Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, June 29, 1916, Page 14, Image 15

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    14
"J HOUSEHOLD] I
RC A TN ES VMARKET AND FOOD PAGB?X ECONOMIES
SELfCTED The Store That market
I MENUS IliasSßL Against- Impure-Food erm&Sm HINTS
t
WONDERBAR RYE
is a winner—have you tried it?
SCHMIDT'S BAKERY
( PURE INGREDIENTS MAKES
HERSHEY'S
ICE CREAM
THE STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE
Hershey Creamery Co.
401 S. Cameron St., Harrisburg, Pa.
,
PHONE 2010-J.
Crystal Restaurant
418 Market Street
We aim to live up to all Pure Food require
ments in our Restaurant Business, and to
justify our claim we invite anyone to visit all
departments of our plant.
We buy the best grade of everything, and
that accounts for our enviable volume of busi
ness.
GEORGE & CO. Prop.
V
V,
C. D. Stonesifer
Wholesale and Retail
FRUITS, FISH. OYSTERS A.ND
PRODUCE
1303 BAILEY STREET
k
r >
The Excellent Grocery and
Meat Market where purity
rules.
H. J. Braconey, Prop.
1001 North Sixth Street
Bell Phone 2689-W
Clarified and Pa«teurlr.ed Milk:
RYDER BROS.
Went Shore Dairy, Lemoyne, Pa.
Bell Phone 3070-M.
r \
Sugar Bowl
Confectionery
D. N. GEKAS, Prop.
We make our oirn CANDIES and
ICE CREAM.
Herr and Third Sts.
j
—___ N
BELI, PHOXE 2439
D.W. Raub
Grocer
EVERYTHING
FOR THE TABLE
Sixteenth and Liberty Streets
Harrisburg, Pa.
k j i
THURSDAY EVENING,
>
r- ~\ GEO. M.
GEISTWHITE
Bell Phone 173. 2« S. Fourth St.
— -
PURE FOODS
Cooked like you would want
them in your own home.
REASONABLE PRICES
BUSY BEE
RESTAURANT
9 N. 4th St.
V
THE BEST. A
That is what \
she gets by \
trading at V >r
GAULT'S GROCERY
GREEN AJfD NORTH STREETS
Dotli
——————— —
RUSS FISH MARKET
RL'SS A WINDSOR, Proprietor*
Wholesale and Retail Dealern In
FISH, GAME, CRABS and
CRAB MEAT
Auto Delivery. Market Square
V v
Kerr's
Meat Market
43 N. Thirteenth St.
Special attention to phone
orders. Bell Phone 3726.
Prize Winners
in Pure Food
Letter Writing Contest
of the
Harrisburg Telegraph
Two prizes of $2.50 each have been
awarded, respectively, to Mrs. S. M. Tay
lor, 903 N. Second street, Harrisburg, Pa.,
and Mrs. Annie Smith Wilbar, West Fair
view, for the best letters written on Food
stuffs, advertised on the Pure Food page
of the Harrisburg Telegraph.
Mrs. Taylor's letter was devoted to the
merits of the products of the Pennsylvania
Milk Products Company, and Mrs. Wil
bar's letter quality of the products sold by
Samuel Gardner.
Two More Prizes Next Week
Next week two more prizes of $2.50 each
will be offered for the best letters on pure
MAN DESCRIBES
GIRL HE LIKES
I
"She Must Be One Who Keeps
Her Appointments and Word
in Little Things"
By Beatrice Fairfax
Again and again unhappy and lonely
\ girls write to tell me of their unpopu
larity with boys because of their insis- i
tence on holding to their own standards
jof dignity. Nothing I can say to these
girls is BO likely to convince them of
their blunder as two letters I am to
| day quoting.
Both these letters came in comment
on a reply I made to a girl who was
very unhappy because she could find
no men who would respect a dignified
girl and who would show any desire
J for her society once they were sure
they could not kiss her.
Of course the right sort of man does
: not feel this way, and I am going to
J quote two of many letters I have re-1
ceived in order that the girls may see
for themselves.
"The enclosed clipping describes just
the sort of girl that the undersigned
would feel honored to know.
"It has been my experience to meet j
many girls. Very few have shown the
least disposition to respect their word
in simple appointments, and so I have
become sceptical about placing any con-!
fldence in assurances they mav give me. !
And yet a word suggesting that they j
were not self-respecting would be read- ■
ily resented. Do girls think of this
side of it when they complain that men
don't respect them?
"I respect principles in any girl who
is sincere in her endeavors to live up
to them. And I think a girl ought to |
regard ke.ping her word just as im-!
i portant as demanding respect for her '
dignity. 1 raise my hat to any girl j
who Is really self-respecting.
"JOHN A. D."
Girls. I suggest tha.t you think about j
this letter a little bit. Are you honest 1
and on the level?" Do you respect j
friendship and liking? Or are you un
reliable coquettes who whimper when
you are taken at your own valuation '
and are annoyed with lovemaking vou '
may have invited?
Now for a second letter: .
"It has been and still is the dream
iof my life to meet a girl who is
sweet and dignified and wants respect, j
I have no personal experience of j
women and their ways, but my work
brings me into contact with all classes ■
of men, and from what I have heard
about girls I was beginning to despair |
of ever finding one who was not wil- ]
ling to be kissed and made love to by
v all and sundry.
"I feel so lonely at times that I am
quite desperate—but I can't take time
from my work to bother about girls
who are not high principled and worth
while."
And there, girls, is the verdict of
two of my boys. There were dozens of
other letters of the same tone. If you
are unfortunate enough to know the
wrong sort of young men, hold your
self aloof from them and wait until
you meet the right sort. You will
meet a fine man some day and then
you will suffer bitterly if you have not
kept yourself worthy of him.
- R
Call Bell Phone 2056
W. D. Farr
The Grocer
1537 State Street
J v .
HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH
foods mentioned on this page. Select
some firm or product from the advertise
ments on this page, write a letter about
them, confining it to two hundred words,
and mail or bring it to the Harrisburg
Telegraph office, before midnight Mon
day, July 3rd.
You may write as many letters as you
choose, but not more than one firm or
product must be covered by any one letter.
All letters should be addressed to the Pure
Food Editor, Harrisburg Telegraph.
Put on your thinking cap now—write a
letter—and try to win one of the two $2.50
prizes that will be awarded next week.
FOOTtC THEY BIILD OR
-8. P DESTROY
AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED
TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT
A^rf ht kccann b ) y By ALFRED W. McCANN
CHAPTER 78. |
When a linking Company That Pro
(luocn Million* of I.natc* of White
Hrcml \nDually Openly Declare* That
All tt lilte llrend Lacks Certain Con
itltuentM IndlNpenrtable to the Health
of the lloily. anil That Thene Connti-
Cuents Are Itestoreil by the Addition of
a I'atenteil I'OHilrr. It Behooves All
>len to Kxnnilne Carefully the Hitherto
\i-Kleeted K*rt» Concerning Their
Hreail Supply There In >o Patented
Powder Which In Any Manner Can
''"j"' IP the l.oaa Suntalneil In the
Milling of White Flour There Is No
I'ntent Ponder Thnt Could Have Pre
vented the Deaths of 1,.100,000 Children
I nder Ten Venrs of Age lu the I'nlted
Mates During the Last Four Years. I
The advertisement of the Ward bak
. ery, published apparently for the pur
pose of neutralizing the published re
port of Inspector Jordan of the Boston
Board of Health, and the facts disclos
ed by Referee Nussbaum at the hear- i
:ng of the New York State attornev !
general into the alleged bread con
spiracy. continued as follows:
"From the above citations regarding
the natural occurrence of calcium sul
phate in foods it would be evident to
every one that calcium sulphate is per- j
fectly harmless as it is present as ai
■ natural constituent of so manv foods!
that are daily consumed by the" people
. hI J n h, we " li ? ht further than
this, as the opinion among the best l
. medical authorities is that the food i
supply of the people does not contain
sufficient calcium salts which are so
j ln t,le formation of bones. I
teeth, and other tissues, especially to i
i glowing children.
! Point the advertisement fail- !
; ed to dwell upon the wisdom under
such circumstances of retaining the na
i tural organic calcium compounds found 1
H„„ " ao " ecp ssary for the forma- !
of bones, teeth, and other tissues, j
: d?rt' tZu to , f rouin K children." nor!
,„.L :ln , t .°. , an >" lamentation con-1
cerningr the withdrawal from thr wheat
SLiHf or S* n,c compounds of iron, phos
phorus, potassium, silicon, magnesium
manganese, fluorine, etc. essentialTo
I amL. M OPm °f bon es. teeth, and 1
dren tlssue - especially to growing chil-j
s a'd was this: "Phvsioio-I
havl in hlv'fnSV a " ad !J lt man sh °uld
na\e In his food one and a half grams
?' iI T 1 l e . as " ne salts per day. To ob- I
tain this amount from bread alone he i
wTi 1 .?. 'L ave <° seven loaves of!
Wards bread, while one quart of milk
| arnountf Urn '"° re tha « the're'quTred j
haS ifl bec l me a cor nnion practice in
I Puriflcation of water supplv for
he cities to add to the water small
i n!S°m 8 «°* . calciu m hyochlorite. This
,8 wu eart J ly indorsed by all
public health and medical authorities
Uiis °, f , ad,led »»• In In
than the V** J i C , aSeS a l ar Ker amount
bread. ded llme salts In Ward's ,
"Another common method of leaven- '
i srea '® means of baklnc 1
m°nn? er " Powders very com? i
! m ?. n ly contain some of these same
as veast food 6 ,nlnut,> amounts j
cess ,hls ne,v bread Pro- |
n,-. T 2 s,lm " up " may be stated that
the new process has made it possible
! and more H 'hefTlthfu I '"t ha t W has 6 b°c™n
1 ffi b p r oce.£ra° dUCe Under ans ' of the
i "During the development of this nm
Wo S m . Agricultural Department at
ill »i? . patents have been allow-
f d 'n the United States and are pend-
Jwe kn 0 oX rl t n h C^ al w f a°r r dT n
world: better
trade and this thQ " h n> j concer n in the
the entire «♦?. r ~ be demonstrated to
Dersnn whl ctl ?"! of an y interested
seJ ?he y vislt our bakery and
ployed there" Up - to " dat * methods em-
Th<> "d is off, we have nothing to
Samuel Gardner
WHOLESALE DRAI.BR IN
FRUITS AND PRODUCE
1311 N. 3rd St. Br " Phone 1053
V /
Wilson T. Hoy
Quality Groceries
QUICK SERVICE
REASONABLE PRICES
1701 MARKET ST. Bell Phone 863.
V
==-'1
I hide; never have had anything to hide
and you may feel secure in the use of j
Ward's bread and know when you buy
it you will use the best obtainable. No
better or cheaper food exists. Feed It
to your children in generous portions.
It is good for them."
j (Signed) "WARD BAKING CO.. :
"By George S. Ward, Vice-President."
This advertisement did not inform j
the public that the standard bushel of
sixty poinds of wheat produces fifty
nine pounds of whole wheat meal, one
pound being lost in the form of mois- i
ture through evaporation in the grind
ing.
] It did not inform the public that the j
same bushel of wheat produces but
forty-five pounds of white flour, show
ing a loss of fifteen pounds of the
most vital elements of the wheat, in
cluding more than To per cent, of its i
, total mineral content —a loss not made
i up In the baking of white bread by.
the use of any patented powder.
It did not Inform the public that but
three and one-third bushels of wheat,
are required to produce one barrel, 196
pounds, of whole wheat meal contain- |
Ing all the life-sustaining elements of :
i the wheat: whereas it requires four and 1
j one-third bushels of wheat to produce I
one barrel. 196 pound?, of white flour. !
I It did not Inform the public tliat ;
I every barrel of white flour represents '
I a loss of sixty-five pounds of the most
precious elements of the wheat ele
ments which are thrown to the hogs
and which are not restored to white
bread by the addition of any patented
' powder.
It did not inform the public that at
I 90 cents a bushel, the price of wheat
1 before the war. the actual cost of a
j barrel of whole wheat meal was $3.10 !
{or that at the same price the actual j
i cost of white flour was nearly $4.
It did not inform the public that at
| $1.70 a bushel, the high water mark
jof wartime prices for wheat, the ac- >
tual cost of whole wheat meal was
but $5.67, whereas the price of de
natured white flour at the same time
| was $9 a barrel.
| There were other things which that'
advertisement did not tell the public j
I but which, because it approached very
close to them, will now be told here. I
Woman Loses Case by
Misspelling Words
I Chicago.—The scene—Judge Caver- I
ly's court in the South Clark street
| station. The actors—Mrs. Lulu Ris- j
I wig and Clarence Alfeld. Woman I
I complainant. Charged Alfeld with !
disorderly conduct. He declared it
was a blackmail scheme. He showed ,
the judge a letter, he said,, she had I
i written—filled with endearing terms. i
| She denied writing it.
The judge asked her to write var- '
| ious words contained in the missive.
| She did. They were misspelled in the ,
j same manner as the words in the |
I letter. The Judge told her she was ■
lying, and discharged Alfeld.
Man's Home Where He
Claims It, Court Rules
Los Angeles.—The charge that
many people who maintain Sum- '
mer cottages at Manhattan Beach de
clared that city to be their permanent
residence and voted there at the
municipal election for the issuance of
$90,000 worth of bonds with which to
erect a pleasure pier was made In
Judge Taft's court during the hearing
of the injunction suit brought by Ste
phen A. D. Long to restrain the issu
ance of the bonds.
The court ruled that a man's home
is where he claims to reside, regard
less of where he spends most of his
time. The checking up of the names
on the register and the election re
turns will be resumed later. It is
claimed that if the votes of those not
legally qualified to vote are thrown
out the bond issue will be officially
lost.
S. Spungin
WHOLESALER OF
ALL KINDS OF
MEATS
326-330 S. CAMERON ST.
Both Phones
1 V
JUNE 29, 1916.
I
Phone 1607 U£>£
DEAN F. WALKER
Manufacturer of Ice Cream
409 NORTH 2nd STREET
PARTICULAR PEOPLE DEMAND OUR CREAM
MADE OF PUREST INGREDIENTS
A— J
"VEGETABLES I
In these days of so much talk on preparedness, would It not be well
to take Into consideration ones body? We know the doctors all advise
i the use of vegetables.
This week we ofTer from our own growing the following:
Asparagus, rhubarb, radishes, lettuce. Spring onions, beets, peas,
spinach.
Also a full line of Southern vegetables will be found at our stalls.
Learn the names of those in charge of our market stands; it may
i help you in your marketing.
SALESMEN IN CHARGE
Broad St. Market. Hill Market. (hentnnt St. Market.
Stalls 83 and 100. Stalls 30. 32 and 137.
Mr. Zimmerman and Stalin 190 and -00. )| r , ifouf and
Mr. College. Mr. Berber. Mr*, linker.
East End Fruit and Truck Farms
ROBT. J. WALTON
j V
Pure Milk
The best drink for a summer day is a glass of pure milk.
When you are tired drink a glass of pure milk.
When you are thirsty drink a glass of pure milk.
When you are warm drink a glass of cool pure milk.
Pasteurized, Certified or Bonnymeads.
WE WILL DELIVER TO YOU
Penna. Milk Products Co.
2112 Atlas St.
Bell 26. C. V. 179 W.
GRISSINGER'S
HOMADE CAKE BAKERY
Purity of Ingredients nud NBUl
tnry coudltlonn are responsible for
our atetdy grroTilnif business.
Phone 3406-n. LEMOVNE, PA.
MONNBROS.
Pure Food Grocers
1637 Swatara St.
Bell Phone 1305-M.
v _ >
GEO. A. GOHL
Baker ot
Cakes, Bread, Rolls, Pies
560 WOODBINE ST.
Bell Phone 2624-M
V ____J
* .
Phone 2187-J Green and Seneca
JACOBY'S
ORIGINAL STEAM AND BUTTER
PRETZELS
MADE BY
HARRISBURG PRETZEL CO.
Kaclt Taste Suggests Another
V
f
Have you tried our
Jumbo Peanuts
Roasted fresh daily.
OURCOFFEE
is blended from the
best the world
produces.
Imperial Tea Co.
213 Chestnut Street
Two Doors Below Market
Bell Phone 330-M.
JOSEPH SPAGNOLO
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
ICE CREAM
Importer of Cornett and Wafers
143 Hanna St., corner Race
—— ji
f >
Bell Phone Prompt Servlee
Open Day and Night
PALACE
RESTAURANT
ALSEDEK, GANGEE & CO.
2 S. Fourth Street
Harrisburg, Pa.
$5.50 Commutation Tickets,
ss.<)o; $3.30 Commutation
Tickets,
Special Sunday Dinners.
E. BIERBOWER ]
Wholesale and Retail
Commission
Merchant
Fish, Oysters, Clams
and Sea Foods
Eggs and Poultry
120 S. Court Avenue
Bell Phone 1159-J
United Phone 914-W.
J V