| == COOKING - ] Harrisbur# Telegraph HOUSEHOLD! I RE^ p n ES iMARKET AND FOOD PAGmi ECO^f? IES SELECTED MRONIZE The Store That Protect-s«l§§Kf MARKET 1 MENUS Agrainst> Food HINTS ii f l&tk. WONDERBAR RYE is a winner—have you tried it? SCHMIDT'S BAKERY V i [ PURE INGREDIENTS MAKES HERSHEY'S ICE CREAM THE STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE Hershey Creamery Co. 401 S. Cameron St., Harrisburg, Pa. V V f 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. _ i C. D. Stonesifer Wholesale anil Retail FRUITS, FISH, OYSTERS AND PRODUCE 1303 BAILEY STREET The Excellent Grocery and Meat Market where purity rules. H. J. Braconey, Prop. 1001 North Sixth Street Bell Phone 2689-W f \ pISIS Clarified and Pasteurized Milk RYDER BROS. West Shore Dairy, Lemoyne, Pa. Hell Phone 3070-M. ' S. Spungin WHOLESALER OF ALL KINDS OF MEATS 326-330 S. CAMERON ST. Both Phones f "J \ r BEI.L, PHONE 2450 D.W. Raub Grocer EVERYTHING FOR THE TABLE Sixteenth and Liberty Streets Harrisburg, Pa. j — THURSDAY EVENING. ' \ GEISTWHITE Bell Phone 173. 20 S. Fourth St. V PUREFOODS Cooked like you would want them in your own home. REASONABLE PRICES BUSY BEE RESTAURANT 9 N. 4th St. THE BEST. I ISL J That is what \ she gets by \ GAULT'S GROCERY GREE.Y AMI) NORTH STREETS Ilotli Phoni'H, V_ R CSS & Wl.> DSOII, Proprietor!* Wholesale and Retail Dealers In FISH, GAME, CRABS and CRAB MEAT Aato Delivery. Market Square •* Kerr's Meat Market 43 N. Thirteenth St. Special attention to phone orders. Bell Phone 3726. V - Mrs. A, H. Hoover, of West Fairview, and A. R. Fenstemacher, of this City Win Prizes in Pure Food Letter Writing Contest of the Harrisburg Telegraph Two prizes of $2.50 each have been foods mentioned on this page. Select some awarded, respectively, to Mrs. A. H. firm or product from the advertisements Hoover, Main street, West Fairview, Pa., on this page, write a letter about them, and A. R. Fenstemacher, 599 Schuylkill confining it to two hundred words and street, Harrisburg, for the best letters mail or bring it to the Harrisburg Tele written during the past week on food- graph office before midnight Monday, stuffs advertised on the Pure Food Page July 10th. of the Harrisburg Telegraph. Mrs. Hoover's letter exploited the \° U ma y write as mai ?y letters as y° u ucts and service of the Russ Fish Market ch °° Se ' but n ? 1 more one firm or while Mr. Fenstemacher's letter dwelt P r °du« must be covered by any one letter. upon the merits of Hershey's Ice Cream. S U1 | t ?T?. sho u d b ? ? ddre i se , d to * e Pure Two More Prizes Next Week K your' ~rite a u we - mor f P r i zes of $2.50 each letter—and try to win one of the two $2.50 will be awarded for the best letters on pure prizes that will be awarded next week. FOODS ™ ms'iSio? AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT | (Copyright. 1916, by n v T . .... Alfred w. Mccann.) By ALF RED W. McCANN CHAPTER SI The Poison Squalls Which Have 1 Given Semiscientifle or Unscientific Data to Dietitians Have Proved Worth- j | less as a Means of Determining the i True Cliaracter of Any Food or Food Preservative—Short-Time Experiments , i on 'Healthy Adults Cannot Revel In- j formation that Applies to the Year-ln j and Year-Out Experience of the Rank and File of Humanity. Under the inspiration of an aroused profession of school teachers, the | school children, familiar with the poi son squad cages of the school house basement, will learn that human poi- j son squads have been organized at ; regular intervals for the purpose of i subjecting healthy young men to a diet of adulterated food In the interest of science. They will learn that after a period of Ave or six weeks the usual results have been announced, frequently to the effect that the members oS the squad "betrayed no noticeable symp- ! toms and experienced no Injurious re sults." They will learn that such reports have appeared in thousands of news papers, quieting the public mind, dis arming anxiety and suspicion, and ; sometimes causing the cautious house- I wife to forget the necessity of watch fulness in selecting her kitchen sup plies. They will learn that these poison squads have never fought it out to the ! finish, and that the brave youths who have been fed with these doses of ben zoate, borax, copper sulphate, sulphur I dioxide, aluminum sulphate, coal tar I dyes, hydrogenated fats and other food ; preservatives have never taken all of [ these delectable substances at any one I time nor during any one test. They will learn that the poison i squad is always confined to one food drug, never partaking of anv other j drug during its scientific experience. \ They will learn that it has been the I custom in the past to disband the squad before any subtle, slow-moving, ! insidious process might bring about serious injury to its members, thereby giving the food sophisticator plenty of so-called scientific justification for his assertion that the occasional cry against preservatives, food chemicals, mineral dyes and denatured food is a bugaboo. They will learn that all the people in the world are not healthy young men and that all of them do not stop eating at the end of a test lasting five or six weeks. They will learn that some of the people in the world are babies; some ! are school children like themselves; I some are nursing mothers; some are | about to become mothers and some have reached the age where natural vigor is no longer sufficiently active to resist even temporary abuse. They will learn that notwithstanding i the fact that all poison squad experi ments have iieen temporary affairs. ! there is nevertheless, on a wonderfully I organized scale, a poison squad among little children which has never been abandoned and which has numbered j among Its victims in the United States j 1.500.000 during the last four years. They wil learn that every time the I law makes the use of a food chemical | legal or every time it winks at an ebuse that denatures a food it makes ' a permanent poison squad of the en | tire country, not for a few experi | mental weeks for a few vigorous young men with a single food chemical, but ! for the entire lifetime of all the men, j women and children in th 6 country | with a combination of all the food chemicals now used legally or illegally by nn army of food manufacturers. They will learn that all the little \ r~ v Call Bell Phone 2056 W. D. Farr The Grocer 1537 State Street ) v , HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH 1 1 children of the United States, whether j their parents realize it or not, are now in that poison squad, particularly the children of the poor and the unfortu | nate. They will learn that when the food drugger puts hU commercial dose into his commercial product and sends it forth to perform its commercial dut> of yielding a profit, he does not know into whose hands it will fall nor any thing about the physical condition of the individual who will receive his medicated wares. They will learn that through igno rance and selfishness in supplying un fit food for the human family murders ore being committed every day. They will lear nthat as life was given for some good purpose, life's efficiency I should not be lessened by those who exploit the needs of life, particularly the natural foodstuffs upon which life depends. They will learn that of the 250 In fants that die before they are one year old out of every 1,000 infants born and of the countless thousands of adults who die before their time, many precious lives ci aid be saved if the tood manufacturer could be made to I realize the responsibility he takes upon himself when he assumes that it j is his right to feed a nation with no other object before him than profit to himself. They will learn that all murders are not picturesque. They will learn that the slow-moving, subtle, insidious undermining of the health of men, women and children is murder. They will learn that individuals have no right to debase food products, the J to bring about degeneration, ill health to bring about degeneration, ill heltha and death to those who depend for health and life upon impoverished food. They will learn that self-slaughter is given the widest possible publicity, but that the subtle slaughtering of ] the race is given no publicity at all. They will learn that to hide the truth by refusing it publicity is to be guilty of whatever murder is involved in robbing the people's foodstuffs of the elements necessary to sustain life. Thev will learn that if life is sacred, I everything upon which life depends is sacred, and the juggling, refining or denaturing of man's food supply is sacrilege. At a time when we are asking that the schools and colleges should teach the relative viciousness and baseness of crime, so that public opinion may proclaim that mob-murders and self murders are the most cowardly and least defensible of all offenses, let us also demand that the schools and col leges teach, with their anatomy and hygiene, the meaning of the presence jof proteins, carbohydrates, fats and mineral salts in the diet, so that any commercial effort to interfere with these elements for the sake of gain may be looked upon as a crime against the sacredness of life. The school children already know that the idea of the sacredness of j human life is universal, through the fact that the destroyers of their own lives are denied church burial by sev eral great branches of the Christian . religion. With their chicken-feeding experi ence before them they will lern that if the average man, though a stranger, will afford succor to his fellow to pre vent a death by violence, it is not too much to ask of him to help prevent the continuance of the modern food crimes, which end so pitifully and tragically. They will learn that there is some thing wrong with society when society responds with reverence and tears to the acts of brave souls when they serenolv yield their lives for the pub lic good, while at the same time refus ing to nick up its own little fragment of public duty, lying at its very feet, because It does not .find that duty gleaming with the golden hue of ro mance. The chicken experience will teach the children that if we honor thou sands of noble men and women who spend their lives at the hospital bed side to bring the sick back to health, there Is even greater honor due to them who fight beforehand against preventable disease. Samuel Gardner WHOLESALE DEALER IK FRUITS AND PRODUCE 1311 N. 3rd St. »"> »*«""" | William Penn Highway Notes In Cambria countv the commission- j ers have let f he contract for the con- I struction of two miles of brick on a j concrete base, between Ebensburg and Cresson. The main William Penn route is from Ebensburg to Loretto, but many road users go to Cresson direct from Ebensburg; and it was to benefit these people that the Cambria commissioners let the contract for the j new brick. In GO days six and one quarter of the eight miles from Ebens- I burg to Cresson will be of permanent ! road. The commissioners of Westmore land county last week put jail pris oners at work on county roads. With ordinary labor costing $2.25 a day the commissioners are saving money, in asmuch as by law they pay the pris- j oners only 25 cents a day. The William Penn Highway Asso- \ elation Is being incorporated under the I laws of Pennsylvania. The necessary | papers are being prepared by Attor- I ney Douglas D. Storey, of Harrlsburg, the road association's solicitor. Work on the construction of the ■ four miles of State highway between | Huntingdon and Millcreek is progress- i ing slowly. But when this strip is | completed there will be an unbroken 1 stretch of permanent William Penn Highway extending westward 113 miles from Millerstown. The Pike's Peak Ocean-to-Ocean New York Extension, which leaves the William Penn at Reading and passes through Allentown and Easton to New York, is attracting much attention in j Lehigh and Northampton counties, j Twelve miles of concrete road are ! being built between Allentown and I Easton. Much complaint is heard regarding the condition of the William Penn I Highway in certain boroughs. Under I j the State laws the district attorney of ! a county may ask the court for a writ of mandamus compelling borough au thorities to maintain the streets in I good condition. Township supervisors as a rule are far ahead of the smaller boroughs in their street maintenance methods. j In marking poles along the William Penn Highway the Pike's Peak and Penn markers will be used In combi- \ nation. On country roads the marker will consist of a 10-lnch red strip and a 10-lnch white strip, with the letters | j "W. H. P." In blue on the white. ' Town and city markers will be more ' pretentious, consisting of the red and white bands and an additional band i of blue, 14% Inches deep, on which will be an outlined keystone with the device, "W. Penn H." outline and de vice being in gold. Application is to be ' made to the State Highway depart- | ment for permission to mark State roads. James Macklin, of McVeytown, Mif flin county governor, and J. G. H. Rlppman, of Millersburg, governor ' for Perry county, covered the high way from Harrlsburg to Johnstown last week and were much pleased with its condition. The Northern Central railroad will fill the bed of the old canal for about a mile and a half near Speeceville, Dauphin county, and build an excel lent road thereon, doing away with the narrow thoroughfare now In use. The grade crossing here will be re placed by an undergrade crossing. INTERESTING NEWS ABOUT 1,0- CAU GROCERY AND MEAT MARKET Housewives who bear In mind two im portant facts in connection with their: purchases of eatables—the purity and grade of the products, and the manner in which it is cared for by the dealer! from whom it is purchased. And it is in the attention paid to these two essentials that the Excellent Grocery and Meat Market conducted by H. J. Braconey at Sixth and Boas streets, takes no little pride. As a matter of fact it enjoys the distinction of possessing a diploma from a well known pure food commission. After the selection of pure foods, I In which great care is exercised, this store gives careful consideration to the sanitary care of the articles while In its possession. A storage plant of unusually large i capacity makes possible the placing of eatables with the customer in a most , healthful and sanitary condition. This includes not only perishable vegetables I and produce, but meats as well, in I which department is carried choice , cuts of fresh meats and luncheon j j meats properly cared for and displayed ; un(ler glass, in a flyproof, sanitary re-! frigerator case. The line of foodstuffs sold at the' Excellent Grocery and Meat Market I includes groceries, staple and fancy,' fresh meats, greens, fruits and lunch eon goods, all cared for under strict j 'sanitary conditions.—Advertisement, i JULY 6, 1916. — I Phone 1607 ZfotHOME DEAN F. WALKER Manufacturer of Ice Cream 409 NORTH 2nd STREET • PARTICULAR PEOPLE DEMAND OUR CREAM MADE OF PUREST INGREDIENTS v y VEGETABLES In these days of so much talk on preparedness, would It not be well I to take into consideration one's body? We know the doctors all advise ! the use of vegetables. This week we offer 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 help you in your SALESMEN IN CHARGE Broad St. Market. >llll Market. Chntnut St. Market. | Stalls S3 and 100. Stalls SO. 3a and IST. I Mr. Zimmerman and Stalin 100 and -00. Mr. Kouf and | Mr. ColleKe. Mr. Gerber. f Mrs. Baker. East End Fruit and Truck Farms ROBT. J. WALTON 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. v ; GRISSINGER'S HOMADE CAKE BAKERY Purity of mid sani tary conditions are responsible for our Kteady Kruwiog liuitlneNN. Phone 3406-D. LEMOYNE, PA. V—————— ' MONNBROS. Pure Food Grocers 1637 Swatara St. Bell Phone 1305-M. v GEO. A. GOHL Baker of Cakes, Bread, Rolls, Pies 560 WOODBINE ST. Dell Phone 2624-M V I > r " A Phone 2 18/-J Green and Seneca JACOBY'S ORIGINAL STEAM AND BUTTER PRETZELS MADE BY HARRISBURG PRETZEL CO. Kach Taste Suggests Another — (• T > Have you tried our Jumbo Peanuts Roasted fresh daily. OUR COFFEE is blended from the best the world produces. Imperial Tea Co. 213 Chestnut Street Two Doors Below Market Bell Phone 330-M. i \ J JOSEPH SPAGNOLO j WHOLESALE AND RETAIL ICE CREAM Importer of Cornett and Wafers 143 Hanna St., corner Race i V 1 9 Bell Phone Prompt Service Open Day and Night PALACE RESTAURANT ALSEDEK, GANGEE & CO. 2 S. Fourth Street Harrisburg, Pa. $5.50 Commutation Tickets, $3.00; $3.30 Commutation Tickets, $3.00. Special Sunday Dinners. v E. BIERBOWER 1 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. 13