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Show FORMER ffi Wfill wmm sugar Now Resides in Pennsylvania; Pennsyl-vania; Says She Needs It for Marmalade. Special to The Tribune. Or,rF,X. !!. 21. A utrongr pri'i-on for Utiih mul l-l:iho r-u-iar is iii'Ji-';t i -ii by n, consumer tn l'cunsyhania, -whoye lctttr, a.l.lrpsspi to tho J.op;in faft(ry. lias .itiFl. been f"i"ari.lrd to tin uuvral offips of the Amalgamated Simar ruin-pany ruin-pany u.t Ofrden. h',ro it is at tract luf: un-UHiial un-UHiial ntteiiiion. The writer is Mh-s Anna A. Robins of AVilkes-Iarre, I'a., who evidently evi-dently makes a business of tho manufacture manufac-ture oH oran'o niarmalade f'r the commercial com-mercial tradp. ITfr letter follows: IjO.gan Amalgamated Suf;ar Company, Com-pany, Los:m, Utah. Gentlemen: Since the last of June I have been usinc: your suar In making mak-ing my orange marmalade. But now there Is none to he had at the wholesale whole-sale houses, and If 1 cannot some from you I'll have no work to do this spring. The most of the day I have spent in the wholesale houses rpeommend-intr rpeommend-intr your pugar, ami taking criticism and ridicule for preferring beet sutrar to cane. There Is no other suar that blends so perfect' with the flavor of the California oranges as Uosan sugar. i The last sack of 100 pounds I used was numbered 54. Now, the question is: How can I get a sack of your sugar in the least possible time'.' For eight years I was one of the teachers in the schools of Salt T.akc City. I can give for reference Charles Baldwin, Bald-win, William Bradford and the Chamberlains Cham-berlains on East Filth South street, and many others, all of Salt .Lake-City. .Lake-City. My Grocer's name- is Beers, West Market street, Wilkes-Barre, Pa. A prompt reply, please. Yours MISS ANNA 'A. RORTXS. . 44 No. Main St., Wilkesbarre. The local officers of the sugar com-panv com-panv have advised Miss Robins of the names of a number of "Wilkes-Barre dealers deal-ers to whom Utah sugar has been shipped. "It is encouraging," one of tho local officials offi-cials wrote, "to find that the old prejudice preju-dice against beet sugar is vanishing. Tn tlie early days of sugarmaking in the west, there may have been some reason for the belief that sugar from beets was inferior to sugar from cane, but with the improved methods now in use in the eleven factories of Utah and Idaho, it is positively impossible for an expert chemist chem-ist to determine by careful analysis which of two sugars is beet and which is cane. "While thousands of our people here at home still persist in the old prejudice I against Utah and Idaho sugars, it is most I encouraging to receive such support from so great a distance as Pennsylvania." |