OCR Text |
Show THE TRUTH AIJOUT CANDY t - One Man Taker, His Sugar on ! Fruit or in Coffee Another I Man Takes Mis in the i Shape of Candy ! . Tlie human body needs conslnnt fuel. j X Just as coal is fui'l for a furnace, sugar, which supplies carbohy- I drntes, is fuel to the body. T I'lain, raw granulated sugar is not n pleasing way to take It, so T T people generally use it with other artieles of food. ' One man takes his sugar in coffee or on fruit. J Another likes a eake of chocolate. X The cake of chocolate, called candy, consisis of cocoa, sugar and 3 X milk, properly blended. ' J Is it rigid to say that the man who takes Ids suirnr in his coffee X Is patriotic, while the man who takes it in the form oi milk chocolate f Is wastefid and enjoying u non-essential luxury? J 4 0,10 small lioy takes several lumps of sugar in his cocoa, or his 4 T portion of sugar on his mush. Another little fellow ;i !s his through J, X his favorite piece of chocolate or a piece of stick candy. Is the latter 4 less patriotic than the former? We know lie is not. T The soldier in the camp has his candy, and it sustains him. The 4 X soldier in the front line trench enjoys a cake of milk chocolate; It 2 makes him "light like the devil," as General Waller of the Marines 2 said. 4 V Yet the cand.v industry, the thlrty-eiglit h largest industry in the E 4, United States, supplying a recognized and tremendously vital food 4 f product, is now threatened with practical annihilation because people 2 have not learned the facts respecting It. Many people still feel that candy litis no food value, that It Is a 3 T non-essential luxury which uses up maybe a quarter to a half of the 4 4, sugar in this country, and that by stopping the manufacture of candy, 4 the sugar problem would be solved. But that is not so. On the con- 1 . trary, only S of the normal consumption of sugar in the United 4 i States (now cut to 4) has1 been Ustd in making" this firmly estab- 4 4f llsbed food product. j t. Take one cent's worth of sugar. Put It in a little pile. That's the 5 X amount of sugar used per capita weekly in candy making. The sav- 3 T lng of that tiny mite in the home will keep the cand.v industry alive, 4, I and enable it to supply men and women and children at home, and the 3 4 men at the front, with nourishing, wholesome body fuel. Put a pound 4 of chocolate creams to the test ; eat a pound on a big, long hike. Then J X you will know why soldiers crave it. 3 n In normal times the candy industry uses only $ of the J sugar consumed per capita in this country. Right now this 4 amount has keen cut squarely In two. ? 1 1 f The Candy Manufacturers of Utah and Idaho. j 1 PROFESSIONAL CA&DS Lawyers J. W. C&ES&Y A ttornej -at-lia w Office in Lamont Building. Telephone Tele-phone No. 46 Mt. Peasant, Utah CLAUD W. BU&QUiST Attorney-at-Law Office second floor of Ericluen block. Notary Public in office. Telephone No. 7 9 Mt. Pleasant, Utah Doctors W. P. WIKTE&S, H D. Physician & Suigeoa Proprietor Winters General Hospital. Hospi-tal. Office at Hospital 1& blocfc S. of Main on 1st West. Phone No. 65 Mt. Pleasant, Utah D2. D. D. TIBBii Dentist Telephone Mo. 7 Second Floor Wasatch Building Mt. Pleasant, Utah DE. B. A. EU&CS Dentist 260 Main Street Salt Lake City, Utah G. F. BQEM3 Sanitary Plumber TUrner Mt. Pleasant, Utah I Built By Henry Ford and Son i I i 1 . 1 : I I I Now being demonstrated on i t 'a number of farms hew. I $ t For further information call ; I 1 I I Sumner iangs r i 1 , County Distributor. t. 1 Mt. rieasant, Utah- g fy I .......w.;v,ccK'-a , WE HP" ECLUSIWE ' I ,J 4 ' Reduce Tire cost by buying GOODYEAR. 1 1 We have a stock of Ford sizes in All Weather J Tread. The Non-Skid Tire for Fall and Winter. ; ; Conserve your Tires. Get the last mile out of J ! them. If in need of Tire Repair, remember we have a 3 ; first class Vulcanizing Plant in connection. Prices ; ; Reasonable. g o WE SELL GOODYEAR SERVICE WITH ft ii GOODYEAR TIRES. SEELY-HINCKLEY AUTO CO. o Phone 1U3 j Mount Pleasant, Utah. Buick and Dodge Brothers Motor Cars and Automobile Necessities. illtitmi"---..... I WANTED! 1 1 I OLD CLOTHES ii We will Exchange NE W I CLOTHES for your OLD j ONES. j ; I ALL KINDS J We have on hand a number j of First Class second hand j I Suits and Overcoats for sale I CHEAP. I C. M. PETERSEN I ; MERCHANT TAILOR f |