10 VO O Fim they build A VJT OR DESTROY AMAZING, BUT RARELY SUSPECTED TRUTHS ABOUT THE THINGS YOU EAT i^d^ ht Mccnn b f By ALFRED W. McCANN If the United States, putting an eiul to Its inllk waste, were to con serve the 5,000,000,000 pounds of perfect food called Mammala by the French, hut which In America Is termed "Slops," wc could, Riving the siinc product a value of 25 cents a pound, turn into Uncle Sam's coffers $1,250,000,000 a year as a prepared ness fund —Such a fund would give us the liirgcst navy and the most ef ficient system of military defense which the world has ever known. When confronted with the stem necessity of saving foodstuffs hereto fore wasted or put to bad uses we find so much prodigality and so much stupidity that the very urgency of reform should Inspire a force big enough to make us see at last, even through the eyes of fear and famine, the folly of our present ways. We are now wasting 6,000,000,. 000 pounds of perfect food every year. in the centralizing plants and co ed 3.t: per cent, of the total quan tity of milk produced. The total Doctor Tells How To Strengthen Eyesight 50 per cent In One Week's Time in Many Instances A I'rrr I'renrrlptton You C'nn Have Killed and Use at Home Philadelphia. Pa. Do you wear glasses? Are you a victim of eye strain or other eye weaknesses? If so, you will be glad to know that ac cording to Dr. t,ewis there is real hope for you. Many whose eyes were failing say they have had their eyes restored through the principle of this wonderful free prescription. One man says, after trying it: "I was almost blind; could not see to read at all. Now 1 can read everything without any glasses and my eyes do not water any more. At night they would pain dreadfully: now they feel tine all the time. It was like a miracle to me." A lad.v who used it says: "The atmos phere seemed hazy with or without glasses, but after using this prescrip tion for fifteen days everything seems clear. 1 can even read fine print without glasses." It Is believed that thousands who wear glasses can now discard them in a reasonable time and multitudes more will be able to strengthen their eyes so as to be spared the trouble and expense of ever getting glasses. Eye troubles of many descriptions may be wonder fully benetited by following the |"ta{HiaHliailliailliailliailliailliailliailliailliailliailliailliaUliailliaHliaiW: i|s ' sJS I "A Different Kind of a Jewelry Store" H x 4= I H j Special Low Price on I | High Grade Jewelry For | Saturday Only in Connection 1 With Our Great Sale of a j| Bankrupt Stock at Reductions | 25% tO 50% AND LESS |l =f= ■ ■ Beginning tomorrow we will inaugurate SATURDAY SPECIALS which 11 ill will include every article in the store. If tomorrow's specials do not include 11 H the particular piece you want, next week's may. Always watch "The diff- f 1 |j| erent Kind of a Jewelry Store's" advertisements for the greatest money- || §j| saving bargains that have ever been offered in this city. 'For tomorrow if |j| only we offer the following 1 — -——— ——■"———- line hundred Klgin or Walt ham Watch I I Willi I 1 ~ . „ Bracelets 7 jewel 2O-year gold tilled in ~em-i - a.I specially cases detachable bracelet can be worn =l= sfj either as watch or watch bracelet. Sell at gjg priced for tomorrow. $15.00 to $17.50 elsewhere; (1 A ftfl Iti ±: special tomorrow, at wIU.UU "4= lii B v n =!= # Elgin or Wal- LaValliere 2OO LaVallieres iff "I" ham Watches ' urri |jf Tf" T 20-year gold filled T' solid gold with —solid gold, with ij| = t~ /% cases every- 3s _ .' UN ... , Siß 1 genuine diamond i 'fr Id-inch chain SIE I one and I in |tf Wff ! I regulated; spe- T'&jif jl sell at $5.00 to] jj! sell at $3.00 to Ip M w'{o I cial for tomorrow A TSjp i I g} 5H |j| g.JB LI ? Jewel, at #6.75 $7 elsewhere; spe- ./'SEV $5; special tomor- S|S jg li jp Jm II IS Jewel, at 0 cla ' tomorrow, at (row, at I ig • ■ fct ijs 'm .. m J/T~\ Buy your SIGNET KINGS the correct way 1 1,0 fumou " Kiementz |g p jf*. tdjj WmLm\ —by the pennyweight a good, heavy, fair 'i' ''' 'n' S 111 ■ti t>jyj I li solid Bold and usually sold SIS =!= 1I& jf]sized ring uflll weigh from 4to 6 pwt. 14-k II elsewhere at front SI.OO to gK Signet Rings special tomorrow, $1 tomorrow, S 59c I at per pwt In gold plate, 2 rr 25e |j| WATCHES DIAMONDS JEWELRY, ETC, 206 MARKET ST. ItP IS afiililMUlii'i'iilalnlalnlglnljl^lglnlalnlaliilaliilßliiLliiLliilaliiUliiUliiUlßliilaliiialiilaliilaliililiilaliilaliilßliilalMUliililiilßliilaliilaliilaliilaliilßlnlaliiLl^ Use Telegraph Want Ads. FRIDAY EVENING, solids of such milk, less the butter fat, amounted to 9.1 per cent, or operative creameries of the United States we produce annually more than 1,600,000,000 pounds of butter. The butter or cream, shipped by rail to the centralizing plant or lugged on a wagon to the wayside creamery, is separated back on the farm or in one of the skimming sta tions which in recent _ years have grown up in butter-producing cen ters. The cream is poured into cans for ■delivery to the buttermaker and the skim milk is disposed of in one of three ways. It goes to the farmers' hogs, becomes commercial casein, or is dumped. The skim milk tank of the aver age skimming station is a thing hor rible enough. It stands outside the station-on a platform uncovered, full of flies and other forms of dirt. The farmer drives up to the edge of the platform, dips from the tank what belongs to him, pours it into cans and goes back to his farm. He does not know the priceless charac ter of the degraded and so-called simple rules. Here is the prescrip tion: Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon-Opto tablets. Drop one Bon-Opto tablet in a fourth of a glass of water and allow to dis solve. With this liquid bathe the I eye two to four times daily. You should notice your eyes clear up per ceptibly right from the start and in- I tlannnation will quickly disappear. If your eyes are bothering you, even a little, take steps to save them now before it is too late. Many hopeless ly blind might have been saved if they had cared for their eyes in time. Note: Another prominent Physician to whom the above article was sub mitted, said: "Bon-Opto is a very re markable remedy. Its constituent in gredients are well known to eminent eye specialists and widely prescribed by them. The manufacturers guaran tee it to strengthen eyesight 50 per cent, in one week's time in many In stances or refund the money. It can be obtained from any good druggist and is one of the very few.prepara tions I feel should be kept on hand for regular use In almost everv family." It Is sold in this city by H. C. Ken nedy, Croll Keller and other drug gists.—Advertisement. worthless by-product. which he treats as "slops," for feeding: hogs. The production of 1,600,000,000 pounds of butter necessitates the production of 46,000,000,000 pounds of milk. The exact figures for last year, 1916, were 45,049,902,033 pounds. This does not Include "the milk delivered In bottles or cans for home consumption In the cities or the milk delivered to the cheese fac tory. It represents the milk in which last year's production of butter, 1,- 621,796,476 pounds, originated. This quantity of butter represent -4,099,541,038 pounds of one of the best, although little utilized, foods known to man. If this food were handled in a clean, decent manner and treated as it Is treated in France, every pound of it with Its precious load of pro teins,' caseins, sugars, and mineral salts could be conserved for human consumption. Following the outbrelik of the war, the Frent-li government forbade the exportation from France of this food which by the French is called mam mala. Thousands of physicians in the United States had learned the uses of mammala as an infant food, and were prescribing the French product in their ordinary practice. An American living in Paris, James R. Hatmaker, at once came to the United States and established a mammala factory at Knoxville, Pa., for the purpose of supplying the American trade with the prod uct .which could no longer be ob tained from France. I know the character of mam mala, for I have used it for a year in my own household, not only as an infant food, but in the hundred and one ways in which it can be prepared for the family table. The value of mammala has been established by the Paris Academy of Medicine as well as by the Congress Hipploque (the French association of horse breeders). Tli!s association has proved that a colt fed upon mammala attains its full development much earlier than a colt fed in any other way, and that by its \ise a horse with a physical development of a three year-old can be produced in two years. Azot, a colt twenty-six days old, was put on a diet of mammala. It gained two and a half pounds daily, weighing at the end of one year 762 pounds. The Congress Hlppique pro nounced its development a full year in advance of colts fed in the ordi nary way. It was exceedingly strong, weli-muscled, and had a much smaller abdomen than oolts one year old. fed as colts are usually fed. The feeding with mammala was continued. The young horse never consumed a narticle of grain. It reached Its full maximum weight in the unprecedented time of eighteen months and ten days, weighing 1,012 pounds. Its performance in the Grand Prix of Brussels, the French Derby, the English Derby, the French Grand Prix, and the English St. Eeger as tonished the scientific men who were HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH interested in its remarkable develop ment and extraordinary stamina. It did not have the breeding; for sensa tional speed, but its feats of endur ance were sensational in the ex treme. The theory that a food which can nourish a race horse can also nour ish a man has been through the career of Azot elevated to the dignity of a demonstrated fact. The milk fed horse of France now asks Amer ica to heed the lesson which it teaches for the benefit of all hu manity. Mammala is a dry, white powder which keeps for several months at a low temperature. It can be recon structed to the consistency of milk by adding the water that has been taken away in its preparation, or it can be used as a powder in the pro duction of bread, cakes, puddings, soups, sauces, custards, ice cream, and vegetable dishes. As It does not spoil on the way and requires no Ice or refrigerator cars it can be shipped in large quantities by freight instead of by express, with the further advantage that as it con tains no water there is only one eighth as much weight on which to pay transportation charges as there would be were it shipped as fluid milk. Furthermore, there are no cans or containers to be shipped back and no souring on the way. It does not have to be consumed within twenty-four hours, but can be held twenty-four weeks or until needed. If the United States government interested itself in multiplying the unique station at Knoxville, Pa., a thousand times through the butter producing sections of lowa, Minne sota, Wisconsin and Illinois, we could have at the end of one year nearly 5,000,000,000 pounds of a perfect food now wasted. The enormous quantity of dry, solid rhilk would not be cheese, nor would It be anything like cheese. Cheese loses in the process of man ufacture all the soluble salts which are discarded in the whey. Upon a diet of cheese, even though it were reconstructed to the fluid state, in fants or children could not live by reason of the withdrawal of these salts. Mammala contains every blessed element natural to milk. In addi tion to this, the simple process em ployed In its manufacture instantly destroys every disease-producing or ganism which may be contained in the raw milk. The milk slops now squandered annually would, if decently handled and converted into mammala, have a value of at least 2 5 cents a pound, or $1,250,000,000, an amount quite sufficient to equip us with the larg est navy In the world. Are we staggered by the wonder of our neglected food problems? If not, we should be. jfMENTsjfe AMUSEMENTS OIIPHKUM Wednesday, matinee niglit. May 2 "Mutt and Jeff's \\ edding. MAJESTlC—Vaudeville. COLONIAL—-"May Blossom." KEGENT—"The People vs. John Doe." Once again Mutt and Jeff will be with us. Mutt and Jeff, in a brand _ P ew dre "s, comes to Matt and Jeff the Orpheum, Wed- nesday next, mati nee and night. The American public never wanted to laugh more than they do at the present time. They seek comedy in moving pictures. Gus Hill's mission since his entre into the theatrical producing game has been to make people laugh. He is the acknowledged dean of cartoon comedy production, never having offered a play of this sort that did not prove a success. It is, therefore, distinctly evident that the enormous success of "Mutt and Jeff's Wedding" is due to the proper handling, by catering to the wishes and desires of the theater going public. "Experience," the modern morality drama by George v. Hobart, which has been the dramatic "Experience" sensation of the past Is Coining; two seasons, is an- nounced f or the Or- Jjheum week beginning Monday, May 14. No play in years has scored the enormous success credited to '"Experi ence," which at first was reported a failure, and then turned into one cf tiie biggest drawing cards of modern times. The producers. William Elliott, K. Ray Comstock and Morris Gest, hive given "Experience" a gorgeous stage setting and have provided a big company of eighty-two people. The play te!ls '.he eternal story of Youth -—his trials, troubles and temptations when he goes forth into the big world. It is told in the form of an al legory. yet all of the scenes and in cidents are very much up-to-date. The play ran nine months in New York, iiye months in Boston, seven months in Chicago and five months in Phila delphia. \ PEARL. WHITE Star of several serial pictures, who will be presented at the Colonial Theater to-day and to-morrow in a beautiful hand-colored photoplay, "May Blossom," a picture that was produced in the heart of Maryland and tells a gripping story of a voung girl who marries a man, who, after they arc married tears up all records of the wedding and then deserts her. I<ater. thinking him dead, the girl .marries her childhood lover. TUe other man returns and in a drunken delirium tells his story to the girl's husband. The picture is shown in all its natural colors, having been colored by hand in France. "Caught in the Webb," the twelfth chapter of "The Great Secret." with Francis X. Bush man and Beverly Bayne. will be the added attraction of the program. Francis P. Bent, one-time Mayor of New York City, and who is, at present, one of that city's aldermen. At the will doubtless prove one of Mnjeaiic the popular numbers on the bill at the Majestic the last half of the week. Mr. Bent appeared at the above named thenter last sea son, at which time he delivered an in teresting lecture, and this year he is touring the Keith Circuit giving an instructive and highly entertaining talk on matters pertaining to the present national crisis. A musical comedy, entitled "Flirtation," heads _the bill, and is surrounded by such "acts as Umh and Morton. Introducing some new and clever equlllbristic feats; Linton and Lawrence, excel lent comedy variety entertainers, and Kerslake's Pigs, ten pretty porkers, in a big laughing act. The (L- I tI T I L "■? I I— <J&ticke'&%erte4. £ I 300 MARKET ST. - 306 BROAD SV I Our President, Mr. Woodrow Wilson, in his last message suggested that all merchants I during our present crisis should co-operate with the government by selling their goods at a I minimum of profit, thus lessening the burdens of the people. We wish to say that our store's I policy has been exactly what our President now suggests, cutting the profits, not from I altruistic motives, but as a means of doing a greater volume of business and thereby doing 5 a greater service. Saturday Sale ' Saturday Sale I Patent Medicine Candies 50c Po.np. iau Olive OH, 1 pt.. . ,34c _ \ £* I)!! 0 I loc OMVC ° U : * I,t> & I 1 L Omc iSo I 50c Bisurated Magnesia 28c I IllT iHi T!° I Sttrs T r,,,a SS mJ it t Vll K..i Fruits 50c Pincx 28c and Nuts 30c SI Pinkliain's V'eg. Compound, 62c v,ii < ' loco ' uto ■f ru ' ts a,u ' t 9 25c Bromo Seltzer 14c a v _ 35c Limestone Phosphate 19c „ , , 35c Fletcher's Castoria 20c M * ■ ■ ■ Saturday Sale as t&Sn M.W Mrik. !?I Face Powders 75c Mellin's Food 50c M .■■■■■ ■■■ 50c Dorin's Rouge, 1249 39c "5c Jail's Kidney Salts -He MM MMM Mary (harden Face Powder ... 73c 25c Red Cross Kidney Plasters, 15c Bjer Kiss Face Powder ....... 35c 50c Sal ilepatica 28c Azurca Face Powder 75c 25c Ijisterinc 15c Carmen Face Powder 29c $1.0(1, Scott's Kmulsion 75c f T J D 11 Ji I-aßlache Face Powder ...... 32c 25c Atwood's Bitters 14c I Iflnfl'lyOHPfl Java Bice Powder 27c SI.OO Danderinc 57c Rogers & Gallett Rice Powder, 21c 25c Hill's Cascara Quinine .... 14c Woodbury's Face Powder .... 15c SI.OO Oil of Korein Capsules... 57c , _ Tctlow's Swandown Face Powder 25i; Bland's Iron Pills, 100 ... .14c / —. CDFf IA f v 9 C 50c Sloan's Liniment 28c / W \ iJ M Ml M/i Li SI.OO Xuxatcd Iron Tablets. .. ,50c /) _ Mr\ \ S-ittirHav <?nl 50c <ilover's Mange Remedy. .. .29c // Saturday bale 50c Fly's Cream Balm 29c \\ XLaTa ! I a lClim PnWflPr* 25c Musterole 18c WioKfll, f ™ 7 , if, 25c Gingerole 17c lijH |'f, V /I a J| B ">°c Mary harden Talcum 35c $2.00 Eckman's Alterative ...$1.19 W - - Ii5 c V Jor KI S T a,,>uin K'c* 15c Alpine Tea c T 1 >lall - 2.w Azurca Talcum 19c 35c Drake's Croup Remedy. 18c \\ • I®® Mcuiiens Talcnm 11c 50c I.ysol 29c \V 50c Lilas de Rigand Talcum ~.38c $1.50 hot. Fskay's Ncwcophosphates 2->c^ljdc<dettejralcHii^^^^^^^^e 25c Jaync's Expectorant 15c Full Pound Saturday Sale jjjj gag'."""ffi Tooth Powders 12. ::: ;:;?!£ Genuine Hand-Rolled Butter Creams u„ SI.OO Bromo Seltzer 57c 50c Pebeco Tooth Paste 27c 25c Holmes' Frostilla 15c 25c Sanitol Tootli Paste 15c SI.OO Glide's Pcpto Mangan ... 73c . , .... . , , . 25c Lyon's Tootli Powder 15c 25c Allen's Pooteasc . isc covered with pure, delicious chocolate. Made in the ■ SI.OO Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre- „ , _ . Saturday Sale scription rc largest and cleanest Candy Factory in the country. >->. SI.OO S. S. S. (Swift's Specific), 55c ClgarS Phosphate of _ We guarantee them to be a regular 60c quality and King Oscar Cigars will ho ail 50c Piatt's ciiioride 33c will only be sold at this special price for n limited time. now?* futurc ' ,a> a 25c Kondons Calairh Jelly ... 15c 7 Ki.. f r,c ZnTc A , 7 Kven Stcven 25c Bromo s<>it/.cr is<- The package is strikingly attractive and the choco- iinvan!. "."cks"' 1 ' 1 . C .'. ,! . arS .!.'! 25c sV'oo'peV'm °' ,,,n,01,t •• •••• : }'l< latcs are packed in a sanitary manner. They come to Hcn'MirwTcigars'.*.*. V.*.'.'. Iv" #, i°i ( !i'i V r"i ipo,t s lust, '' , ' ss y° u fresh and pure from the and we '' ' .store Only " >u SLOO lie pa iiea !1! | know y ou wiH cn thest dainties that we have pro- Saturday Sale *I.OO Danderine . . it I Vlded for thls v,eek ' I Toilet Ar icles 75c BHlHns KmU,S '° n 35c OrchardJu'lllte 1 . 240 1? $!'00 Borden's Malte'l'"illilk' ''* H ' if' Cntex'cnK llcmoicr .'!.' 15c Saturday Sale of Rubber Goods 50c Pn^' b %'taSl" ~S 20c Syringe 27c $1.25 Fountain Syringe 05c I>jor Watcr' SL2S 50c Mack's M„k;•, .S? t ™ o r,!: •'•*> "<• "™ — ' ~~~~~■"————i .-joe Atonii/er 28.• *'•••' louiilain Syringe .... $1.25 A/urea Kxtract, sample 25c Saturdav "5e Atomizer I.'.'.'.'!.'.'.'!.'!,* 31c $1.50 Combination fountain Mary Garden Sachet, sample.. 10c y c $1.75 Combination Fountain I Syringe lsc Kiss Sachet, sample 10c rifiicr* Syringe $1.25 $3 Marvel Whirling Spray, $2.50 Azurea Sachet, sample 10c 1 " u 6 5 $1.25 llot Water Bottle 48c $2 Kant Leak Water Bottle. $1.15 Roubigant's Ideal Sachet, Sample 25c Rose Water and Glycerine *1.50 llot Water Bottle 75c $2.00 Kant Leak Fountain 3 oss i„ $1.75 Hot Water Bottle 95c Syringe $1.35 25c Peroxide Cream lc 125 c Castor Oil, 1 ire " j'se $2.00 Hot Water Bottle . . .-. $1.25 Tar Balls, lb 15c 25c Sweet Spirits of Nitre', 3 ox., 15c $'•"" Fountain Syringe 45c.Tar Flake, 11) 15c [ 15< . raßf|lc Soap and W „ sh | 25c Spirits Camphor, 3 oz 15c Cloth; special 8c 25c Camphorated Oil, 3 oz 15c Fss, Jamaica Ginger, 3 oz., 15c n , 25c Kss. Peppermint, 3oz 20c cx I n• n iVQ ni f'f'l-f" Uf>ipoc Saturday Sale oz Ar " mn Sp,r,ta Aramu !> |a . 3 rule 1 (ll Ddgo ax vUt rntco Cold Creams 25c' Fluid Fxlract Cuscara Aro- ,5c For Keeping Moth Out of Furs, Clothes, Etc. 'cream 15c I miitie. 3-o/. bottle: the favo- 25c Aubrev Sisters' Beautiller.. IBc rite tasteless cathartic 15c Pine Tar White Lined Odorless Cedar 25c Sanitol Face Cream lc 2.> c 100 Rhinitis Tablets, % strength 24 in xox24 40c 48c se S1 Pompclan M.assage Cream, 500 19c ••••- 50c Daggett & Ramsdell's Cold 35c 100 5-gr. Cascara Tablets, 19c ''' ,n - xU * 4 ® 48c .>< 64c Cream 32e 25c 100 Pink Hinkle Cascara 24 in.xox37 ....„ 00c 72c 85c 50c Poinpcian Massage Cream. .27c Tablets 15c so in.xU\so 80c 92c $1 05 50c size Mary Garden Cold Cream 15c hot. Hydrogen Peroxide, 8 oz. . vKxK|l ftH , |0 ~ 38c „ , 10c 30 * , •" (, * , " JS 75c size Mary Garden Greaseless 25c 100 Tablets. Asaroetida, 5 gr. 30 In.xox7o $1.20 $1.35 $1.60 Cream 02c .. 19c 25c size Pond's Vanishing Cream, 35c 100 Migraine Tablets 25c —————_ Lpsom Salts, 1 lb., 6c; 5 lbs 25c 2se size Pond's Vanishing Cream, Saturdav Sale Jt 00U.S 2.e"'lze siitin Skin Coiii Cream, Ifto aaturaay &aie J 25c sjic Ponipolnil Night Cream, 15c Toilet Soaps 125 c Faglf Brand Condensed Milk '.... 10e|" 5c B ' ito " in^"s 4 01,1 Cream, I 25c Woodbury's Facial Soap ... 15c SLOO Horllck's Malted Milk 70c 50c size Hind's Honey and Almond 25c Cutleura Soap 17c 50c Horllck's Malted Milk 35c Cream ••••••• 31c 25c Packer's Tar Soap 15c *. Noatl<>' Pood -w.. 25c size Colgate's Cold Cream, 20c 20c Pear's Glycerine Soap 15c ' * 25c size Aubrey Sisters' Cold Cream 15c Pear's ITnsccutcd Soap .... 10c s'-00 Fskay s rood 00c lJc 25€.- Reslnol Soap 17c $3.25 Fskay's Food, hospital $2.35 50c Charles' Flesh Food ....... 29c r ■ 1 Til Wonderful bargains in Watches being demonstrated in our Market 188 I ® r .BBBStreet Store window. Watches atsl.4?) and others at higher prices. Every Watch a great bargain. Czarina Had Love For the Infamous Rasputin London, April 27.—Extraordinary revelations concerning the relations between the former czarina and the infamous Monk Rasputin, who was murdered in December, are made in the Moscow newspaper, Ultro Kossii. A remarkable letter which the em press is said to have written to the monk, is quoted by the Evening Standard. It says: "What joy that you have come to see us! How can I thank you for all you are to me? To lay one's head on your shoulder, to say noth ing, just to feel the joy of peace and forgetfulness what heavenly bliss! I think you for giving it to me. For give me for all my imperfections. I want to be good, to be a real Chris tian, but it is so difficult. How diffi cult it is to conquer one's bad hab its! But you will help me. You will not leave me, for I am weak and love you and have faith in you alone." I 'APRIL 5 27, 1917," r-. -irg|j Screen debut of George M. Cohan in bis great American play, "Broadway Jones," coming to Regent next Mon day for three days. FOR THROAT AND LUNGS sm nnoitpr COUGHS AND COLDS Eckman's Alterative SOI.I) BY AH LEADING DRUGGISTS The New Suburb ESTHERTON River-Drive SALE May sth 1917
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers