4 "The Different Kind of a Jeweliy Store" W We InVite All Harrisburg to Our Grand This Evening at 7.13 to 10 O'clock N t yy i # % i/(i nA/^nnn Updegroos Orchestra Free Souvenirs Nothing Sold I ■ '' : ls IJiiierent Kind of a Jewelry r T , HE steadily increasing trade which made Store"was first opened we stated the policy * necessary the securing of additional space on which we determined to build ouis business and f i-_ j fl *. i stake our reputation. "T th ® second I fl l oor over our , store and com pletely remodeled and rebuilt proves in itself I r J I HAT policy —— Satisfaction or money that our methods have won. refunded—and truth and honesty in all our tT . £ v , . | dealings with the public has given us the greatest X 1 a teelin g°* gratitude that we re- * j asset any business can have—the confidence of the request you to honor us with your presence at ~iJ J. peop^e - the opening of our new and enlarged jewelry store. MeMfCa/JcmQ . il FOODS "ES °" AMAZING BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT Aif,- p e y d r '^ ht M^ 9 caAn b f By ALFRED W. McCANN CHAPTER 134 Cream unfit for human consumption, produced under conditions in which inspection and control are unknown can be utiUzcd by model dairies In the production of butter for the ITnited States army and navy solely for the reason that the Bureau of Animal Industry has never made an attempt to regulate the creameries How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollar* Reward for an* ! J**e or Catarrh tbat cannot be cured bj Ifall'i' Catarrh Cure. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, 0. We, the nnflerslgned, have known F J , Cheney for the last 15 years, and believe him 1 perfectly honorable In all business transaction! •nd financially able to carry out any obllgatluu Bade by hla firm. NAT. BANK OF COMMERCF.. Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Catarrh Care Is taken lnterntlly, acting fllrectly upon the blood ami mucous surfaces of the system. Testimonials sent free. Price 75 •ents per bottle. Sold by ull Druggists. Take Hall's Family Pills tor constipation. Bringing Up Father (H) # Copyright, 1916, International News Service 0 £>y McManUß I , HELLO .ORN.I IN 1 1 I LL OH:THE I \OU 0., THE PHONE j I—l OLDbS- I) R OINTXNOORE- pi! MR. MOORE - WELU | Jr\ P// \ [-■ I HOV/ARE [ V WL"T> THAT? J J^QY iL/FVty I ME OLD * —> w 1 eon >r" [!£, v,—in < —-—' 1 | ~ THURSDAY EVENING, and ccntraJizcrs of the country ship ping tlioir products into Interstate I Commerce. . When Professor George Supplee of 1 Cornell University was seen in the fac tory then turning out 300,000 pounds of "pasteurized" butter for the United States army and navy he was asked where was the pond from which the ice used in cooling the wash water was cut. He escorted the investigators to the pond. Ii lay in a basin on the brow of which stood two cow barns. With every rain the drainage of these bains was washed into the basin. The ice i was cut from frozen water and cow I sewage. Come into the barn," said Pro- I fessor Supplee, "and I will show you | a condition which explains my reason lor condemning three batches of but ter. These people did not know I meant business in inspeoting the but ter made here for the government. They could not realize that I meant business until I had condemned the third batch, after which they began to clean up." The barns to which we were es corted were known as "the model I barns." It was the cream originat ing in them that Professor Supplee had condemned. "Do you mean," he was asked, "that you reject the cream from these mod el barns while using the cream that comes from the dirty farms in the country districts roundabout?" "That is exactly the situation," he said. "I don't know anything about the cream produced in outside farms delivering to this creamery. But I , do know that the cream produced here is not fit for human consumption." He led the way to the room where the cream from the creamery herd was being made ready for churning, i It was as bad as any of the barns along the country roads. Tho walls and ceilings were infested with flies. Within twenty feet of the room lay a manure pit over which the flies buzzed in swarms. "Now you can see for yourself," said Professor Supplee, "why I cannot permit the stuff originating here to go i into Uncle Sam's butter. "I have been kept so busy here that I have been unable to find a single hour in which to make inspections in the country, in consequence of which I know nothing about the conditions to be found there. • "Perhaps very pound of butter pro duced here should be rejected. I don't know, for the sole reason that I have been unable to find out. "This plant operates every dav in the week, including Sunday. For the first time in its history a factory in spector was here yesterday. When he declared that the workers must have one day of rest in each week the own- HARRI&BURG TELEGRAPH ers of the plant said: 'lf this is the law we will have to dock the men a day's pay. They are paid by the week.' " Asked concerning the disposition of the butter condemned by him he said: "The stuff I reject for Uncle Sam is converted Into prints and shipped to ! Philadelphia and New York City. "Furthermore, when I came here I i found they were pasteurizing in name only. I was obliged to change their ' methods so that the bacteria would be killed as was claimed." The conditions suggested by this I description are to be found in thou sands of other barns and creameries, i They are common. On year later in a pasteurizing creamery in Chicago another group of investigators, of which I was one, I found men working over full tubs scraping the surplus from the tubs with a stick and squeezing it with their baro hands into lumps. The ' lumps were then thrown into other tubs. Butter hanging from the tubs fell 1 to the cement floor and was picked up dripping with dirty water and put back into the tubs. We had just ' come in from the Chicago streets and our shoes were In the water in which the butter fell. It was "pasteurized" butter. The girls in the print room squeezed off the extra weight from the butter on the scales and deftly added the i finger excisions to the prints which were found to be short weight, 1 smoothing the handled butter cleverly i with a knife. In this "pasteurizing" plant process- Ed, renovated, and ladles butter were also manufactured. In the ripening vat dirt and dead flies were scattered over the surface of the pasteurized cream, thus rein fecting it. The man in charge in forjned us that he was ashamed to let us see the plant, as it was "all wrong." "Improvements are on the way," he declared. Ho agreed that naked hands should not be used in making butter unless the workers are under medical in spection. He agreed that flies should be kept out of butter at all cost' for the same reason that they should be kept out of milk. He knew the meaning of the phrase, "the typhoid fly." He knew that the fly is a carrier of disease. He knew that the fly, feeding on thr spittle of the floor or the street o emerging from a visit to a cuspidot or toilet- room can infect milk, pot cheese, ice cream, cream or butter with measles, diphtheria, septic sof throat, tonsilitis, scarlet fever, typhoid fever, and tuberculosis. He admitted that all the pasteur ized butter sold by Ids concern wa: not pasteurized. He did not know what percentage 1 came from other crearndries or cen- i tralizing plants. We later learned of shipments of raw butter from various centralizing | plants to this pasteurized butter in- ! stitution. There was no medical inspection of' the men or the girls working in the NOVEMBER 23, 1916. butter-making- and print rooms. They could have suffered from any disease and remained at their task. No gloves were used in the factory. The bureau of animal industry has nothing to say concerning these evils, although the products affected by them are shipped into inter-State com merce. Stough Comes East to Fight Slander Suits Danville, Pa., Nov. 23.—Evangelist Henry W. Stough left Danville yester day for Wilkes-Barre to light slander suits against him there. Dr. Stough left Danville with the indorsement of every minister of the city. They will ticking Torture Stops || | U is unnecessary for you to suffer •with eczema, blotches, ringworm, rashes and similar skin ♦troubles. A little zemo, obtained at any drug store for 25c, or SI.OO for extra large bottle, and promptly applied will usually give instant relief ; from itching torture. It cleanses and soothes the skin and heals quickly and effectively most skin diseases. Zemo is a wonderfuj, penetrating, dis appearing liquid and is_ soothing to the most delicate skin. It is not greasy, is : easily applied and costs little. Get it • to" a y and save all further distress. The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, O. r conduct the campaign here In his ab i sence under the leadership of C. H. > Wieand. Dr. Stough has decided to light tho ' cases to a finish. EDUCATION AX. School of Commerce ' Troup Building IS So. Market Bq. Day & Night School Bookkeeping, Shorthand, Stenotjpjr, Typewriting and Penmanship Bell 4U5 Cuuibciiuiul I Harrisburg Business College A Reliable School, 31st Year 12 Market St. Harrisburg, fa, YOUNG MEN'S BUSINESS INSTITUTE Hershey Building Front and Market Streets The School That Specializes Day and Night Session^ Bell Phone 4361
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers