&owma4& HKI.I,— imtI—UNITED II AII It IS 111; H(r. THURSDAY. JANUARY 11, 1017. ..... ~ — 1 - - - I 1 UT JILL BL) 1971' Boudoir Caps Turkish Towel j ....... 11w , n i„ wtwlMMmwn . FT"* D G d han dsomst° boudoir°'ca ps ji P VOf '' Greatly reduced for Remnants at very low urices for this Consisting of one largre l! J , J i> „ :j _ r , special sale. towel, one guest sile il ! | Friday selling Including French I 39c, 59c, 79c | Double Attractions I ™S-ftx-v ®HKSF BOWMAX-O—Third Floor Doxecl. i naay saie, , __ ~ —lO yards, 8 inches wide, 7 Turkish Towels BOWMAN'S—Second Floor K/_ MJ * % 1' £ TA7I 1 V inches wide, yard, $1.95. BOWaiA Main Floor. WolWs 11 * *3lB Of WhltS 11 SS*'! Wa ' h G °° J Handkerchief, | .... "T i! da*%l?s, yt 35c il Together With Sr - M /fctf of Other Special Offering >f§£: -.iS~ |m the Various Secti '•£&£" bale, yd., jo* '! " —— . jj inches wide, yard, $1.50. 17c rame * ctures A truly great day for the thrifty bargains galore —no matter II leaver) V Inched'wide! Men s Shoe> BOWMAN'S—Second Floor A large and varied as- ***** *,>., L. l-k. 1 1 ■ j l . '< y d - $2.00. High and low shoes in sortment of beautiful sub- What yOUT pUTCIiaSe may be, in the sale lots, a positive and SUDStan- I! Nutria, 2 inches wide, black and russet. Low IVT • 1 I i ects . w ' t l l 1-inch brown a* 1 v ] na '! yard, $1..10. shoes, in sizes sto 11. Nainsook j Mission frames, size 16x j, Uai Saving IS aSSUrea. j. Marabou, in natural, High shoes, sizes Bto 10. v r i- t <• 20 inches also a lot of i> ;| black and white, vard, Friday Sale, pair, very nne quality lor convex glass subjects, i! 356. Novelty Braid. Ute W. $3.00 J)ICCC —~BOvV MAN &—"M&in I 1 loor $1.60 39c 7or m f r; Clothe. Rack Ho.iery Bathrobe. Men'. Underwear a —— BOWMAN'S Second Floor BOWMAN's-Fourth Floor work. Friday Sale, yd., The Leader clothes Thread silk stockings. Children's nink a „,i . .. Angora Scarfs 9/. rack can be attached to in plain black, white and white eiderdown bath- Men s heavy weight Beach Cloth Rubber Treads * C wall, has eight arms. 30 colorS doubl , robes, bound with ribbon f,e T h ! ied , and " atura J „rav blie and combina KUPD Ireaqs BOWMAX'S second F.oor inches lo "g. which gives hih spliccd hee , wide ' or with scalloped edges - T n,,xed , sl ? ,rts 1 .and fS of and wi rte . Wears and launders . Made M corrugated of dry,ng surface. garMr tops . Friday Sal( , also Indian p'atternf, fin- izes K'"o 'S K aid S'Elack and just like linen -7 inches j rubber, /8-inch tuc •. Men's Neckwear " P air ished with scallops Drawers sizes 3? to 40 white and red and white, wide. Friday Sale, yd., 6xlß inches, at 9<-. Men 6 INeckwear po ket d dat neck drawers sues to 40. 7xlß inches, at Small lot of men . s four . C 98C and waist. Friday Sale, ,lday ba,e ' garment ' ' 24c 9xlß inches, at l.?^ 1 in-hand ties, to be closed """" KI„„I. _• I- . fiQr SOc BOWMAN'S—Second Floor I BOWMAN'S —Fourth Floor nnt FHHav it ————— I laill black Silk lisle OOC I out, lrida>, at stockings, double soles. BOWMANS-Second Floor BOWMAN'S—M&in Floor BOWMAN'S—Main Floor mmnpftp J, • T, R ,®I- U , • * 1 C- Mflpaiicoc liigii spliced heels, wide j i! !j 10C r, j, i garter tops. Friday Sale, ! i House Dresses ii BOWMAN- 'S-Mam Floor. Candle Lamps pair, jj rr}l xr7 - y •. n i T~r ,; l! A Friday sale of gingham and percale house |i Children'. Shoe. andXie" WdaysJle,' 42 C !; dresses that should and will attract a throng of !> BOW MAN s—Mam Floor ; j; '! ca r 'cr buvers. || A clean up of small lots £iOC , The Sale /CO !' Sale'"air t0 11 trida - v bowman's—Basement Women's il Muslin Underwear Silk Underwear Corsets j: F*" ce • | j SI.OO Yellow Bowl Sets Union Suits White Cotton Fabrics Sheets and Pillow Cases J: Fu l^ Cl ran^o°sizes I f'rom^6^to ( W , . l - , Fine quality of cotton, || Blouses White Silks and Dress Goods Babies' Dresses || | Better take advantage of this offering and come iI . , sisting of one each, 6. 7, bleached, silk finish, pearl ;j r-fIJ IT J . ii |in the morning if possible for the spirited selling H Notions and 8, 9 and 10-inch bowls. buttons; high neck, long ! Children 8 Undergarments ;j I that's bound to be may clean the lot out quickly. ii ! Friday Sale, set, and short sleeves, ankle ..... \\ | BOWMAN'S —Main Floor. I Toilet Requisites ,engtn * my bale> ! Every offer is of sterling merit you'll trade to excep- | QQp .. . . IT 1 1 • _ - Brooks' Machine BOWMANS— Basement oin, tionally good advantage here ir you attend this supreme econ- ; i Fibre Carpet Cottage Rods Thread, 3 spools, s*. bowman's—Main Floor ii , , r- .. ■ . Donnybrook linen fin- ni i w .„ n , j! omy selling event. |> Blue brown and green, and °"^ C rods . oak ish Thread, black, 3 Ribbon Mill Ends ii i l?oXV: e 2rind'es wide! to malclf' Friday 1 , Ribbon mill ends, in- Children's * J Friday Sale, yd., 3 spoX 5 eluding plain, fancy, sat- ~ Infant.' Pearl Thread Wall Paper 1Q„ 5c Naiad Shields, pair 10* |ns and str.pes; 3 a„d (> Union Suit. ; iyc EOWMAN'S-Fourth Floor Stickeri Braid, 30. inch widths, in good col- > Petticoats Pmk, brown, green, Bedroom wall paper BOWMAN'S—Fourth Floor — _ Remnants of Elastic orS " Frida y Sale > > ,d -. j oy R , P ee . ler white, red and purple, in special, consisting of 10 ————— ... piece, 10 to 50. Iff an - s , c : 0 1 0I i un ' on White flannelette petti- Nos. 3 and 5. Friday rolls satin stripe side wall Silk Remnants Snap Fasteners, dozen, IOC suits, some slightly coun- coats in body and Ger- Sale, skein, paper and 20 yards cut Children S Purses : 3* BOWMAN'S—Main floor. ter soiled. Friday Sale, trude styles; slightly soil- out border to match. Fri c „ . . Including crepe de Hooks and eyes, 2 ' ed - Frida y Sa,e > 3c day Sale, Small leather purses chines, mescalines, tat- cards, 50. . 4ZC BOWMAN-s-second Floor. . m w,th chan, handle; most- 'etas peat, de so.es, etc. Fauey Calendars, 10*. Women'. bowmaks-m.l. F,.., 19c $1.29 ly black. Fnday Sale, Fnday Sa e Buttons odds and „ Infants' long flannel j., cc 9 C Half Price ends, card, 10. Handbags petticoats, embroidered at Ash Sifters BOWMAN'S— Main Floor UOWM..V S _M.,„ F.oor Fancy Sachets. 49. Black handbags made Me " Ure " sh ' rtß f 0 °" o d ™d'- sfchtly St Galvanic! ash sifters Black Silk. ■ ——— —_ \ ivandon Bath lab- of genuine leathei, lined Men's shirts of percales e d, Friday Sale ' to place on top of ash .. R1 , T f \\r CL Curtain frplnnnp lets, 3 for 230. with leather and fancy and madras, in good pat- cans the most practical , ( ~" lllc ' . 1 la *" Women's Shoes Curtain Cretonne Jergen's Violet Glycer- poplin, fitted with -com terns; coat styles with sifter -no dust. Friday feta ; - some coun- Sale 36-inch Black Silk Mes- Mostly of dark tan Figured cretonne m Woodworth's Talcum Sale > ter soiled Friday Sale BOWMAN S-Socond Floor • saline, yd., sl.lO. calf, laced smart styles. light and dark colors. Powder 100. A ' ———. . d0 CQ 36-inch Black Satin To clean up quickly, Fri- Friday Sale, yd., Dolly' Varden Com- 49c rk •. J Majestic, yd., $1.53. dav Sale v d.ucu _ u ' 1 " V OUC Decorated China BOWMAN'S—Basement BOWMAN'S—Main Floor uay oaie, - _ . plexion Chamois, o0 and BOWMAN's —Main Floor v BOWMAN s Main rioor a> o cn 14 J /2C 100. __ BOWMAN'S Main Floor. SS.DU BOWMAN's —Fourth Floor Complexion Brushes, _ _ Assortment consists of BOWMANS— Mi-in Floor ——— 470. Cordemon Carpet L • i salad dishes, cake plates. Clothes Hamper Women's Oloves D.. . Individual Puff Sets, —: j curtain Lace spoon trays, sugar and —— " - tSatlSte 490. Green, brown or red cream sets, bonbon Made of white splint A special lot of men- Lace Curtains v j Djer Kiss Sets, $1.19 patterns with colored Curtain lace in white dishes, marmalade jars, with hinged cover; ders and returns in odd - olive trays, jugs, hat pin hamper is 25 inches high, sizes and shades kids. White and ecru, in one 06 inches wide. Friday Luster-ite Manicure used for trackers or run- der; 36 inches wide. Fri- holders, mustard mugs, 17 inches square. Fri- silks and chamoisettes. pair lots. Friday Sale, Sale, yd., Sets. 210. ners. Friday Sale, yd., day Sale, yd., etc. Friday Sale, choice, day Sale, Friday Sale, pair, Half Price 39c Fickle Cream jg c g c 43c 83c 9 g c BOWMAN'S—Fourth Floor BOWMAN'S—Main Floor BOWMAN'S—Main Floor BOWMAN'S—Fourth Floor BOWMAN'S—Fourth Floor BOWMAN'S—Basement. BOWMAN'S—Basement BOWMAN'S—Main Floor FOOnS THEY BUILD OR I A VF mJ k3 DESTROY AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT VcChnn b J By ALFRED W. McCANN In America we tolerate a system which, as a penalty for endangering the lives of men on a vast and cruet scale, imposes a small fine upon a convicted culprit when the public grasps the meaning of offenses of this kind the fining system will be de stroyed. Following the accidental discovery of one of the shipments of putrid BELL-ANS Absolutely Removes Indigestion. One package proves it 25c at all druggists.! THURSDAY EVENING,, ' meats to Charleston by Louis Stutz & Sons, the guilty concern hastily re moved their stuff to the Terminal Cold Storage Warehouse. Cold stor age affords an efficient method of | hiding from more or less alert offl i cials decomposing poultry, game, fish, | eggs, and meat. | The processes of putrefaction are arrested at the freezing point, telltale odors are suppressed, and the com mercial refrigerator salvages many a ton of ptomaine-producing food of animal origin. . When I informed Solicitor Caffee, of the department of justice at Wash ington, of my knowledge of the facts he asked me to co-operate with the government to the extent of suppress ing what I knew for the time being, assuring me that the department of agriculture would make every effort to stamp out the evil traffic. I agreed to his proposition and said' nothing. As far as the Stutz case was concerned the government did all it promised to do. But it went no further. August 7, 1913, the secretary of ag riculture wrote the attorney general concerning the case, asking him to direct the United States attorney to prosecute the Stutz company vigor ously and to urge the court to im pose such sentence as would deter others from committing similar crimes. When the officials saw the letters that had passed hetwoen Stutz and Werner congratulating themselves upon marketing meats described as "slimy" and "mushy," and boasting of their cleverness in fooling the bu reau of animal industry, it was de cided to make an example of them. Before the indictment of the Stutz brothers. Dr. P. J. Styles, professor of physiology, Simmons' College, Bos ton, referring to the relatively com mon cases of ptomaine-poisoning with which every physician is familiar, stated through the columns of the Journal of the American Medical As sociation, December 13, 1913: "Meat poisoning is another form of lntoiicatlon following the eating of decomposed protein food. Hun dreds of cases have been reported] (most of them are never reported). HARRISBURG gSRQI TELEGRAPH but little has been said of the pro tracted convalescence in patients that do recover." Ptomaine poisoning frequently re sults in death when its victim at the time of the attack is in a run-down condition. Yet It is quite impossible to drag a dead body into court and prove conclusively that Its death was due to this or that portion of beef stew, this or that portion of hash, this or that portion of deviled ham, minced chicken, sausage, bologna, or other animal product. Certain It is that ptomaine poison ing is so unnecessary, so cruel in its origin, so savage in the Illness and pain which it Inflicts upon its victim, so menacing to the health of the bread-winner of the household, so violent In its assault upon the life of the delicate or undernourished child, so potent in setting up a train of dis orders which frequently result In long periods of Invalidism, that no denun ciation of those who deliberately spread It abroad can be too bitter. It I 3 a striking coincidence that on the day following the conviction of Krnest and Otto Stutz, Mme. Oer vllle-Reache, leading contralto of the Manhattan Opera House and a singer of world-wide reputation, died in Roosevelt hospital, New York city, from a form of blood degeneration. following a case of ptomaine-poison ing contracted while on lier last tour. The idea that decomposed meat, deodorized with permanganate of potash, disguiseii behind spices, gravies, sauces and staoke, can be conserved for the food of the poorer classes should be torn from all standards of food inspection. With these facts in mind Assistant. District Attorney Auchincloss, fol lowing the conviction of the Stutz brothers, implored Justice Pope to impose a jail sentence upon the cul prits, declaring as his reason for ask ing such a sentence that trafficking in meats of such a nature was in itself sufficiently heinous to Justify any penalty that lay within the juris diction of the court, but that in stealing the government stamps with which to decorate such meats the malice of the offenders made clemency impossible. Justice Pope replied by imposing a fine of SI,OOO upon the firm and promptly released the convicted men from custody. WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENT Marietta, Pa., Jan. 11. W. Wtl dey Wlkel, of Marietta, will wed Mrs. Laura A. Nipple, widow of Dr. D. C. | Nipple, of Mount Union, in the early JANUARY 11, 1917/ spring. The bride-elect is an ac complished musician. The announce ment was made at a didnner given by Mr. and Mrs. S. Howard Brencman. Recent Deaths in Central Pennsylvania OreviUe. Levi Eby, aged 89 years, a retired gardener and farmer, died Tuesday night. Three children and a sister survive. Sunbury. Mrs. Joel Bartholomew, aged 79, died at her home here after a long illness. ADDRESS CONVENTION Middleburg, Pa., Jan. 11. Dr. Van Ormer, of Altoona, and Dr. Charles Lose, principal of the Lock Haven Normal School, were the principal speakers at the Snyder County School Directors' Convention in the court house here yesterday. Sixty of the ninety directors attended the sessions. Dr. Van Ormer delivered a lecture to a large audience in the courthouse in I tin evaitlng. JACOB S. SHIRK IHES Grantville, Pa., Jan. 11. Jacot S. Shirk, aged 76 years, a retired mer chant, died at his home in East Han over township, yesterday. For many years he was postmaster here. He is survived by his wife, two sons, Ned M., of Ilarrisburg, and Robert, of Pal myra, and one daughter, Emma. FU- * neral services will be held on Sunday morning. F YOU HAD Jfer NECK M AS LONO AS THIS FELI.OVVL l/I AND HAD |] SORE THROAT Mim I way! ftil [poWTT (ft TONSILINE IVV wodid quiour aurora it. ijl 1 ™ *U. tod Me. Hanttal Wu, |fc 3