13 INDUSTRIAL, INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT I PURE FOOD LEADERS PRODUCTS THAT STAND SUPREME . [ LEADERS 1 Dress Well at Small Cost TT7"E have found the way for you and we have se -IVVI lected large and varied stocks of stylish ap parel for men, women and children. Our Prices Are You May Have Credit, Too YOU can furnish the home completely—from top to bottom—with little outlay of money. Let Us Show You How ______________ Gately & Fitzgerald Supply Company 29 to 33 South Second Street —Stores in 74 Cities > If you want to secure a good position and HOLD IT, get a THOROUGH TRAINING in a Standard school of ESTAB LISHED REPUTATION. School o£ Commerce Business —Stenography—Civil Service Troup Bldg. 15 S. Market Square BELL 485. DIAL 4383 FULLY ACCREDITED New Ford Prices CHASSIS *400.00 RUNABOUT M% ... 4:15.00 TOURING -150.00 COUPELET RUO.OO TOWN CAR .... 045.00 SEDAN <11)5.00 TRUCK 000.00 All F. O. B. Detroit Williams Motor Co. 120 MARKET STREET "SOW IS THE TIME" h ■ J / Charles L. Schmidt Elale Francis Schmidt SCHMIDT FLORIST 313 MARKET STREET Harrisburg, Pa. Members Florists' Tclrfiaph Delivery V C \ Geo. H. Haverstick HARDWARE Cutlery, Tools. Paints, Oils, Lead, Glass, House furnishings, Farm and Poultry Supplies. Sport ing Goods and Bicycle Sundries. 2560 Mala St, Peabrook, Pa V GEO.R NAUSS Art Needle Work Shop Exclusive Stamped Goods, Yarns and all Accessories. Front nml Pine Sta., Steel ton. Open every evening. V ■. i Abdominal Supporters and Appea dlcltls Delta Made to Order W. J. Piker Artificial Limb Shop TRUSSES MADE TO ORDER for BAD CASES OP RUPTURE. N. Sixth St Harrlshnrg, Pa. Dial 54711 Bell 1213>K - /" —S New Cumberland Auto and Supply Company BROOKS WEIGEL, Prop FORD CARS NEW CUMBERLAND, PA. V J f -v Estlmatea Farnlahed Bell Phane B. F. KNUPP P. O. Box 225 PEXBROOK, PENNA. I Marble & Granite Monuments r Ryder Bros. Clarified, Pasteurized MILK and CREAM Lemoyne, Pa. Bell Phone HOLD UP Before you go any Further, Try a Pound of Our Home Roasted COFFEE GEM TEA CO. CHA9. L. WUIKH 1004 Derry St. llarrlabnrg, P. THURSDAY EVENING, A 5c CARFARE will bring you to our New Store to aee A USED PLAYER PIANO for $290 Eaay Payment Plan H. G. Day 1421 Derry St.. * [ M. H. Baker and Company Plumbing Plumbing Supplies Steam and Hot Water Heating HAR&ISBURG, PA. V. > [cut rate medicines Special Prices on Saturday Nelson'a Halrdresslng, 250 alze, 21c Nelaon'a Hnlrdresslng, 50c alse, .!0o Nui and Iron Tablets, SI.OO alee, Ue Connseler Cigars, regularly 00c, 050 WATCH WINDOWS FOR OTIIEII SPECIALS PAUL F. ZIEGLER PRESCRIPTION DRUGGIST Front and Conentoga Streeta STEEI.TON, PA S. A. FISHBURN General Merchandise Coal, Grain, Mill Feed, Cement, Brick. Peabrook, Pa. A Yon Phone Me and I'll Wire Yon Elwood D. C. Ross Electrical Contractor JOBBING AND SUPPLIES Stand Lamps and Domes New Cumberland, Pennsylvania ■ R. N. Wagner & Son 207 JtOCUST STREET HARRISBURG SanltaryPlumbing. Gas Fitting and Hot Water Heating. Boaa St. Near Mala, Penbrook. I _ . Ruhl's Bakery We can't make all the bread, so we make the BEST Protection in Making, Perfection in Baking C. H. BUHL, Prep. Penbrook, Pa. ' ' ' Try Telegraph Want Ads ADVERTISEMENT Anyone Can Learn to Make a Sweater In a Short Time It is the common belief that sweaters are especially hard to make. As a matter of fact, they are not. A little girl 7 years of age has Just completed a sweater that Is just •is well made as one made by an older and more experienced person. Possibly the reluctance of many women to attempt a sweater has been due to the blind way they have been taught to Unit. Crochet work is one of the easiest and most fascinating forms of fancy work. Its simplicity and rapidity with which it can be done makes it particularly attractive to the begin ner. George R. Nauss, who conducts the Art Needlework Shop, at Front and Pine streets, in Steelton, per sonally teaches the art of knitting and crocheting. Years of experlenec enables Mr. Nauss to teach a per son in a very short time to accom plish what they may think is al most Impossible. Mr. Nauss handles all the various shades of Lion, Bear and Corticelli brands of yarn. To those who buy yarn from this store Mr. Nauss will teach free of charge and will glad ly give any help or directions that will make your work a success. Besides a full line of yarns, Mr. Nauss carries various designs in stamp goods, ribbons, fancy needle work and ladies' handkerchiefs. Most anything in the needlework line can be procured from this store. The best quality goods, personal at tention and a desire to please make this store a mecca for the ladies. All street cars pass the door. Get off at Front and Pine streets. Oleomargarine Now Sold Extensively Because of the high cost of butter, oleomargarine is fast coming into prominence is butter's one big sub stitute. Very few people can really tell the difference between butterinel and butter, especially if they buy it from L., G. Martin, 1626 North Fourth street, who sells only the best. „ , Mr. Martin conducts a first class grocery store, besides his butterlne business. Special brands of coltce at from 20c up and staple and fancy groceries comprise a large part of the stock. . , . A delivery service is maintained and special attention is given to phone orders. Your patronage is re spectfully solicited. Business Is Excellent In Grocery Trade Meyer Marcus, the popular uptown grocer, who conducts a general gro cery and meat shop at 2030 North Seventh street, says business was never better for the sale of staple and fancy groceries. More people today are buying the necessary food ..products than ever before. People are beginning to realize that they must save in some way, so are cutting out amusements and so on and instead of skimping with their groceries are buying more instead. Besides groceries, Mr. Marcus handles a full line of fresh and smoked meats. Both phones are in stalled and a delivery service is maintained. Your patronage is so licited. Heinz Tells Why Nation Must Observe Wheatless and Meatless Days Persons who observe strictly the wheatless meal and wheatless day may wonder why the Food Admlnis trator continues to almost daily send out bulletins on the urgency of fur ther conservation, but there is a rea son. For example, his figures in to day's message put the situation in a nutshell. He says our average an nual consumption of wheat is 572,- 000,000 bushels. Our 1917 harvest was 600,000,000 bushels. After ship ping 200,000,000 to Europe we will have 460,000,000 bushels left, or eighty per cent, of our normal amount. "Bear in mind that this leaves us approximately eighty per cent, of normal wheat for the 1917-1918 sea son (and there are some hundreds of thousands of our boys on the other side who will not be here this year to eat their share) and there is no possibility of our losing any of this eighty per cent, through submarines or in other ways. Therefore, it should bo plain to all of us what our duty is—lt is to save as much over and above the amount we are asked to conserve by the observance of Monday and Wednesday as wheatless days and by the observance of one meal daily as a wheatless meal. "The reason we must save thirty per cent, now Is because the twenty per cent, represents the saving that must be made during tho entire sea son of 1917 and 1918 and we "did not start our conservation until long aft er tho 1917 harvest had been started through the mills and even now there are soma who have not started con serving as they should." Mr. Hoover lays great stress on 1 the necessity of using more potatoes. Potatoes anrf wheat possess starch in generous quantities and by using po tatoes freely we will be able to con serve the wheat it Is necessary to send abroad. Some of the delicacies he suggests, made from potatoes, are: Shepard's Pie, Potato Sausage, Scalloped Potatoes and Cheese, Pota to Pie, Potato Turnovers and Mrs. Lea's Bread Receipt. One of Phila delphia's largest bakeries is using a big percentage of mashed potatoes In making its bread. Any housewife can loam al about potato substitu tion by writing to the United States Food Administration, Bulletin Build ing, Philadelphia. Sr Drink In Bottles Sr COCO COLA BOTTLING WORKS, 1326 Marion St. Good Things PHILADELPHIA QUICK LUNCH TL % A All Our JBaking Done On Our Premises Under Most Sanitary Conditions JLO Ml 407 Market St. 307 Market St. 305 Broad St ftIRRMBURO ASUS* TEEEGRXFH ADVERTISEMENT Bread Baking on Large Scale at Ruhl's Bread baking is an art that is only acquired, like most any othfer art, only through years of experi ence and keeping abreast with the steady march of modern science. In the past decade bread baking methods have so changed that a per son familiar with them then would find himself very much at a loss now if you should step into & mod ern bakery. Ruhl's Bakery, at Penbrook, Is just such a modern bakery. All the modern equipment known to the baking trade is installed in this model bakery. Every loaf of bread that is delivered to you from this bakery Is protected from dirt and dust from the time it is only flour until It comes to your door, the fin ished product. All who know Ruhl's bread agree that it can't be beat for quality or quantity. Besides perfection in bread, this bakery also maintains a service that is as nearly perfect as times with labor shortage and scar city of materials will permit. A trial of this bread will convince the most skeptical that it is all bread and full value. Excellent Grocery Store Sells Quality Goods One of the most modern, sanitary, up-to-the-minute grocery stores in the city, tho Excellent Grocery, is located at Sixth and Boas streets. H. J. Bracony, the proprietor, has a long experience in the grocery business and knows how best to please his customers in both quality of goods and quantity of service. j All the goods in this fine store are bought clean, kept clean, and sold| clean. Food products, green goods, I fruits, smoked meats, etc., can all be purchased here. A meat market is also attached to this store where the choicest cuts of all kinds are displayed. The most fasUdious housewife will find this store a real meccat for sensible buy ing. Sea Foods Economical For Everyday Use In these clays when high prices for food products stares every one in the face and with the government asking us to co-operate in the plan to conserve the meat supply, fish and sea food play an Important part in the menu for our daily meals. By using fish in the place of meat you not only help the Government but you also help yourself inasmuch as sea foods on an average are cheaper than meats and just as nu tritious and satisfying. The Russ Fish Market on the Square, carries a full supply of fish, sea foods and game. Dally ship ments of these products asure only fresh and quality goods. Special attention is given to a de livery service, that for speed is un equaled in the city. A telephone call will bring to your home any of theso money-saving and meat conserving products. Be patriotic. Let your to-morrow's menu contain some product of the water as its important factor. Be sure that, if quality is what you want, to call the Russ Fish Market and place your order with them. Everyone Welcome at the Crisfield Cafe The Crisfield cafe, at 213 Chestnut street, is always open to welcome everyone who Is looging for a good, clean, homelike place to eat and where quality foods count more than quantity. The dining room and restaurant jis suitable alike for ladies and gentlemen. The food served is cook ed clean and served clean. All the modern appliances known to the restaurant business to produce food under the most sanitary conditions are used. The service is among the best In the city. Full course meal.* and short orders are given every con sideration. The prices maintained are so adjusted that the most can be secured for the money. This cafe is right near the Chest nut street market. It is easily ac cessible to every one. If you have a good-sized appetite and are de sirous of satisfying it to the full extent, visit the Crisfield cafe and you will be sure to realize your ambition. A trial will convince you that you have found the right place at last. FREE WAR GARDEN PRIMER 32 pages fully illustrated for every reader ©f THE HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH We have arranged \vith the National War Gar den Commission, Maryland Building, Washington, D. C., for you to get this free garden book of instruc tion on how to plant and cultivate a garden. Send this coupon and a 2-cent stamp for postage NOW to NATIONAL WAR GARDEN COMMISSION Maryland Building Washington, D. C. Herewith 2-cent stamp for postage ior which please send me your war garden book free. Name ... Street , City State * PLAN to PLANT and WIN the WAR ADVERTISEMENT Economies in Restaurant Leveling Prices Spurrier's restaurant in North Sixth street is a mecca for the rail road man. Good home-cooked food is served here and tlie pastry is baked right on the spot Just a few doors below, Reily street, in Sixth, this restaurant is only a little over two blocks from the roundhouses in Seventh Btreet. Short orders of all kinds are Berved very appetizlngly. Everything is cooked and served un der the most sanitary conditions. The prices maintained are in ac cordance with any in the city. As a special feature, a chicken and waffle dinner, just) the kind mother used to make, is served ev ery Sunday. Tho price of this full course dinner Is only fifty cents. This makes a Sunday dinner a great deal cheaper than if you buy the chicken and cook it at home. Besides the restaurant business Mr. Spurrier sells oysters and fruits in season. Fresh shipments of these products are received dally. This assures the customers of good qual ity and perfectly fresh goods. A Royal coffee roaster has been installed and fresh roadted coffee and peanuts daily are offered the public. Everyone knows the ad vantage of fresh roasted coffee. Candy of all kinds and the best grade of cigars are on sale. The grade of service is A No. 1. Mr. Spurrier welcomes everyone and in vites you to give him a call so that he can prove the worth of his res taurant and of the products he sells. A trial will convince you that you have found the right place to satisfy Iyour appetite. McAlicher Store Has Full Line of Groceries The question of food products to day is no better than it has been; Indeed it is getting worse. The great problem is to get the goods at most any price. The demand is much larger than the supply. 'C. E. McAlicher, who conducts a general grocery store at the corner of Green and Peffer streets, carries a full line of staple and fancy gro ceries. The prices maintained are based on quality rather than quan tity. All the articles are of the first grade of goods and are appetizing and will please the most fastidious. Special features are the different grades of coffe handled. One spe cial brand sells at 20 cents a pound. Mr. McAlicher treats one and ail alike. A most hearty welcome is extended to every one to try* the goods that are displayed in this up to-date store. Flour and Feed Business On the Increase A big specialty seller Is the chick en meat mash sold by O. S. Ebersole, the Penbrook flour, feed and grain man. This meat mash is a special preparation, put up by Mr. Ebersole, and especially during this time of year, when cold weather has its us ual effects in causing a dropping off irk laying, is a very good feed for the chickens. It not only helps In the production of more eggs, but makes healthier, better chickens. Mr. Ebersole also does a large business in flour, grain and corn. During these strenuous times, when all feed of any kind is so high, it is a very hard matter to even secure these products at almost any price. However, Mr. Ebersole has a goodly stock on hand and those who have been dealing with him know the quality of goods he handles and tie business integrity used in conducting one of the largest flour and feed businesses in Dauphin county. City Markets Good Place to Buy Meats When you go to market to buy produce of any kind you always like to know if it is of good quality or not. In green goods and fruit you can readily tell by inspection. But in meat it is a different pro position. You must almost take the word of the party from whom you makfe the purchase. In so doing you should choose a good reliable man to buy meat from. Lafferty Bros., of Hummelstown, who conduct stall No. 69 in the Chestnut street market can be relied upon to handle only first class, fresh and smoked meats. Convince yourself to this fact by giv ing them a call next market day. ADVERTISEMENT Cash and Carry Plan Working Well at Etter's Store The present system of the much talked of "Cash and Carry Plan" is working out to the entire satisfaction of the customers of S. S. litter, the Hill grocer. fftnce opening this store a few months ago the trade has Increased in jumps and bounds. The prices maintained are lower than most stores working the delivery and credit system, and the general sales show an increase over the old system. More satisfaction is shown among the customers who realize that they are getting full value for their money. The scarcity of food products causes sonjo inconveniences to the grocer and the trade In as much as articles advertised are soon gone and nothing to take their place. Mr. Etter has a large stock on hand and is trying to supply his trade as best he can. Supply and Demand ... . Regulator of Prices The two dominating features of to-day's merchandise situation are high prices and low stocks. The law of supply and demand appear to be working inflexibly to wards constantly higher prices in practically every commodity pro duced and marketed. Experts in buying and selling of merchandise—men who have given their lives to a study of the produc tion and distribution of food, fuel, clothing and home goods—confess their inability to see the end of the upward price movement. The low stocks of goods In the hands of textile, metal, woodenware and clothing manufacturers reflect their inability to produce goods fast enough to keep up with the de mand. This is. Indeed, the one big rea son far the 'highest prices In a gen eration With the governments of the world competing for the goods require at whatever price is demanded, and the merchants of the world competing for whatever goods are left at equally high prices and with millions of men with drawn from the production of goods, a situation is developed where the delivery question is of greater importance than that of price. There is a desperate shortage in clothing of every description—work clothing, coats, trousers, hosiery, un derwear, shirts, piece goods, etc., — and the spectacle of jobbers—even manufacturers—hustling around the country 1o pick up small lots in broken sizes, at whatever price Is demanded, shows in an illuminating way the struggle that Is on to get the goods. The readers of this page are giv en an opportunity, through the ad vertisements of these merchants, to get in touch with almost any articlo in 'any lino of goods that is pro duced and marketed. By carefully reading the advertisements here list ed the reader, in a very few mo ments, can pick out the article he has been hunting for and, the mer chant that is lucky enough to have it, by either calling in person at this store, or by using the telephone, may secuve that article. The goods all advertised on this page are handled by merchants in Harrisburg and the surrounding towns and are backed by the mer chants' reputation for good qual ity goods and a large mercantile ex perience. Every Day Is Economy Day at This Store The Allison Hill Provision Com pany, dealers in meats, groceries, fruits and vegetables, maintain low prices, not one day a week or every couple of weeks, but every day. "Quality products in their entire line are offered at surprisingly low prices. Staple and fancy groceries of all kinds and varieties, suitable to every taste; meats of all kinds, fruit and vegetables, fresh daily are displayed for sale in this big store, located in the Flat Iron building, at 1903 Derry street. Both phones bring in orders for all these goods. If you are not al ready a regular customer you arc wasting a grand opportunity by not calling to-day and getting a line on prices and goods that can't be beat. War Time Lexicon (Copyright, 1918; by British-Cana dian Recruiting Mission which main tains depots In all large cities where men except Americans, may volun teer.) O C i Abbreviation for office* command, lng battalion under the direct com mand of the Brigadier of the Divi sion. S—M: Sergeant Major, the senior non commissioned officer of a battalibn, who is the official spokesman be tween the Adjutant and the Non commissioned Officers, at the Adju tant is between the Hcrgeant Major and the Officer Commanding. NA—POO: In the familiar parlance of the trench, • "Na —Poo" means "done for," that Is killed. It Is presum ably a corruption of the French phrase "ne plus"—no more—and is used not only with reference to the death of a comrade, but with the general meaning "It Is finished." Gone West: In another exprepion for death; likewise, the slang "kicked In." Theße terms together with the phrase "Pushing up the daisies" are the soldier's common reference terms for the fate that overtakes comrades and may momentarily overtake themselves, lion rt oilers: The holder for ammunition, a cartridge belt. Not Infrequently re garded as simply something to lose. MARCH 14, 1918. . How Much Better / It la to buy the best grocer jcey,. ,es * rom a stock that La kept l/l t\ fresh and ngnt up to the ) I ro' n "te. Our store speaks I \es vXul I/ \— for ltself * but J UBt loo,t I M X # I through it Don't think our " jijlf pS|s§feS|] I' J \ prices axe any higher, be •a v i cause we keep things spic I H I 3l span—they're not. Phne. Delivery. B. B. DRUM, Grocer, moi-iso* n. th st. - • > Irvin E. Depperi The Reliable Grocer COR. SIXTH AND EMERALD STS. BOTH PHONES*, Staple and Fancy Groceries Fruits and Vegetables in Season Fresh and Smoked Meats "WE DELIVER THE GOODS'* Why Pay 40c Per Dozen Fop Fresh Eglgjs when you can get the same result with EGG-SUB co °£ in . and baking. Egg-Sub is made in powder form, add a iittle coW water, then mix with other material the same as "i® no t,o Ub i e to use it and satisfaction is certain. Egg-Sub corn indefinitely, it is derived principally from eggs, milk and A 25c package goes as far as three dozen of eggs. Get it at all W. T. HOY, Distributor WHOLESALE A\D RETAIL 412 WOODBINE ST. 17TH AND MARKET STS. BOTH PHONES ** Friday Is Ladies' Day We Serve Tea and Rice Cakes Free of Charge to All Ladies Between 2 to 5 P. M on Friday Tokyo Garden SECOND FLOOR Betweeh Colonial and Victoria Theaters. EVERYTHING UP-TO-DATE —— , Russ Fish Market Wholesale and Retail Dealers la Fish, Oysters & Game Russ Building Market Square ■ J f —— E.M.Shuler & Co. Fresh Opened Oysters All Kind of Fresh Fish Fruits, Nuts, Vegetables 1202 Market Doth Phone* Free Auto Delivery L —.— HER Mf! Before Sacrificing Elsewhere PARTS Miienrlos, Generators. Used Tires, Etc. CHELSEA AUTO WRECKING A. SCHIFFMAN, Proprietor Dealer In USED, WRECKED AMD OLD AUTOS Bell Pkone 303.1. 1021 Market St. Crisfield Cafe Try OUr 35c Dinners 213 Chestnut Street < J Willow Dale Dairy JOHN S. Kit AMUR For Milk and Cream Penbrook, pa. > ' r The Excellent Grocery MEAT MARKET The moat modern, sanitary, up to-the-minute store. Bought All Sol 4 Clenn Food clean H. a. BRACONY, Pray, 1001 N. Sixth St. " | > C. E. McAlicher Staple aatf Fancy GROCERIES Try Our Special COFFEE 20 f a Pound COR. OKBBS AND PEFFBR \ Cumberland Valley Dairy Clarified Milk CLARBKCI GILL, Prop. Lemoyne. Dial 4349 > • o LAFFERTY BROS. Fresh and Smoked Meats Ilnwmelstowß Ccater Square Chestnyt Street Market STALti 00 Suggestions for LENT Bal Boa Sardines In Tomato Sauce, 1 lb. cans 18c Oil Sardines, Large Can .... ] Oil Sardines, Small Can, 3 for 25c Northern Light. Bardlnes in Mustard, large can 10c Small Can, 3 for 2Se Herring. Large Can ........ 20c Extra Large Fat Mackeral .. 30c Cod Fish, 1 lb. Bricks 20c Pink Salmon, Can .. is e Shredded Cod Fish, Glass .... 12c S. S. ETTER 1515 Derry St. "Cash & Carry Plan" - SPURRIER'S Restaurant Bakery All Fruits in Season 1409 N. Sixth St. Phone 4498. WM. CLOMPUS ' STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES SMOKED MEAVS, VEGETABLES 2109 GREEN STREET v . , f Chicken and Waffle Supper Served to Order Any Dm r TURKEY SUPPERS WHEN ORDERED FOH PARTIES Saner Kraut and Pork Dlanera Coxestown Hotel F. BOSSINGER 3 Miles North River Drtvs O. S. Ebersole Flour, Feed, Grain and Corn CHICKEN MEAT MASH A SPECIALTY Penbrook, Pa. Phone 4755-R Latimer Willis 120# N. THIRD STREET Engraving, Photagrapkle Supplies Circulating Library Leatker <;ods ROOKS AND STATIONERY Society Writing Paper, RlrthCay Cards, Typewriter Snppllea Food Will Win the War Don't Waste It MEYER MARCUS GROCER 2030 N. 7th St Bell, 3857 Dial, 4MS V i ■' ( N West Shore Bakery, Incorporated L. M. BRICKER Superintendent and Gen. Manager Lemoyne, Pennsylvania L. G. MARTIN MARTIN'S SPECIAL 20 COPFBB The Original Nut-m*d Oleo margarine Sse White Flyer Butterlns .. .SO Phone and Prompt Delivery TM N. FOURTH STREET
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