j The Store That 17 IWT 1\ O TVie f/ome of j| | MaknTh™ JV JC 111 1 E jLr 1 Ss! J j MM**™ | Money-Saving Specials For Saturday [ SZlsssL j i Rnkhfi? flnnrlc Prices on Rubber Goods offered for Saturday are cut in half. Compare them 1 | vIUUUo in price and quality anywhere. | | STANDARD Half-Priced Every Household TOILET 1 | MEDICINES Rubber Goods Need at Special ARTICLES I Bpj 25c Carter's Liver Pills 120 25c Ear and Ulcer Syringe 120 , j.;f pj $3.75 Horlick's Malted Milk $2.75 Infant Syringes 120 • 15c Palmolive Soap 60 |j§{ || $1.50 Fellows' Syr. Hypophosphites 930 2 5c RubbwSponges • 120 A fICCS S ° C D ° rin ' S R ° gUe BrUnctto 39 * y Si-OO Pinkham's Veg. Compound 020 js c 2 - q t. Fountain Syringes .....370 25c Cuticura Soa P 180 HI jspj 75c Jad's Salts 42$ 75c 2-qt. Hot Water Bottle 370 75c Mary Garden Talcum Powder 370 pi 50c Sal Hepatica 290 75c Bulb Syringes 370 sl-25 Bed Pans 85 0 25c Jess Talcum Powder 140 j§{ 10c Smoko Cigarettes, 2 boxes for 100 5c Medicine Droppers 20 25c Boric Acid 170 $1.50 Oriental Cream $1.05 II §§ 25c Alexander's Lung Healer 140 Anti-Colic Nipples, 3 for 100 io c Epsom Salts 50 $1.50 Attar Tropical Toilet Water $1.19 |j <= Jad's Kidney Salts 42f g™ s°,' Boalc 98* 25 ° Sani F ' USh 17 75c Pinaud's Lilac Water 18? ® M in' M aa .h°f ? $2.50 Ladies' Spray Syringes $1.15 'sc Bird Seed 9* SOc Sempre Giovine 290 S §£ ;" c ' F rnl sl - 50 Bath Sprays .750 75c Pint Russian Mineral Oil .390 SI.OO Mary Garden Face Powder 750 fH £3 $1 C OO Phdps' Rheumatic Elixir '.!!'.!!'.!!!!! i!!'.!! 590 !!f° F C ® . B °~ tlcS '*V r. Pound Gum Cam P hor 790 50c Derma Viva Face Powder 270 gl 50c Phenol Sodique 290 25c Fountain Syringe Tubing 100 10c lb. Flower's Sulphur, 2 lbs. for 100 15c Corylopsis Talcum Powder 110 ||J ran 50c California Syrup Figs 290 \ 10c Royal Glue (j0 25c Mennen's Talcum Powder 110 81l 35c Limestone Phosphate . 210 10c Sulphur Candles, 2 for 100 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 270 ER !!'!! o° ley S Kldney Pills 1 SI NOTICE % 1 | 4 our rubber good, specials w m ~,b . p„de r - m 1 i§ inf e e c S Castona 210 be found on sale in our new rub- 1 lb. Sunflower Seed 120 25c Mennen's Shaving Cream 150 r§J M I) nn Q. , • ber {roods denartment on fbe S*>r- 25c Platt ' s Chlorides 170 15c Pear's Soap 100 M K3 !j-°° If. 1 H N P f u'kt'w'; -t* tier goods department on the Sec xlb Moth Ba]ls 10c Williams' Shaving Soap, 2 for 100 § 1 Bayer As7rinT r abl s blet :.!!1!! °" d Fl °° r ' Wth Hjr attendant to , lb . Moth Flake 1 PI ? C n n S , Safola ,'."i'"XV"A 15* serve you. 50c Liquid Veneer * 25c J. SJ. Shavtag <£ea^:!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! "i 1 !! 1 | Wampole s Ext. C. L. 0 550 25c Alcohol Stoves 150 5 0c j)j er j{j ss Face Powder 380 S3 gjj 5>1.00 Pierces Dis 570 10c Carter's Ink 50 25c Djer Kiss Talcum Powder 190 FOODS T " i,™? OE AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT iW^ ht Mlc^n b f By ALFRED W. McCANN The Kxpcricnee of the Wisconsin Au thorities, Actually Dolled by the Proprietors of Dirty Creameries in Their Open Opposition to flutter Reform, Is Characteristic. Compro mise, lear, Selfishness and Staiul patism Expressing: Themselves Through Infected Butter, Are Maim ing or Killing Thousands of Chil dren. Following the publication of the alarming facts connected with the GINGEROLE DRAWS THE INFLAMMA TION FROM CORNS, SORE FEET AND BUNIONS INSTANTLY Apply this wonderful ointment and you will be surprised at the quick re lief. It is positively guaranteed to draw the inflammation out and banish Ihe agony that makes your life miser able. Swollen rheumatic joints are re duced and the pain quickly stopped. It's better and acts more quickly than any liniment, poultice, or hot water Talk INTO Your Telephone First: The operator's pleasant "Number please?" Second: Give the number deliberately, clearly, distinctly. Third: Talk directly into the transmitter with your lips close to it, giving your whole attention to the conversation. That looks easy: It is easy, and that little care in speaking into the telephone will help make telephoning more pleasant, the steps of your call surer, and the serv ice more satisfactory to yourself and those you call. THIS BE2I/I, TEI.EPHOMC CO. OP PA., (if A S. B. WATTS, Local Manager. ! M 1 HAKBISBUIia, I'A. FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG tSB&l TELEGRAPH NOVEMBER 24, 1916. manufacture of butter, which includ ed a description of the betrayal of the butter industry by the dairy depart ment of the University of Wisconsin in which the truth concerning pasteur ization was publicly preached, where as, in the classroom it was privately ignored, all the trade papers in the country devoted to creamery interests broke forth In defense of the butter bottle for any ache or pain or sore ness anywhere. Do not suffer when GINGEKOLE will help you so quickly, but be sure you get the original GNGEKOLE— "the ointment with the ginger." All first-class druggists sell It for 25 cenu on the money back if dissatisfied plan. makers based on a sweeping denial of every detail of the exposure. Professor C.E. Lee and Dairy Com missioner George J. Wlegle had stated the truth to the legislators of Wis consin at Madison, July 28, 1915. In the general hysteria that followed the exposure, the truth as outlined by these two authorities was dismissed. Professor Lee, charging that the Wisconsin butter makers, were dis gracing the State, had said, "Gentle men of the Senate, we have in this State a large number of sanitary creameries which arc not in any man ner affected as regards cleanliness by what I or anybody else may say about them. But we have a still larger num ber of creameries that don't know what sanitation is. "We are still making one-sixth of all the creamery butter produced in the United States. But we are mak ing butter and cheese which, if la beled as coming from the State of Wisconsin, would disgrace the State. "Many of our creameries are as dirty as they dare be and others are just clean enough to dodge the law. We are sick of fining their operators $25 only to see them turn back the very next day to their dirty methods. "We have hundreds of creameries here which should be condemned, but we have no power to condemn them. The dairy commissioner Is absolutely at ther mercy, as regards his ability to interfere with the rotten conditions against which we are here to com plain. "Under the present uncontrolled situation which now confronts us we cannot shut up a factory or a cream ery no matter how rotten it may be. We have no law which empowers us to resort to such methods. For ten years we have been talking about en forcing dairy laws, but all our talk has been futile. "Here stands a creamery owner who has dared to tell you that he will not submit to any interference in his twenty factories by any State official. This man has been arrested on num erous occasions for maintaining un sanitary conditions. On every occa sion a Jury of farmers, pronouncing him not guilty, has acquitted him, only itl Independent of price, you look • for, and expect here, furs of j Service and of undupllcated g Style. *i Nor have we failed ever to suit the most nartlcular and I the most exacting. I I I Chestnut Street Philadelphia I Tkt Brm* of Kn>lutiv Model* I to make a laughing stock of the au thorities "It is because of dirty competition that we are now making a lower qual ity of dairy products than we ever made before." Commissioner Wiegle, following Professor Lee, said: "The tuberculosis cow is not the only danger which confronts the but ter eating public. Under our present uncontrolled conditions men who have tuberculosis in its worst stages are working in the creameries." The names of dirty creameries were mentioned by the commissioner with such freedom of speech that little short of a panic ensued. The opponents of the bill to license creamery products, which Commis sioner Wiegle and Professor Lee were urging the Senate to pass, were on their feet constantly, with their law yers, interrupting. The chamber was full of sulphur and brimstone. The law makers, provoked by the very violence of the scene, were be ginning to believe that all was not well. When one of the creamery men, after declaring that the sanitary con ditions of the State of Wisconsin were the finest In the world as far as cheese and butter factories were concerned, was asked if he knew the meaning of b. coll, shouted, "There is no such thing as b. coll," It became clear to the representatives of the people that they were dealing with prejudice and passion, not with facts. It was following this tempestuous scene, of which I was an eye-witness, that the Legislature of the State of Wisconsin enacted a law for the licens ing of cheese factories and creameries. This law, however, affected only the outward cleanliness of the plants and did not in any manner, directly or indirectly, control the character of the cream, the health of the cows, the health of the workers, or the necessity of pasteurization. "If the New York State authorities," commented Commissioner Wiegle, "had required pasteurized butter three years ago our butter makers would have given them such butter. They never will produce such butter until the law compels them to." The New York authorities, declaring there would be a butter famine if they Interfered, will never make such de mands. Hero, then. Is the unbridged gap that separates the people from pas teurized butter. The authorities do not require pas teurized butter in spite of the fact that they require pasteurized milk. They justify this sin of omission by the statement that they fear the but ter makers will refuse to give them what they want. On the other hand, the butter mak ers frankly confess that they would have produced just such butter years ago had it been required of them to do so. Thus in a shiftless and purposeless period of compromise the public has been caught between the wheels of fear on the one side and standpatism on the other while thousands of chil dren have been maimed or killed in the process. Nation-wide dairy inspection and compulsory pasteurization are the only Instruments available for the suppression of these evils. Many Dodge Brothers Cars Are Exported The question is often asked in mo torcar circles as to whether Dodge Brothers have devoted much attention to export business. While officials of the company maintain theif usual reticence in dis cussing matters of policy, it is known that the company has had a very suc cessful year in export lines and that Dodge Brothers' cars have won a pop ularity abroad that rivals the esteem in which it is held at home. No figures are given out. on the actual number shipped to foreign countries, but it is known that agen cies have been established In the principal European countries and throughout the far east, particularly in India and Australia. The car has proven exceedingly popular in England and Ireland and the sales are holding up well, despite the slump occasioned by the duty im posed by Great Britain. Dodge Brothers have not accepted war orders, and yet they have shipped many cars to all of the countries to which It is possible to ship motorcars. G. R. KINNEY & CO. It's good business on your part to buy at the store that gives you the best value for your money. A good reason why you should buy from us. Our chain of 54 big retail stores can, and do, buy to better advantage than the individual dealer, our business is conducted on a smaller margin of profit and every possible saving is put in the values we give. Present leather conditions considered, we are giving the best shoe values in our history. ==sj Ladies' 8-Inch $1 08 \ i.l 1 \ : Lace Boots cu' \ \ • Another shipment of those Sll 06 S \ * \ * | popular Fall styles just re- Greatest values in 1 • ceived. Come in black, gray, tQwn Good / A I • brown, white or combi- . J / \\ / A nations. Regularly welted soles ' button /V A Aw $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00 or lace, cloth or 11^^^ I grades for leather tops; all A leathers. Regular $3 %v\A $2.98 & values,for " ilFrh $3.49 Men's Dress ?. oys /"""p*? Jjo Shoes Shoes /r f \o\l Eor school or dress. [ \Q, \ '/ \#V Goodyear welts, calf Serviceable and dressy. i \ \A uppers; all toe shapes. A n sty i eSi Extra value, for \sT\ $1.98 51.25™ . $1.98 —————————————— Men's Work Misses' and Children's Gun Shoes; built for ¥ I Z | Metal or Patent Leather service; tan or / jo J 1 J te I Shoes; good, serviceable black. Values if \ / W A soles; dressy shapes, you cannot get |i Ik. \ * or less tban $1.25 and $1.49 $2.50. Our Other grades 980 to "I Q Q J j SI.OB. 3>i.yo 1 G. R. KINNEY & CO. 19 AND 21 NORTH FOURTH STREET CIIOLKRA DIMINISHING The cholera epidemic has shown a gradual abatement in Tokio, so that the average number of cases reported daily is about one-seventh of that at the height of the epidemic. A mem ber of the police medical department, however, said that the season has set in for the fishing of mackerel, pikes and sardines, and that the epidemic is likely to break out afresh unless in dividuals continue to take precautions by not eating: raw fish. An official dispatch to the Japanese Foreign Of fice says that the customs and consular officials at Yinkow have decided that Nagasaki is a cholera port. At Na gasaki the disease has greatly di minished. 7