4 |( Saturday Sale o£ f Saturday Sale of s oc \. Saturday Sale of ( s a i Hepatka j I 1 V 27* J f a lcum Powders ( Toilet Creams ( Ka^pais)Tooth Powders H \ 2Hd* J 50c size Mary Garden Cold Cream 38c \ 320 / e , t , _.. 1S „ Mary Garden Talcum Powder 3flc \ V" 7 75c size Mary Garden Greaseless Cream. . .02c \. 1 Sanltol Tooth Powder High Jinks Talcum Powder •*!« 50c size Hudnufs Marvelous Cold Cream.. 34c S Kalpheno Tooth Powder 13c «,-. T o„« hPo «„ V P / ■ E \ y >« / wampoie's\ jL c .f3» y ßffi':§ss; b s, < ssB«:".::JS / peiw. \ p °- a «' » \ 57 V Coleate's Talcum Powder 15c | Liver 1 50c size Stillman's Cream 27c I __ T_ 1 Lyon's Tooth Powder 14c Colgate s raicum j VXXI I 50c size Wilson s Cream 29c | HyphO- I Calox Tooth Powder 14c Mennen s Talcum Powder » TT-eft-art / 25c size Satin Skin Cold Cream 14c I I Pvorrhtcide Tooth Powder 63c TC- Babcock's Corylopsis Talcum Powder 10c \ HiXtrHCt / 25c size Satin Skin Greaseless Cream 14c \ phosphites / y 75c Hj m / X Jess Talcum Powder 13c \ „ _ / 25c size Satin Skin Rose Tint 14c V M . / Brown Dentifrice Powder 17c f X ■ IS / SI.OO \ Talrolette Talcum Powder 14c \. 000 >/ 50c size Kintho Cream 45c \ gaS / \ Talcolette 1 aicum fowner ••••••• V 50c size Pompeian Massage Cream 25c \ / Zhongiva Liquid 34c f VJiccilb » W3 I Olialrer T-Terh I Rlverl's Lehn & Fink Talcum Powder 15c 25c size Pompeian Night Cream 15c , , T im.ifi o 7 „ I AllP'llct m I VUSKer nero 1 Vantlne Sandalwood Talcum Powder l»c 25c sl>e Woodbury-S Facial Cream 14c Lavorls Liquid 27c I AUgUSt | lS \ Extract | Aubrev Sisters' Talcum Powder 17c 25c size Hind's Cold Cream, tubes 17c Vernas Liquid 29c 1 Flower / H fB \ I !f y ® i«„ - 50c size Hind's Honey and Almond Cream..3lc Sozodont Liquid 14c \ U C / ■ S \ 670 / Hind s Chafing Talcum Powder $1 size Hind's Honey and Almond Cream. 75c Rublfoam Liquid 15c \ J / M sg] X ' / _ 25c size Daggetts & Ramsdell Cold Cream, 15c tc f 25c size Colgate's Cold Cream 20c —-v. Saturday sale or ( SI.OO \IK s:«ssifr?.:::::::::::: i!S /35c \ _ , _ . _ ES / \ / \ 50c size Creme Elcaya Witch Hazel 37c / \ *m#l •« r a -vf / \ BB i SI.OO \ p arp Pnwiilw Danderine {gy» g»;ggaSSII? ( F 'f tc ] ,^ s I saturflay Mie OI / ioe \| i&9 I \ J. XL vv W3» 1 I 50c size Ingram's Milk Weed Cream 29c I CaStOria I _ / _ \ P 1 \ tjtfO / SI.OO size Ingram's Milk Weed Cream .... 67c \ / | I Feruna | Mary Garden Face Powder 75c \ / size |^ e^ l^f e^ re l^d ;;;;;';'';" \ I \ / Djer Kiss Face Powder \ 50c size Knowlton's Massage Cream 39c N. y \ Jv / m pi \ ""r / Azufea Face Powder owe 25c size Aubrey Sisters' Cold Cream 17c - y Kolynos Dental Cream 14c . B| H y Florayme Face Powder 89c 25c size Sisters' Greaseless Cream.. 17c . Colgate's Dental Cream 20c I Hudnut's Face Powder 39c . Pebeco Dental Cream 29c Hudnut's Rice Powder 17c _ Kalpheno Dental Cream 13c Carmen Face Powder 29c S. S. White Dental Cream 12c f (C ■j 7 c 3 B f __ Lablache Face Powder ;... 32c " Lyon's Dental Cream 13c X $3.75 \ I ■ f tpl.oo \ Java Rice Powder 26c f SI.OO y y Sanltol Dental Cream 13c / 'Mnrlirlr'c \ 9 S I 1 Rogers & Gallet Rice Powder 20c / i\ / $1 00 \ / nc~ \ I 35C \ Pond's Extra Paste 17c I I 1 -lnKfiams 1 Rogers & Gallet Face Powder 39c / Pierce's \ / \f ' \ I Pluto 1 Pasteurine Paste 17c I Malted Milk I H ESj I Compound / Jess Face Powder 19c I 1 I Merniridfi ll t J ou. ttt I Sheffield's Paste 15c V mn T5 / I H V rr»s I Woodbury's Face Powder i4c I Medical I I nerpiciae ii j a( j s Salts I \ Water I Sozodont Paste i7c \ J 9 Ml \ V)2(S * Tetlow's Gossamer Face Powder loc \ I 1 II I \ V y ■ H \ ' / Tetlow's Swandown Face Powder .9e \ DISC / \ 596 / V / \ 21 (t / Mennen s Paste l. Sanltol Face Powder 13c \ / \ /X 1-3 Charles' Face Powder 2ilc XT it* S X. > " -* 1 Colgate's Charms Face fJ * \> j (jy ßem 7ndNJtbe p r ' ace KENNEDY'S s treet ljy| FOODS TH DECTROY j AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED ' TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT l»'^ ht MccaAn b r By ALFRED W. McCANN I' CHAPTER 9:s For Many Years the Effect of Sul phurous Acid Upon Public Health In spired Bitter Agitation in Scientific tnil Trade Circles—The Public, Know ing Nothing; of the Facts, Are Intro duced to Them Here. For years the Bureau of Chemis- Iry of the Department of Agriculture it Washington and the dried fruit Industry of the United States have worried each other to such lengths ;hat scientists and lawyers, engaged by both sides in a controversy that Don't Dye Gray Hairs Darken Them in a Natural Way Remove every trace of prematurely pray, streaked and faded hair, easily, quickly, safely, and turn It an even dark, beautiful shade with WA and keep it full ot life, lustrous, healthy, soft, wavy and fascinating. Removes all traces of dandruff, itching scalp and stops falling bair. too. No dye—harmless to use—use cannot be detected. Large 50c and sl. bottles at your druggists. Send for valuable booklet "Beauti ful Hair," Philo Hay, Newark, N. J. Bringing Up Father # (0) © (0) (0) By —_______________ — 7 v —y 11 T \ ' 1 r C fn f ... , \ m all BUT SOME ' T ° KILL MORPHY? LATIN' ON THE C= ]•• ILL TAKE Cl? ALL BUT Hl«b FACE ? J • _ _ - ... ——— .11 I m —l|W^——m»|| ■ I T——nM^aUl FRIDAY-EVENING,.. | the public has never hears of, have appeared in almost all the courts of the country for and against the j merits and demerits of sulphurous ! acid. It is time indeed that the laity should have some knowledge of what is going on. The beautiful Sultana raisin, grown in California, and marketed under a name which conveys the idea that it comes all the way from Turkey, is part of a scheme of fraud which the ; average housewife never suspects. This beautiful blond fruit contains | sulphurous acid. For years all efforts i to reform the methods of preparation, whereby the wholesome little brun ette of the preserved grape family i is forced to appear under false colors, have been defeated by .the food so ph isticators. j The dried frut men openly refer, when speaking to themselves, to a phenomenon which th'ey admit to be real. They say that beetles, ants, flies, ajid birds will starve to death rather ; than eat bleached, dried fruit- con i taining sulphurous acid. If the instincts and habits of the j lower animals, which prompt them to avoid certain foods, had no meaning i for human intelligence, we would not now have our modern system of med | Ication. i Notwithstanding this fact the lay | man never asks how it is that the | masquerading Sultana raisin acquires ! its golden hue. 1 The housewife never asks why iti is that the flavor of the masquerad- ing Sultana raisin is so inferior to the flavor of the natural, unbleached raisin. For years men prominently identi fied with the dried fruit industry have declared that if they were com pelled by law to abandon their cus tom of bleaching dried apples, dried pears, dried peaches, dried apricots, and dried Sultana raisins with sul phurous acid they would be put to an expense that would destroy their business. Dried fruit brokers have told me with great pathos that without the use of sulphurous acid the bleached dried fruit industry would be obliged to erect new buildings, install new machinery and take greater care in protecting their products from the appetites of birds and insects. For six years the Remsen Rel'eree Board, to which the sulphurous acid question was referred for a decision, kept fiuiet, while, in the meantime, the harvest of sulphured fruits has increased enormously. In 1909 California alone produced 20,000 tons of dried peaches treated with sulphurous acid. In I 4 this quantity had increased to 3 2.Q00 tons. The traffic in dried apricots and evaporated apples treat ed with sulphurous acid increased accordingly. Six years is a long time in which to determine whether a poison is a poison, particularly if during the meantime the public, without its knowledge, is obliged to eat the prod uct over which there is so much ar gument. In the meantime California has been able to say to the United States Government, "Hands off." Through her influence at Washington she was able to keep the Referee Board silent for six years. Dr. Harvey W. Wiley made a bitter (?ght against the use of sulphurous acid In all foods. What happened to the greatest food crusader of all times is now only too well known. Yet, while the Referee Board was HAJtRISBURG TELEGRAPH brooding over the wholesomeness or | unwholesomeness of sulphurous acid; as an Ingredient of commercial food stuffs, Dr. J. C. Olsen, professor of chemistry in the Brooklyn Polytech nic Institute, established to his own satisfaction the harmfulness of sul phurous acid when introduced into the food of animals. In 1911 Dr. Olsen issued a statement which was given wide publicity throughout the newspapers of the country. These were his words: "Sulphurous acid kills people by the slow route. It prolongs their agony longer than would be the case if they were shot or stabbed. There is no doubt of that. But whether you de scribe the effects that follow its use as murder or not depends perhaps upon how much stock you own in the food industry that uses the drug. "I have put sulphurous acid in the food of dogs and watched them closely for months. At first they actually appeared to fatten on the diet. Any casual observer would have been led by this phenomenon to pronounce sulphurous acid a whole some ingredient of food. "At the end of six months we chloroformed the animals and made post-mortem examinations upon them. All their organs appeared sound and healthy. The acid apparently had not harmed them as far as the naked eye was concerned. "Before a jury, with only the sur face evidence by which to be guided, sulphurous acid would have been whitewashed. "However, we went farther than a mere post-mortem. We put the dogs' kidneys under the microscope. In every case the results were the same. The kidneys had begun to break down. The lens revealed the degen eration of the cells. For this reason I look upon sulphurous acid as dead ly." Dr. Olsen did not profess to know anything about the conduct of sul phurous acid in the body of a human being. He knew only what happened ] to the unfortunate dogs on which he had experimented, but there his knowledge stopped. Children were eating dried fruits bleached with sulphurous acid In every State of the Union. Children have been eating this fruit for six years, during which the Referee Board has spent the nation's money in silence. Throughout all these years all American children in wnose diet bleached dried fruits has appeared were in the sulphurous acid poison squad whether their parents knew it or not. On April 21, 1913, I sugested to the Health Department of New York City, which has unlimited powers, that it should take twenty orphan children ranging in age from five to ten years and feed them daily with the same kind of bleached dried peaches which twenty million other children of the same age in the United States are asked to eat and are permitted to eat without shock ! or objection on the part of their i parents or guardians. I suggested that If at the end of one year these twenty unfortunate chil dren should be found to be peculiarly anaemic the Department of Health would find some justification for exer cising its vast powers In the dis couragement of the sulphurous acid Industry and would doubtlessly be ab solved of all charges of cruelty' cfr barbarism in making the experiment. The criticisms that were showered upon me for making this "inhuman" suggestion indicated then that the timid souls who stand by and say nothing while millions of women and children are exposed to the use of a chemically treated food which is at least in the doubtful class, became exceedingly indignant, forceful, and even militant when a generalized condition tolerated on a vast scale Is I focused down to a fine point where 1 AUGUST 11, 1916. can be seen, weighed, measured, and felt. We shall now see what actual justi fication then existed and what justi fication still exists for taking this bleached fruit industry in hand. Such an easy way to heal my skin! " I never worry if I have a little rash or other eruption break out— I just put on a bit of Resinol Ointment. That takes out the itch ing and burning instantly, and soon clears the trouble away. I learned of Resinol Ointment through our doc tor prescribing it for my brother. Tom had been almost frantic with eczema for months but that ointment healed his skin like magic." Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap are sold by alt druufrists. For a free sample o' each,write to Dept. 29-R, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. Resorts Atlantic citv, s, j. *1.50 up Dally. SB.OO up Wily. Am. Plan, OSBORNE Pacific and Arkansas Aves.. near Beach. El®. va f°u running water in rooms. Pr*. LEXINGTON Pacific and Ark. avs. Grounds adjoin beach and boardwalk. Only hotel where guests may go to surf in bath ing attire without using streets, which 1- Prohibited. Use of bath houses free. Running water in rooms. Private baths. Special rates, $1.60 up daily; $8 to $17.5# weekly, including choice table, sup plied from own farm. Whltb service, orchestra, ballroom, tennis courts, gar age. Booklet mailed. NELLUNDY"°'»'° : 'b«=" 'S s minute t0 g teel pier Excellent cuisine; white service; prl« vate baths; running water; elevator to ■evel. Cap., 250. Special $12.50 up Wkly. $2.50 up daily. E. H. LUNDT, THE WILTSHIRE"^®H! LA view. Capacity 350; private baths, ele vator, porches, etc. Special rates, sls up weekly. $2.50 up dally. American plan. Every convenience. Open all year. Auto meets trains. Booklet. SAMUEL ELLIS. HOTEL KINGSTON Ocean Ave., Ist hotel (100 feet) from Beach. Cap. 250; elevator; bathing from hotel; distinctive table and service; $2.50 up dally; sl2 up weekly. Special family rates. Garage. Booklet. M. A. LEYBEB. Try Telegraph Want AdT