The Store That 17 T\TVIPI\ V> O I H. .< I HT ivtlN IN fcD i o v , All Advertise | Cut Prices! | Standard Medicines Saturday Sale of fSSVH," Saturday Sale of Rubber Goods I 1 r olllK ( j ) ' l ,'' CiTS 50c size Mary Garden Cold Cream 3Bc NOTICE—Our rubber goods specials will be found in our new department, !m aBnCS :? Mary Garden Face Powder 73c ?5c size Mary Garden Greaseless Cream, 62c on the second floor. In charge of lady attendants. IS ■ SI.OO Hood s Sarsapanlla 57c n .j' . ' 25c size Pond's Vanishing Cream, jars, 14c isc Aiurea y m P c mr Z cr ;;;; ;;;;; 75 = 2&^^v.ntaw^c re a ra ,tubes, 14c Saturday Sale Saturday Sale of Bulb Syringes I 6 2 : ££ t SSA&gOSSoZ;:: £ Fountain.Syringes and Atomizers dc >romo Se tzcr 14c Hudnut's Rice Powder 17c -^ c s * zc Cream 39c $1.25 Fountain Syringe 83c 50c Atomizer 38c SI.OO Sargol 55c Carmen Face Powder 29c 2° > Pompeian Massage Cream .... 25c $1.75 Fountain Syringe $1.35 65c Atomizer 48c H 35c Limestone Phosphate 19c r r p , -'2 C s,ze Pompeian Night Cream 15c K f - q fi n r /5c Atomizer 58c ■ 35c Fletcher's Castorh 19c Laßlache Face Powdcr 32c 25c size Hind's Cold Cream, tubes .... 17c ~ C E /? Untai , n y S 'J SI.OO Atomizer 78c I I', m , • ." Java Rice Powder 27c 50c size Hind's Honey arid Almond $1.50 La Salle Fountain Syringe ..... sl.lß $1.25 Atomizer 98c I TI , CI !" C aV',";' ,7-.'. Rogers & Gallett Rice Powder 21c Cream 31c sl.23.Cleveland Fountain Syringe 98c f? , T ° , * . $2 ' 75 Rogers & Gallett Face Powdcr 39c 25 % size Da gg ctt & Ramsdell Cold sl.lß Fountain Syringe 98c . ■ /3C Mellin s Food 50c T e ss Face Powder < ? am • \ ••••• 15c $2.00 Goodyear Fountain Syringe $1.35 £g(jlb SvriflfifGS 75c Jad's Kidney Salts 41c Woodbury's Face Powder Ic_ --2 C s } zc Colgate s Cold Cream 20c $1.75 Madewell Fountain Syringe ... $1.23 " ® 25c Red Cross Kidney Plasters 15c Tetlow's Swandown Face Powder 9c r n C SIZC S- cme D T^I e T ric !° r 14c $ 2 - 50 Goodyear Fountain Syringe ... $1 63 50c Bulb Syringe 38c Sal Ilroatic-i ?8 r Sanitol Face Powder iSr cH° ® lze DeMendor - 27c $1.50 Combination Fountain Syringe .. 98c 63c Bulb Syringe !. 48c m -I. al " lle P atlca 28c Charles Face Pmdor d 50c size Ingram's Milk Weed Cream ... 29c $2.00 Hub Combination $1.48 75c Bulb Syring 58c _3c Listennc 15c c j . . charms Fire" TWW f'" 00 . slze Ingram's Milk Weed Cream, 67c $2.00 Combination $1.48 SI.OO Bulb Syringe 78c ■ SI.OO Scott s Emulsion 75c La Baronesse Powder iq C c S - ZC a^mo^ve . Cream 25c $2.25 Puritan Combination $1.65 $1.25 Bulb Syringe 98c I H 25c Atwood's Bitters 14c 1 qdv \Tarv Firp PnwrW s ' ze Knowlton's Massage Cream .. 39c $1.75 A-Grade Combination $1.15 $2.00 Ladies' Rotary-spray Syringe ... $1.38 ■ SI.OO Danderine 57c liaya ffie PowJer . 39c size Aubrey Sisters' Cold Cream .. 17c $1.50 Challenge Fountain Syringe .... $1.23 _I ■ I 25c Vick's vap-o-Rub isc Manilla Poudrc dc Ri z Hi g s^i cerate $2 - 50 Goodycar Combination sl - 68 c ? . ITrT1Y 1 25c Hill's Cascara Quinine 14c J' 11 Marquese Powder 39c 50c Viola Cream .... 29c I i ~ m SI.OO Oil of Korein Capsules 57c Doris Powder 79c 50c Lady Betty Cream 39c Saturday Sale Rubber NeCeSSltieS ■ 25c Blaud's Iron Pills. 100 Mr 39c 30c Lady Mary Creme 39c u , ... . n m 25c James' Headache Powders 13c ~~T ] I Z 25c Ideal Cucumber Cream 18c MOt Water ESOttleS Rubber-lined Sanitary Aprons 21c || ■ c _ . y . . at* O 1 „ _/* 50c Charles Flesh Food 29c Rubber Soap Trays 38c H 50c Sloans Liniment 28c OaLUlQciy OcilC 01 sl-25 Hub Hot Water Bottle 67c Rubber-lined Sponge Bags 21c ■ SI.OO Xuxated Iron Tablets 59c _ . \ SatlirHaw € a | n f $1.25 Grade A Hot Water Bottle 65c Rubber Sheeting, single coated, the yd., 65c ■ 50c Glover's Mange Remedy 29c I IYIIPT ArTirlPQ WQIMIUfIJ Ul $1.35 La Salle Hot Water Bottle 73c Hard Rubber Pile Pipes 39c ■ SI.OO Milk's Emulsion ..." 67c *U. W.UICD Dental CreamS f!~- f: llly . I,ot X \ at r r ,? ott i? '"ixr"" 98c Rubber Bath Tub Mats $1.78 m Flv'' s 69 c M m 25c Musterole l ßc \x ax 48 c Colgate s Dental Cream 20c $1.50 Royal Red Hot Water Bottle ... 98c Rubber Crutch Tips, the pair 10c ■ 25c Gingerole 17c *->- v {) , ' 27c Pebeco Dental Cream 27c $1.73 Puritan Hot Water Bottle $1.19 Rubber Garters 23c ■ $2.00 Eckman's Alterative $1 20 75c Amoved Cocoa' : If® Dental Cream 15c SI.OO White Hot Water Bottle ....... ,58c Corrugated Rubber Mats 38c j| ■ 15c Alpine Tea 6 " SLOO Kenklay s Dental Cream 15c $2.00 Goodyear Hospital Special $1.48 Perfume Atomizers 78c jS B 35c Drake's Croup Remedy 18c SI.OO Delatone ' p 3 " 1 ]" p e . n p . eani 13c sl-73 Hudson W'ater Bottle $1.35 Rubber Plant Sprinklers 78c |m I 50c Lysol 29c SI 00 Othine Freckle Cream C i° n , S J X p a aste 15c $2.30 Best Grade Goodyear $1.63 Rubber Air Pillows $1.78 H ■ 50c Rheuma (for Rheumatism) ! 28c 50c Dor s 249 Rou-e Paste l 7c $1.75 Madewell Water Bottle $1.19 Rubber Bath Shoes 98c 1 1 25c Jayne's Expectorant ........ 15c F° Rado DenUatorv If le, l nen n ? Past | •' 17c $2.00 Wearever Water Bottle $1.35 Rubber Toys 23c H jc .uc 1-1 Kauo depilatory 27c Arnica 1 ooth Soap 15c $2.50 Standard Water Bottle $1.78 Large Rubber .Toys 48c H MarketjStreetj F'firiTSft THEY BUILD OR " £9 DESTROY AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT A^rw ht M : ccann b ) y By ALFRED w. McCANN "While Federal Officials Find Tuber cular Cows Indescribably Diseased, City Officials Find Them Quite Nor mal. Tlic 1 Seasons for Tliis Conflict of Official Opinion Must lie Fully Under stood by the Public Before the Cor ruption Which They Kcveal Can Be Reformed. < if the sixty-five cows purchased in the Jersey City stock yards for slaughter in Brooklyn, the govern ment officials sent thirty-three to the Swift & Co., federal-inspected estab lishment at Kearny, N. J., lor post mortem examination. The other thir ty-two cows were forwarded to the Brooklyn slaughtering establishments operated by S. & H. Plaut and Rob ert Plaut & Son. I communicated at once with Dr. K. S. Goldwater, commissioner of health of New York City, informing him that the government officials were unable to hold these thirty two cows because palpitation did not reveal cervical lesions, although in the belief of Drs. Mailings, Wilson, and Keene of the Bureau of Animal Industry, at least thirty of the thir ty-two cows would be found on post mortem to be diseased. I called his attention to the fact tl.at under the federal law th e offi cials had no power to seize these thir ty-two cows, although none of them would be passed in a federal inspect ed establishment on account of their extreme emaciation and exhaustion. I urged him to follow them to slaughter and make post-mortem ex aminations of his own for the purpose of obtaining some adequate idea of the kind of animals which corrupt representatives of the New York City Health Department were passing for food purposes. i Dr. Goldwater acted upon tl.ese Bringing Up Father Copyright, 1917, International News Service .*.* ** By Mc l-j I'LL <,ET ALU )I I I /\ 11 HZrwir t I 111 /\l I 1 DON ' T &EE 1 VOO'RE K~-555 AV. UCTEM- 1 \ A-A UP I vVi h Vou ' I LmX\ NOT M/K was constantly approached by insinu ;Jating suggestions from strangers i who managed to make it clear to me j that I could earn three times as much i. money as the city paid me. My men • | were pretty severe in condemning •; stuff at that time and I soon found > I myself relived of duty." tj Notwithstanding such disturbing! >i facts as these the Health Department l i ' officials remained unmoved. Other! significant revelations followed each . other in quick succession, but to no > j purpose. A. F. Hunt, manager of ihe Swift • establishment at Harrison, N. J., in i spired by these incidents, purchased [various lots of cows at $9.25, $9.15, rand $9.10 a head. His experiment ; with them, as reported to me in one paragraph, should be quite enough to i arouse the entire country to an ap preciation of the horrible truth now j receiving so little attention. "Heretofore," he said, "these ani | ma Is have always been killed in un i inspected establishments. At an aver age cost of $9 a head we have tried them out for the reason that the hide of every one of them is worth $5 and 1 the tallow and fertilier stock $5 1 1 : more. Our experience with them, I however, has proved so offensive that :| we have abruptly ended the experi | ment. Apparently all such cows are | j grossly diseased and should not be | | slaughtered In any establishment : where moats intended for human food ■ are prepared." Here then are two sets of records. ! The federal officials found the Jersey I end of these transactions to be inde scribably bad. The city officials of i j New York found the Brooklyn end of them to be quite normal. I had spent two years in dragging the truth to this resuitless issue. I As far as official action was con j cerned the government ceased to in ; terfere as suddenly as it began, and the New York City Health Depart ment whitewashed the entire affair. The New York Globe published the facts. I went before men's clubs, women's clubs, and organizations of any kind that would give me audience j for the purpose of arousing public opinion, but my charges of corruption stood discredited. The people were not alarmed, for surely if things were as black as they were painted the officials would have attended to them long ago. Saddened and discouraged, I con- I tinued to cry out against a situation I which 1 was powerless to change. Not until two years later was the : truth completely established. At the j beginning of 1917 all the fa,cts stand I forth in their hideous ami dreadful nakedness. But public officials re ! main as indifferent now as when they j first sneered at every reference to the i truth. j The only advance lies in the fact ithat they are no longer able to sneer. We shall see. INDICT CONFESSED SLAYER True Hill Found Against Man Who Killed Woman Wilkes-Rarre, Pa., Jan. 4.—Charged ; with murder in the first degree, ] Thomas (Doughey) Williams, who I confessed lo murdering Ida May ! Brown and throwing her body in Car penter's Creek on November 17 last, was indicted by the Grand Jury here. He will be brought to trial at the next session of Criminal Court. The body of Ida May Brown was found by fishermen. First theories were that she committed suicide. An investigation followed, and Williams, who had pretended to aid detectives in the search for the girl's body, finally broke down and on the night a coroner's inquest was vheld admit ted the crime. TELEGRAPH f 4 INJURED IN BLAST OF SECRET EXPLOSIVE s Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 5.—A mysteri-, ous high explosive, known as lanoline, j - made from a secret German process. | - blew to pieces a one-story frame 1 building at the plant of the Holllday Chemical Company, North Side, yes- j " terday. Four men were injured, and at first j e there were rumors of two other men i 1.1 being missing, but the company offi-1 i i cials say Ihey escaped. Fire started 1 a I and spread to dwellinghouses in the c I neighborhood, destroying three and i 1 damaging four. The property, loss is I e ! estimated at $48,500. e 6 CHANCE FOR DRY NATION 1 Pittsburgh, Pa., Jan. 5. The Rev. ] Charles R. Scanlon, D. D., general i "{secretary of the Board of Temperance, 1 of the Presbyterian General Assembly, told the board at its annual meeting, ® yesterday that "there is a fair chance; : that the prohibition amendment will j I pass both houses of Congress at •this session and then be submitted to the 1 " people. There is' a good chance that j 'I the amendment will receive the in- ; 5 dorsement of three-fourths of the I . States, as twenty-three of them are i, now 'dry.' Sixty per cent, of the ' territory of the United States is now : prohibitory territory and eighty per cent, 'dry.' " , j ALTO HEAD KILUS HIMSELF Cincinnati, 0., Jan. s.—Frank J. ! 1 Enger, president of the Enger Motor ; Car Company, of this city, which was ■ i j recently organized with a capital stock < of $3,000,000, shot and killed him. j ' self while in his office at the motor | ' company's factory. Mr. Enger is said ! i to have been in ill health for months. 1 1 i He was reputed to be one of the i wealthiest men in Cincinnati, and was j. , said to have carried more life inaur-1 , ance than any other man in this city. [ , He was fifty-eight years old. ; FIND SUICIDE DEAD IN SNOW J Reading, Pa., Jan. s.—Lying in the j 1 t snow with a new revolver and cart-1 i - ridges beside it and a bullet hole In i the temple, the body of Howard M JANUARY *5 Doctor Tells How Eyesight 50 per cent In One Week's Time In Many Instances A Fee Prescription You Can Have Killed mill l*e at Home Philadelphia, Pa. Do you wear glases? Are you a victim of eye strain or other eye weaknesses? If so, you will be glad to know that according to Dr. Lewis there is real hope for you. Many whose eyes were failing say they have had their eyes restored through the principle of this wonderful free pre scription. One man says, after trying it: "I was almost blind; could not see to read at all. Now I can read every thing without any glasses and inv eyes do not water any more. At night they would pain dreadfullf; now they feel fine all the time. It was like a miracle to me." A lady who used it says: "The atmosphere seterned hazy with or with out classes, but after using this pre scription for rifteen days everything seems clear. I can even read tine print without glasses." It is believed thai thousands who wear glasses can now discard them in a reasonable time and multitudes more will be able to strengthen their eyes so as to be spared the trouble and expense of ever getting glassesi Eye troubles of many descrip tions, may be wonderfully benefited by Montgomery, thirty years old, was found on the Wyomissing - Oakbroolc road. A note found in one of his pockets read: "This will be welcome news for a few people who made life miserable lor me." The note was ad dressed, to Mrs. Eva Montgomery, Jacksonville, Fla. CONVICT EDITOR MUSSING Leavenworth, Kas.. Jan. 5. 11. A. Shapper, editor of the Square Deal, the prisoners' paper, and advocate of the honor system, was the only one missing of seventeen men paroled for the' Christmas holidays when the roll was called at the State penitentiary. 1 following the simple rules. Here is the prescription: Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tab lets. Drop one Bon-Opto tablet in a fourth of a glass of water and allow to dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyes two to four times daily. You should notice your eyes clear up perceptibly right from the. start and Inflammation will quickly disappear. If your eyes are bothering you, even a little, take steps to save them now before it is too late. Many hopelessly blind might have been saved if they had cared for their eyes in time. Note: Another prominent Physician to whom the above article was submit ted, said: "Bon-Opto is a very remark able remedy. Its constituent ingredi ents are well known to eminent eve specialists and widely prescribed bv them. The manufacturers guarantee it to strengthen eyesight 50 per cent, in one week's time in many instances or refund the money. It can be obtained from any Rood druggist and is one of the very few preparations I feel should be kept on hand for regular use in al most every family." It is sold In Har risburs; by H. O. Kennedy, Croll Keller and other druggists.—Advertisement. ! GETTING READY FOR THE 111 17 FAR EASTERN OLYMPIC I The tracks for use for the selection |of Japanese champions for the next | Far Eastern Olympic games have just been completed at the reclaimed | grounds of Shibaura. The tracks are quarter-mile, and surrounded by a board fence. The track was made of | cinders and red clay six Inches deep, and leveled with machines. Inside the I tracks are prepared special grounds for jumping and similar games. The grounds have been built for perma nent use, and may be used for the 1 Far Eastern Olympic games next May. 7