Harrisburg telegraph. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1879-1948, October 27, 1916, Page 7, Image 7

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    I The Store That The Home of
J All Advertise SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Cut Prices!
I Standard Medicines! All-Over-the-Store CANDY
H 50c Listerine 330 2vc Lyon's Tooth Powder 150 o *1
fl| 25c Lavoris 170 25c Arnica Tooth,-Soap 150 *o° Canthrox 290 vOodßtlS
P| SI.OO Herpicide 590 50c El Rado Hair Remover 290 25c Tond's Vanishing Cream 160 r /?jWi
jjfl 50C Herpicide 290 SI.OO Othine Double 590 Creme De Meridor 150 H
|| SI.OO Pinkham's Yeg. Compound .... 620 50c Creme Elcaya 39* 50c Lad y Be y Cream. 390 sl-25 Metal Douche Tans 190 O Q
9 25c At wood's Bitters 140 50c Riker's Violet Cerate 390 'soc Pebeco Tooth Paste 290 1 lb. Robinson's Prepared Barley 250 L M
m 50c Pape's Diapepsin 29 0 50c Hudnut's Marv. Cold Cream .... 390 50c Djer Kiss/Face Powder -..370 75c Oil or Water Atomizer 490 D £
® SI.OO Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets 590 I 25c Cuticura Soap 18* 25c Djer Kiss Talcum Powder 190 50c package Gillette Razor Blades ... 340
K SI.OO Hood's Sarsaparilla 590 50c Daggett & Ramsdell's Cold Cream 75c Hudnut's Violet Toilet Water.. .070 Yi pint Bay Rum. imported 230 T MM- , ' ffiUgm
I $3.75 llorlick's Malted Milk $2.75 25c Viola Cream 150 15c package Weber's Alpine Tea 60 I IffffilPK •' \
B Bromo Seltzei 50c Mary Garden Talcum Powder. ...3GO 50* c Lady Mary hace Powder 390 -5c Peroxide looth Paste 1>0 M [)
I SI.OO Fruitola Stomach Remedy'!!!!! 670 ? 5c Fros j t , illa ;• • IG * Do, .' in '* 1249 Rou S e Brunette . .. 390 J pint Russian Mineral Oil 390 E T -•> WfW £
25c Sal Hepatica 150 50c Hinds Honey and Almond Cream 2?c Satin Skin J-ace Powder ....... 150 100 Lapactic Pills 250 /
| $1.75 S. S. S #1.07 _ _ J SLO 50c Java Rice Powder 280 25c Ear Syringes 120
H 50c Syrup of Figs . . 280 25 c Menileh's
I 35c Sr!a ..".".'.'.'." .*." IS* ™c like Arly Si Potter' .'.' .* :V)0 # ** I- Blache Face Powder 320 1 1b. 20-Mule-Team Borax 90 .
■ °sc I iquid Veneer 150 50c Derma Viva Face Powder 290 sl-00 Mary Garden l'ace Powder 750 SIOO Sal Hepatica 590 ManufacturedudDUtribuiedby
i ST.OO Steam's Wine and Cod Liver Oil', 590 25c Hudnut's Cuticle Acid 190 SI.OO Mary Garden Extract 750 100 Blaud's Iron Pills 170 G BALDWIN & CO., Inf."
1 25c Alexander's Lung Healer 13* I 25c Prays Rosaline 150 SI.OO lCenklay Freckle Cream G9O Rubber Gloves 190 M.i„office.„dSou.i*,nF.c.ory '
J SI.OO Pierce's Medicine 570 | Attas rropical Face Powder .... 390 50c Dr. Charles' Face Powder 29* 100 Aspirin Tablets 90* ROANOKE. VIRGINIA
SE <SI OO <nrrrnl Wfi I 30c Roger & Gallett S RICC Powder, Siltf i r\4. T • 1 /-I ***, Northern FactoryandSaleaOffice
25c vIcS VaiJ-O-Rub !!!!::: 'is* 75c Rind's I.ilac Water > 48? J* J 1 " 1 ""?. ? eam ** q C 'f' ♦ ♦ CENTRAL AVE"NCTARK
-75c Mellin's Food 50* S 50c Kintho Beauty Cream 39* ~^ c Graves 1 ootli Powder 150 sl— Sheepwool Sponges 980
sQe Vsoline oil 340 j Bi-Carb. Soda ,0 • J Mmtu, aim, thu ci*
Saturday Sale of Saturday Sale of , - A
% Rubber Goods / Brushes : i®! 25 and 50 Cents
SS 53,50 Marvcl Whirli " g Spray Sy,in ls. s o •■■■ V,
50c Mi-o-na Tablets 330 j $1.25 Royal Ice Caps 79* s~o° White Ivory Ilair Brushes ....$1.48 loc Whisk Broom 90 , ® Ppfteh
SI.OO Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur 59* J $1.50 Comb. Fountain Syringe 98* 75c Bath Brushes 38* 5c Wash Rags 3* " llvwlu w llll# 111 villi Ml
75c Jad's Kidney Salts 41* I $1.75 Goodyear Invalid Cushions ...$1.15 35c Kleanwell Tooth Brushes 250 15c Face Chamois
\{ a } her J°! m '* Reniedv 33* $1.25 Hub Hot Water Bottles 630 SI.OO French Beauty Brushes 650 35c Durham Demonstrator Razor .... 150 UICII6BIU2OIIS &i3V OF S
SL.OO U ampole s Cod Liver Oil ,>* I I wo-Quafrt rountain Syringe. ..79o 7; R-I IT • O 1 10 r- 1 >T I 1 _ MNFWIIWI W u JF ,w ' M
-A F • \T I-,- E -r\ u1 u . n 1 • n " u •>-! 7oc r.bony Hair Brushes 37* 10c Glass Nasal Douche 56
.->oc Kings New Discovery 29* A 50c Rubber Complexion Brushes ... 3.>* _ T . J ™ H I JAL I n
M 25c Sani Flush 17* j $2.50 Comb. Fountain Syringe $1.63 75c Keep Clean Hair Brushes 480 5c Ivory Soap, 3 for 100
SI.OO Mayr's Stomach Remedy 590 | SI.OO Goodyear Bulb Syringe 650 $1.25 Natural Ebony Brushes 98 0 25c Barkeeper's Friend Silver Polish..l6o rj
-.50 Nestles Food $1.90 ( 75c White Hot Water Bottle 490 35c Baby Brushes 250 75c Automobile Goggles 480 klfC
FOODS STBOY ""
AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED
TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT
By ALFRED W. McCANN
Tlio Contrast Between What 100
Cream Is and AVliat It Ought to
lie Should Indicate to tlio Consum
er the Folly of His Indifference
Toward tlio Subject of Misbranding
With Respect to All Other Food
l'roducts.
Had ice cream parlors can undo all
| Bore out in Its heroism, and in its martyrdom, the ( v>)
H unconquerablecharacteristicsof the patriot
m fathers. That same spirit is as manifest today, as it Zgrfp
£4 wasone hundred and fifty years ago. Thecalltoarms gfc
65 that PREPAREDNESS has sounded, has proven that
KA the "spirit of '76" is not a patriotic reminiscence; but a . A.
Sgl live Impulse that the circumstance of a crisis called into / AMEE! Hi
rcponsivc action. When a "crisis" In yr-ur health Is ACrif ttW-'iAs'X 4 LTj
reached, S. S. S. Is the most-esponslveßLOODMEni- \TS '9 S®
CM CINE to be found. S. S. S. is the GREAT NATIONAL ' /A - J>, lEw
Rj BLOOD PURIFIER. YOU and your father and your ~ \ [2?
firanJfather have read about S. S. S. When you go Jo rßli'rwr I \ >-Cn
£5 buy S. S. S. as you ares ur to do sooner or later, look ei/ I' M,'i tX, *
jgfi. out for substitutes. Insist en the genuine. Write for JB r jtlh
mSk. free books on BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES: or J&LJ ] I¥%* gk
'tarTW witeour MEDICAL ADVISORY DEPARTMENT M
■\ Jypv freely and fully, in confidence, for free advice. 4BiSi3EffPjx''.{fijjtjjr
ip€*Mk. Adlre,i THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.
t ■; 163 SwUl ATLANTA. CA.
5c CIGARS.
are made of the best tobacco money
and experience can buy. They are
made to conform to a high standard of
quality and to maintain it regularly.
JOHN C. HERMAN & CO.,
Makers.
On Top For 25 Years.
1 _ 1
"FRIDAY EVENING, HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH OCTOBER 27, 1916.
i the good that pure milk stations are
j designed to do.
Occasionally unsanitary labor
camps, which are said to pollute the
water sheds, are discovered. The polr
lution of the Albany reservoir in 1913
attracted attention because it was a
spectacular incident.
The State's failure to protect the
most popular food concoction of child
hood, notwithstanding the scientific
data which prove that the diseases
originating in infected milk are in the
same manner and for the same reas
ons spread by ice cream in which in
fected milk or other infected prod
ucts are employed, constitutes one of
the most xnreasonable crimes charge
able to official inaction.
Ice cream is on sale (luring the
summer months at every soda foun
tain, at every confectioner's counter,
in almost every bakesliop. It is serv
[ed at every picnic and at every festive
feathering of juveniles. It is consum
ed sit outings and on excursions.
Young people are its chief patrons.
Ice cream should be wholesome. In
tlio ice cream trade journals a ma
chine has been advertised that will
sweeten rancid cream bought at ran
cid cream prices for ice cream makers.
That ice cream, in its ideal state
"not only the most delicate of deli
cacies but a most wholesome and
nutritious food, should thus come to
be looked upon as a medium through
which waste products can be salvag
ed at a handsome profit, surely should
Inspire, in these days of so-called
progress, sufficiently vigorous protest
to bring about the long-delayed legis
lation necessary to insure its integrity.
A quart of Grade A pasteurized
milk costing 10 cents, two fresh eggs
costing 5 cents, a teaspoonful of edi
ble gelatine costing less than 1 cent,
a Ifcilf pound of sap maple syrup or
extracted honey costing 10 cents will
produce, when expanded by freezing,
two quarts of "ice cream" at an out
side cost of 26 cents.
Manufactured on a largo scale the
cost of ice, labor, and delivery would
bring such a product under the 30-
eent limit. Itetailed at 40 cents a
quart such ice cream, sold to chil
dren, would yield the ice cream ven
dor SO cents on an Investment of SO
cents.
Such ice cream" would not only
be harmless food for children; it
would be good food for them.
Its bacteria count would bo low
Its protein or casein content would
be normal. Its content of salts and
colloids would be normal. Its fat con-
CCUGiiED CONTINUALLY
Day and Night—Man Says Noth-
ing Helped But Vinol
That statement does not surprise us.
We have told the peopio of Harriaburg
many times during the lust ten years
tiiat Vinol is the greatest remedy
for chronic coughs nnrl colds that we
ever sold. Mr. Dunning says:
"1 took a heavy cold which settled
Into a chronic cough. It soemod as
though I coughed continually day and
night, to 1 could not sleep. I was all
run-down and so weak 1 could hardly
keep about. 1 triod different cough
medicines but seeine_d to get worse
instead of better. 1 went to the drug
store and got a bottle of Vinol. Be
fore it was half gone I was better
and lt continued use cured my cough,
built me up and I am feeling tine."
Ben,l. Dunning, 208 Tenth avenue,
Scranton, Pa.
Vlnol is not a paliattve like cough
syrups, but It is a constitutional rem
edy for coughs, colds and bronchitis,
which removes the cause and stops
the cough, and tho recovery of Mr
Dunning was due to the beef and cod
liver peptones, iron nnd manganese
peptonates and glycerophosphates
which are contained In Vinol.
Gtorge A. ilorgas, Druggist; Ken
nedy's Medicine Store, 321 Market
street; C. P. Kramer, Third and LSroad
streets: Kitzmlller's Pharmacy, 1325
Derry street, Harrisburg. Also at the
leading drug stores in all Pennsylvania
towns.
! tent, approximately 4 per cent., would
Ibe better suitable to the capacity of
I childhood digestion than an ice cream
| containing- the federal government's
suggestion of I 4 per cent.
The child's ability to assimilate fat
is limited. Such ice cream would im
pose no tax upon the saponifying pro
cess necessary to the digestion of fat.
This formula, loading to a properly
labelled product, might constitute one
of a dozen reasonable formulas each
of which, according to the fancy of
the self-respecting ice cream maker,
would afford an almost unlimited
range of possibilities in the use of
other ingredients, including larger
percentages of pasteurized cream,
fresh fruit.-., and pure, flavors.
Ice cream should contain the fats
natural to pure and wholesome milk
or cream and no other fats. Where
other fats are used the finished pro-'
duct should be labelled "Iced Lard,"
"Iced Renovated Butter," "Iced Tal
low," or "Iced and Homogenized
Skim Milk, With Ueiincd and Deodor
ized Oils."
One of those oils now employed in
the production of "ice cream" is cal
led cocoa butter. To cocoa butter
there is no objection. To many of the
other foreign fats there is objection
indeed.
, lee Cream" should be free from
the fetid product known as glue, now
bei?,g utilized at the wholesale price
of 14 cents a pound in carload lots in
the production of this mistreated and
misbranded food product.
It should bo free from contaminated
gums, half-cooked starch, undeclared
synthetic flavors, undeclared ribbon
dyes, and the undeclared chemical
preservatives with which barrelled
fruit pulp is prevented from ferment
inK while in transit.
. Jh " ul ' ! ''O free from bacteria.
Lime lVe 110 food va,ue . and the
deceptive ornamental coal-tar prod
v'J;l(Lh J mve evon less food value
and which frequently disguise a pov
erty-stricken condition in which the
absence of fruit and other suggested
Through rc " rese!l(od b >' fraud.
V co ;°P e ration of Mayor
Maik M. Pagan, Jersey City, and his
secretary, Felix Tumulty, I was nor
mitted escort Dr. Edward H Sal
mon of t.ie Jersey City Board r>r
Health and Messrs. W. A Averill
Zelgcr, John F. Putnam, and
'? r - £ a ' 1 ®- McCombs, representing
the New ork Bureau of Municipal
Kcsearch, to a largo Jersey City Ice
cream factory for tho purpose of
squaring the truth of the statements
made here with the facts ascertained
through-it cold-blooded Investigation.
(lie results of this invpntii/M Hrr
tT bUt ° no of hundreds in
(r. nni , a y,° Participated, will serve
to indicate the character of the nrod
uct now known as "ice cream."
CITY TKACHEIIS TO MKKT
I\' IN'STITI'TK TO.MnßiiniiT
Second day sesions of (lie twenty
CU r teachers' institute win
open this evening in the Central hiel,
school auditorium at 7.45 o'clock Thi
m s n ;r°ut. as^stant k palto?
hi et Pr esbyterian Church
O C rZV , the dcvotio " al exercises!
pi Ezra Lehman, principal of the
i-h ppensburg State Normal School
wili speak en "Teaching Pupils How to
Study, and Dr. Cheesman A. Derrick
president of Girard College, Philadel
phia, will speak on "The Keystone of
the Educational Arch." To-morrow
morning Dr. Lehman will speak on
"How to Measure Success in Teach
ing" and Dr. Herrick will talk on
."Education and Life."
SOO,OOO FUND FOR SMITH
Northampton, Mass., Oct. 27.
Establishment of a professorship fund
of Ifoo,ooo at Smith College by Mr.
and Mrs. David B. Gamble, of Cin
cinnati, 0., was announced by Presi
dent Marlon L. Hurton yesterday, 't he
fund is given in the name of their
daughter, Miss Mary Gamble.
Marries Model, Must
Work in Father's Factory
Muncle, Ind., Oct. 20. Arthur K.
Hall, 20 years old, son of Frank C. 1
Ball, millionaire president of Ball j
Brothers' Glass Manufacturing Com,
pany, is to go to work in one of his
father's fruit jar factories in Wichita,
Kan., as a result of his marriage in
New Haven, Conn., to Miss Margaret'
Lavina Doherty, an artist's model.
The marriage took place last May, it I
is said, just prior to the time young
Ball left for the Mexican border with '
his company of National Guard from 1
Taft's School, which he had been at
tending.
The young man's father, who is re
puted to be worth $10,000,000, became
aware of his son's marriage only a!
few days ago, and it is iroid he made i
a trip to New Haven, Conn., to i
straighten out matters.
HUGE COPPER KETTLE
FOR BOILING LESION PEEL
Recently a well-known brass and
•Tablets
if To protect the public x ■
m against' spurious and adul- ) B
H temted Aspirin, the sole I
I makers of the Genuine
II Aspirin mark every pack- .-'■fejjlk" i
a S e an d every tablet with^\
\ J Ask fei "
Lj jay in these tablets mof the reliable Bayer manufacture. I i"®ffll!t| I >■ I
2oltl ta Pociiat BOSM of 12, Bottle* of 24 tad tOO Lf ''WMlb L [J „
.
[copper company m Indianapolis took
prkle in displaying in the streets of
[that city a huge copper kettle it had
made, which has a capacity of ap
proximately 2,000 gallons— his enough
to hold twelve men without crowding
them, as a photograph in the Novem-I
ber Popular Mechanics Magazine tes
tifies. Five men worked six weeks to
complete it. This is without doubt j
one of the largest cooking kettles in
the United States. It will be used i
| by a fruit company in New Jersey in !
boiling orange and lemon peel.
Keep License Five Years
Before They Get Married
Wilkes-Barre, Pa., Oct. 27. Five
j years after they had taken out a li
cense to wed a Dattimer, Pa., pair has |
married. On October 20, 1911. a mar- !
riage license was issued to Aniello
Notarobesto and Mauriana Kugierl. A
return has just been made to the local
office showing that the couple were
married October 12, 1916, by the Rev.
Naxario de Lucanni.
Investigation shows that after ob
taining their license the couple de
cided to defer their marriage until
the had accumulated more funds.
Their courtship was continued and
when Notarobesto announced lately
that he was prepared to take until
himself a wife there was no objection
on thu'part of the girl.
SSOOO Bonds in Torn
Envelope Safe in Mail
Washington, D. C., Oct. 27. Five
thousand dollars in bonds, good as
cash and readily negotiable, poorly
concealed in a much-torn envelope,
traveled safely in the ordinary letter
mail from Rusk, Texas, to the Post
Office Department, where thev were
delivered to-day to the Postal Savings
Director.
The bonds came as security for pos
tal deposits from a national bank,
which was requested, however, to reg
ister such valuable mail in the future.
7