, at 3:30 in the afternoon. The orator of the day will be William I. Swope, of Clearfield. John B. Seifert, lyric tenor of Pittsburgh, and Mrs. William K. Bunibaugh, soprano, Mrs. William Witherow, contralto and A. W. Hart man, basso, will be the local singers. The Rev. Floyd Appleton, rector of St. Paul's Episcopal Church will offer the invocation and prayer. The pro gram is as follows: "March a la Moor," Moschowslti, Lebanon sextet; "Whispering Hope," Hawthorne, Mrs. Bunibaugh and Mrs. Witherow; opening of the lodge; "Fear Not Ye, O Israel," Buck, John B. Siefert; continuation of opening services; "There Is A Land Immortal," March, quartet.; memorial exercises, lodge ofllcers; (a) "Adoration," Borowski; (b), "An dante, Op. 13," Beethoven, Lebanon sextet; oration, William Swope; "Over the Stars There Is Rest," Abt, John 8. Siefert; "Am Meer," Schubert, Miss Elizabeth Johnson; "There Is No Night In Heaven," Bul lard, quartet; closing of lodge; sing ing of "Auld Lang Syne," by the members of the local lodge and visiting Elks; prayer and benedic tion, the Rev. Mr. Appleton; march, "Commemoration," Lebanon sex tet. HOLD SPECIAL MASSES AT ST. FRANCIS CHURCH Solemn high requiem mass will be celebrated at the St. Francis' Catholic church to-morrow morning at 8 o'clock. The Rev. D. J. Carey, rector, will officiate. The mass will be for deceased members of the Ladis' Cath olic Benevolent Association. Memorial vespers were celebrated last evening at St. Francis' Catholic Church for the deceased members of the order of Knights of St. George, local branch No. 168. On Thanksgiving morning solemn high requiem mass will be offered up in St. Francis' Church for the deceas ed members of the German branch of Knights of £t. George. Local mem bers will meet in their hall and march to the church in a body. . . i Absolute Guarantee U not • better Potuh than anything ritr of it* land, you may return tHe bank and we .ill refund y—r money Dives, Pomeroy & Stewart (GEORGE H. SQURBIER | FUNERAL DIRECTOR 13(0 North Third Strut Ucll t'kuofc Auto kvrtlce. I For a QuicK PicK up Luncheon try that most delicious, nourish ing, whole wheat food, Triscuit, the shredded wheat wafer-toast. It con tains all the body-building material in the whole wheat grain, including the bran-coat which promotes healthful and natural bowel movement. It is real whole wheat bread without yeast, baking powder or chemicals *1 of any kind an ideal food for children because it com pels thorough mastication and insures perfect digestion. A crisp, tasty "snack" for picnics or excursions. Toast in the oven and serve with butter or soft cheese. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. UNION SERVICES AT DAUPHIN Dauphin Pa, Nov. 27. Union Thanksgiving services will be held on Thursday morning at 10 o'clock in the Methodist Episcopal Church. The Uev. J. K. Robh, pastor of the Zlon Lutheran Church, will preach the ser mon, while all the other ministers of the town will assist in the services. LOOK AT CHILD 7 S TONGUE IF SICK, CROSS, KVERISH Hurry, Mother! Remove poisons from little stomach, liver, bowels. Give "California Syrup of Figs" at once if bilious or constipated. Look at the mother! It coated, it is a sure sign that your little one's stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or act nat urally, or is feverish, stomach sour, breath bad; has stomach-ache, sora throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of "California Syrup of Figs," and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of the little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful child again. You needn't coax sick children to take this harmless "fruit laxative;" they love its delicious taste, and It al ways makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a 50-cent bot tle of "California Syrup of Figs." which has directions for babies, chil dren of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of coun terfeits sold here. To be sure you get the genuine, ask to see that it is made by "California Fig Syrup Company." Kefuse any other kind with contempt. IHH l: { ....... I FRONT 2*l N. BACK I . THE NEW COLLARS ARE HERE j pArrv'c Third and Walnut ■ Wliy b Open Evenings
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers