Browse Titles - 1 result
National Food Magazine: What to Eat, Vol. 28 No. 3
edited by Paul Pierce, 1866-, in National Food Magazine, Vol. 28, No. 3, March 1910 (Chicago, IL: Pierce Publishing, 1910, originally published 1910), 100 page(s)
The National Food Magazine: What to Eat is a monthly publication 'striving for the enactment of laws that will prohibit the manufacture or importation of any food or beverage deleterious to public health.' This issue of the magazine includes articles on: Women Food Inspectors, Menus for Everyday of the Week, Germa...
Sample
edited by Paul Pierce, 1866-, in National Food Magazine, Vol. 28, No. 3, March 1910 (Chicago, IL: Pierce Publishing, 1910, originally published 1910), 100 page(s)
Description
The National Food Magazine: What to Eat is a monthly publication 'striving for the enactment of laws that will prohibit the manufacture or importation of any food or beverage deleterious to public health.' This issue of the magazine includes articles on: Women Food Inspectors, Menus for Everyday of the Week, Germany, the Home of Honest Foods and Honest Prices, Comparison of Wage and Salary Increases, Olives and Olive Oil, Bread Making in Many Lan...
The National Food Magazine: What to Eat is a monthly publication 'striving for the enactment of laws that will prohibit the manufacture or importation of any food or beverage deleterious to public health.' This issue of the magazine includes articles on: Women Food Inspectors, Menus for Everyday of the Week, Germany, the Home of Honest Foods and Honest Prices, Comparison of Wage and Salary Increases, Olives and Olive Oil, Bread Making in Many Lands - Salvador, In Candyland, and Food, The Government, and The Press: Their Relations to theh People.
Show more
Show less
Field of Study
Food Studies Online
Content Type
Periodical issue
Contributor
Paul Pierce, 1866-
Date Published / Released
1910-03, 1910
Publisher
Pierce Publishing
Series
National Food Magazine
Topic / Theme
Domestic life, Food industry, Cooking, Foods, The Gilded Age & Progressive Era (1876–1913)
Sections
×