Democratic watchman. (Bellefonte, Pa.) 1855-1940, September 12, 1919, Image 6

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    —
Bow fatdan,
Bellefonte, Pa., September 12, 1919.
CORN OIL COMING INTO GEN
ERAL USE.
Replacing Olive Oil for Salad Pur-
poses. Better Than Animal Fats
for Frying.
By Edwin F. Bowes, M. D. Author of
“Alcohol, Its Influence on Mind and
Body.” and “Bathing for Health.”
Ever since the Indians passed the
information along to our old Puritan
fathers and their equally puritanical
wives we, in America, have acknowl-
edged that corn is a wonderfully nu-
tritous and sustaining food.
It is only within recent years, how-
ever, that we have come to realize
that the oil in the germ of the corn,
hitherto regarded as a by-product, is
one of the most valuable of all the in-
gredients of the corn.
For recent experiments have prov-
ed that corn oil, pound for pound, is
one of the most readily converted and
assimilated of all fats, and that it has
very high nutritive qualities by rea-
son of this fact.
Corn oil is a true “made-in-Ameri-
ca” product, inasmuch as its use has
been confined largely to America—
although it is quite conceivable that,
before many years, there will be a
very great demand created for it
abroad—especially in the British
Isles, in all the northern countries of
Europe, and, perhaps, even in the ol-
ive-growing countries themselves.
BETTER THAN OLIVE OIL.
Corn oil has unique qualities, which
give it a great advantage over olive
oil in many respects. For one thing,
its method of preparation preserves it
from rancidity to which olive oil is so
liable, for fermentation processes
have been overcome in the prepara-
tion of corn oil.
Olive oil, as is generally known, is
merely the oil pressed from ripe ol-
ives.
fining or sterilization. So there is
nothing, once the oil has been expos-
ed to the air—or even before, for that
matter—to prevent the action of bac-
teria responsible for the development
of rancidity.
With corn oil, on the contrary, great
care is taken to insure thorough ster-
lization. The crude, yellow oil, ex-
pressed from the corn germs, is puri-
fied by filtration and steaming. Then
the water, protein substances, and
glycerine elements, are removed. In
the oil thus sterilized, any germs that
may have dropped around, are killed.
Further, the oil is deodorized, and the
ferments which later on might cause
rancidity, are completely destroyed.
The result is a limpid, clear, light
yellow colored oil—odorless, and with
a peculiar and agreeable sweet flavor
that satisfies a natural taste. For,
unlike the taste for olives or olive oil,
the liking for corn oil does not have
to be acquired. It comes right along,
and makes itself “to home”—with
American palates, anyhow.
In mixing salad dressing it has been
found that corn oil is equal to the best
olive oil, and very much better than
ordinary olive oil—and at a cost not
to exceed one-half the cost of the
highest grade of imported olive oil.
Indeed, many discriminating South-
Europeans, including Italians, now
prefer the sweet blend oil to olive oil.
Corn oil blends perfectly with the
various ingredients used in “building”
a French or a mayonnaise dressing—
making a perfectly smooth and home-
geneous combination.
One interesting fact ip connection
with this use of corn oil is that corn
oil does not congeal as readily as does
olive oil. It remains fluid down to a
temperature of fourteen degrees;
whereas olive oil becomes cloudy and
solidifies at a temperature of thirty-
two degrees. This makes a very great
difference, for crisp coldness is one of
the first requisites of a salad.
But an even more desirable proper-
ty in corn oil is its correspondingly
higher burning point. While butter
burns at about two hundred and fifty
degrees, goose grease at four hundred
degrees, lard at four hundred and
twenty-five degrees, cottonseed oil at
five hundred and thirty-five degrees,
and olive oil at six hundred. coin oil
does not burn until it is heated up to
Sisdmndied and fifty degrees Fahren-
eit.
It is the low burning point of but-
ter, lard, and other fats and oils, that
fills the house with smoke and stench,
and gives all the neighbors wireless
information as to what the family is
to have for dinner.
KEEPS THE FOOD-JUICES SEALED IN.
The great advantage of a higher
burning point in frying steak, fish,
onions, and other odoriferous foods, is
that the higher temperature, used
with corn oil, makes it possible to
cook the food in a shorter space of
time, and thereby prevents the tough-
ening of the meat, the drying out of
the fish, and the diffusion of the per-
fumes not of Araby from other com-
estibles.
Also, the use of corn oil at its un-
usually high temperature “seals in”
immediately the surface juices of the
food, retaining thereby the flavor,
aroma, and succulence which would
otherwise be lost, or else disseminated
all over the neighborhood. The food
is cooked in its own juice, instead of
being saturated with burnt grease
that would give the food a flavor and
odor anything but desirable.
This makes it possible to fry dough-
nuts, fish, onions, or any food product
in one pan, and at one time—if it
were necessary—without any one pro-
duct taking up the odors or flavors of
any of the other products.
This is carrying American efficien-
cy into the kitchen, with a vengeance
—right into the heart of the frying
pan. All of which makes for the con-
servation of life and health—also for
the increase of happiness and the sat-
isfaction of being alive.
Needed a Friend.
Mamma—“What is the matter, chil-
dren? What are you crying for?”
Little Arthur—“Oh, mamma. I've
dot such a pain in my ’tumich!”
Small Bill—“Nothin’, only you
didn’t hear Arthur at first, so I just
pitched in and helped him cry.”
——TFor high class Job Work come
to the “Watchman” Office.
It undergoes no process of re- |
THE A B G OF THE
| “AGUE OF NATIONS
By DR. FRANK CRANE.
4. What is the League of Nations?
A. A union of the strongest civilized
nations formed at the conclusion of
the great war.
2. What is its object?
A. First, to promote the Peace of
the World by agreeing not to resort to
war. Second, to deal openly with
each other, not by secret treaties.
Third, to improve international law.
Fourth, to co-operate in all matters of
common concern.
8. Does it presume to end war?
A. No more than any government
can end crime, It claims to reduce the
liability of war.
4. What will be done to any nation
that makes war?
A. It will be boycotted and other-
wise penalized.
5. How else will the probability of
war be lessened?
A. By voluntary, mutual and pro-
portionate disarmament; by exchange
ing military information, by providing
for arbitration, by protecting each na-
tion’s territorial integrity and by edu-
cating public opinion to see the folly
of war.
6. What else does the League pro-
pose to do for Mankind?
‘A. (1) Secure fair treatment
labor,
(2) suppress the White Slave
Trafic, the sale »f dangerory
Drugs, and the traffic in Ware
Munitions,
(3) control and prevent Disease,
(4) promote the work of the Red
Cross, and
(5) establish International Bu-
reaus for other Causes that
concern the human race.
7. Who are to be Charter Members
of the League?
A. The United States of America,
Belgium, Bolivia, Brazil, British Em-
pire, Canada, Australia, South Africa,
for
New Zealand, India, China, Cuba,
Czecho-Slovakia, Eucador, France,
Greece, Guatemala, Haiti, Hedjaz,
Honduras, Italy, Japan, Liberia, Nic-
aragua, Panama, Peru, Poland, Poriu-
gal, Rumania, Serbia, Siam, Uruguay
and the following states which are in-
vited to accede to the covenant: Argen-
tine Republic, Chili, Colombia, Den-
mark, Netherlands, Norway, Paraguay,
Persia, Salvador, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, Venezuela.
8. What other nations may join?
A. Any self-governing State which
will agree to the rules of the League.
provided the League accepts it.
9. What Agencies will the League
have?
A. (1) An Assembly, composed of
representatives of all the
member Nations,
(2) a Council of Nine,
(3) a Secretary-General,
(4) a Mandatary Commission, to
look after colonies, etc,
a Permanent Commission, for
military questions,
various International Bu-
reaus; such as the Postal
Union, etc,
(7) Mandataries.
10. What is a Mandatary?
A. Some one nation designated by
the League to attend to the welfare of
“backward peoples residing in colonies
of the Central Empires, or in terri-
tories taken from them.”
a “sacred trust,” and in selecting a
mandatary the wishes of the people
of the area in question shall be the
principal consideration,
11. Does the League mean a Super-
nation?
A. No. It interferes in no way with
any Nation’s Sovereignty, except to
limit its power to attack other nations,
12. Can any Nation withdraw when
it wishes?
A. Yes. The League is Advisory
and Co-operative, not coercive.
13. Does the League put Peace above
Justice and National Honor?
A. No. It puts Reason before Vio-
lence.
14. Does not the League take away
the Constitutional right of Congress to
declare war?
A. No. The League can advise war;
Congress alone can Declare war,
15. Does it destroy the Monroe Doc-
trine?
A. Exactly the contrary. For the
first time in history the other nations
recognize the Monroe Doctrine; and
extend it to all the world.
16. Does it not interfere with Treaty
Making Powers of the United States?
A. No. It is a Treaty. We can make
any Treaty we please.
17. Would we have had the Great
War if we had had this League?
A. No. That War cost the world
over 7,000,000 lives and 200,000,000,000
dollars.
18. Of what
League?
A. It is the greatest deed of man-
kind in the history of the world.
19. Has not anyone a right to ob-
ject to the League?
A. Yes. This is a free country. Any-
one has a right to any opinion he
chooses.
20. Why is the League so bitterly
opposed by a few?
A. Because, unfortunately, any
Treaty or League must be made by the
President, and a President is chosen
by a political party and many mem-
Jers of the opposite Party think they
must decry whatever he does,
5)
(6)
importance is the
—— Subscribe for the “Watchman.”
This is to be |
Baking Diesase Away.
The healing value of heat plus elec-
tricity is a very modern discovery,
but it now is possible for a patient
suffering from rheumatism, sciatica,
paralysis or other ills following
wounds to virtually “cook the pain
away,” for there are electric baths in
the hospitals, where a heat far beyond
boiling point can be generated and
that without discomfort to the pa-
tient.
A man suffering from rheumatism
or other trouble in his legs has them |
first wrapped in cotton wool and then |
inserted in specially constructed
ovens, a perforated asbestos covering
lining the space. Electric current is
then turned on, which passes through
wires in the bath outside the asbestos,
and the temperature is slowly but
surely increased sometimes to 360 de-
grees Fahrenheit without discomfort
to the patient, but with a decided ef-
fect upon pain or stiffness. Electric- |
ity is also passed through the body by |
a new type of generator to remove |
stiffness and paralysis, it having been |
proved possible to heat the flesh to al-
most any temperature by the new pro-
cess without its proving painful or
dangerous.
The Modern Way.
Teacher—“Joseph, can you tell me
why Thomas Jefferson wrote the
declaration of independence?”
Little Joseph—‘“’Cause he couldn’t
afford to hire a stenographer, I sup-
pose.”
Distinction.
Parson—I'm surprised, boys, to see
you in swimming on Sunday. Didn’t
you promise you wouldnt?
Jimmy—7Yes, sir, but we ain’t swim-
min’, we are only bathin’.
a
demand more of
ialists
vote their lives,
their activities,
dozen packing
men. It is the
equipment.
the
purposes?
Experts or Theorists—
Which?
The packing industry is intri-
cate, complex—far more so than
the railroads or the telegraph.
Every day multiplying needs
of society increase its problems
and multiplying responsibilities
Highly trained experts, spec-
of years’
thinkers and creative men, de-
problems of the packing industry
and meeting its widening duties.
Swift & Company is not a few
hundred branch houses, a few
thousand refrigerator cars, and
a few million dollars of capi-
tal, but an organization of such
telligence, initiative and activity
which operates this physical
Can this intelligence, this ex-
perience, this initiative and cre-
ative effort which handles this
business at a profit of only a
fraction of a cent per pound from
all sources, be fostered through
intervention
theorists, however
Or be replaced by
legislation? Does Congress really
think that it can?
=
it.
experience,
their energies,
to solving the
plants, a few
experience, in-
of political
pure their
Let us send you
Union Stock Yards,
It will interest you.
Address Swift & Company,
a Swift “Dollar”.
Chicago, Ill.
Swift & Company, U.S. A.
THIS SHOWS
WHAT BECOMES OF
THE AVERAGE DOLLAR
RECEIVED BY
AND BY PRODUCTS
85 CENTS 1S PAID FOR THE
LIVE ANIMAL i
12.96 CENTS FOR LABOR J
FREIGHT /
Fe Fe 1 Fo Ft 8 Fe | | Fi | rt or A i RT
Your Suit, is Ready
to Try On
is
We say this because we know we have
the suit to please you.
IRERE
Our extensive and varied stock is cer-
tain to include the style that best becomes
you.
In selecting this season’s suits we made
an unusual effort to get types and styles
that would meet many of the individual tastes
among the their
patronage.
High Art. Clothes
Made by Strouse & Brothers, Inc., Baltimore, Md.
friends who favor us with
RAR YR
2a
do much to make this easy for us, as their
faithful service brings back our customers
year after year. This trademark stands for men’s
clothes that are fine in quality, and desirable in
cut, style and pattern.
| [oe | [oe | | [| [|
Therefore we say again, “Your suit is
ready to try on.”
Fauble’s
sa Allegheny St., BELLEFONTE, PA.
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Your Banker
The institution with which you main-
tain banking relations can be of service to
you in many ways.
The Centre County Banking Co.
does not consider that its service to its pa-
trons ceases with the safeguarding of their
funds. It keeps in personal touch with all
of them in such a way as to be of assistance
very often when other matters develop
affecting their interest.
It Invites You to Take Advantage
of Its Unusual Service.
60-4
Consult Your Banker
Do not invest vour money with strang-
ers, who offer fabulous profits.
not be after your money if their representa-
tions were true. Wild Cat promoters are very
busy now. Consult a
fore investing. We have financial data con-
cerning all reputable securities. It is at your
service.
The First National Bank.
61-46-1y
They would
reputable banker be-
Bellefonte, Pa.
INTERNATIONAL TRUCKS
WILL DO ALL YOUR HAULING
3-4 Ton for Light Hauling
Big Truck for Heavy Loads
“Greatest Distance for Least Cost”
" GEORGE A. BEEZER,
BELLEFONTE, PA. 61-30 DISTRIBUTOR.
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