The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, February 02, 1939, Image 7

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    (Copyright, W. NX. U)
OH WELL--
AFTER ALL,
THERE'S NO
PLACE LIKE
IN |
By
J. Millar Watt
\ ————
“= © Dell Syndicate —WNU Service
THE=E is one food that can
lay claim to being almost uni-
quarter of the globe.
to nuts.
Nuts, of course, are seeds.
But unlike most other seeds
This forms a sealed package
which makes nuts easy to
store, and comparatively easy
to keep.
A Concentrated Food
food and provide a large amount
of food value in a
small convenient
form. Once they
are shelled, there
has been suggest-
ed, therefore, that
they might profita-
bly appear in the
i menu far
frequently
? GO.
different
vary in
them contain
h protei hers con-
at whil
at, while
nuts has
rather similar to
i In fact,
s complete
their pro-
§ cat able
ang re-
many
With Grains
ire
»d to vari-
said to
0 the pro-
.
a per cent
s300h
Such
its are im-
and there-
roasted be-
Fresh chestnuts con-
42 per cent and
Ti441
a little over 74 per
cookin
yroved by
Mineral and Vitamin Values
The amount of mineral salts in
Gen-
erally speaking, however, nuts are
considered a rich source of phos-
phorus and a good source of man-
ganese and of copper and iron, re-
quired for the formation of the
hemoglobin or red pigment in the
blood.
nsidered a poor
mn; or at best only
air source of this mineral which |
required for helping to build
bones. Two noted
ors, however, determined
as a result of careful experiments,
that in adults the calcium of al-
monds was fairly well utilized by
the body. It is not as well utilized,
however, as the calcium of milk.
in-
Nuts are not regarded as a sig- |
nificant source of any vitamin ex-
cept B, though some kinds have |
also been found to contain vitamin |
A. As they are frequently served |
in combination with fruits, how-
ever . . . in salads and as des-
serts ,. .
tion usually supplies a substantial
Place in the Menu
with meats and
interchangeably
compared
used
may
They are espe-
combined
dinner.
good
vegetables,
even
cially when
or a
with
rmrhrhvdrate
carbohydrate
made into cro
casserole combin:
14 - " «}
stitute a one-dish
advisable to allow them to replace
milk or eggs.
It is highly desirable, however,
that homemakers and their fami-
lies regard nuts as a food and not
as a tidbit to be served at the end
already nutrition
Thorough Mastication Desirable
It is also important to encour-
age the thorough chewing of nuts,
them more
stible. For children, nut
desirable.
prepared in
or pastes. In
not difficult for
Juices to penetrate
and nuts may be consid-
as y digestible as other
are especially
are also
the form of
meal
forms it is
ighly concentrat-
seen, it is also ad-
is containing
ount of bulk or cel-
its included in a
y..1 3
iliose when nuts are
| Questions Answered
B. T. L.—There is no im-
nutritive
ity of eggs when they are
food does not con-
Mrs.
yrtant change in the
qual
vitamin C,
stroyed in the cooking.
Mrs. D. T. F.—The
me pickles are
ason that
\ is par-
g fermenta-
y due, at
» acid formed
Lion
ton Goudiss— 1038-47,
THESE pretty dresses will be
exactly as smart for spring
they are right now! So get a head
start on your sewing for the com-
ing season by makin ]
the winter weather is keeping
indoors so much anyhow.
designs are so ea:
you'll enjoy work
the guidance of beginners, and
you will enjoy your clothes much
more when the fabrics are of your
own selections.
Blouse-With-Skirt Fashion.
Here's a smart design that you
will repeat time and again in dif-
ferent fabrics for every season of
the year. Blouse - with - skirt
dresses, like all two-piece styles,
are much in favor right now, and
this one is unusually smart and
becoming. The skirt flares from
a lifted, princess waistline. The
blouse, on classic shirtwaist lines,
has bosom fullness and high-
shouldered sleeves
© Bell Syndicate ~WNU Service,
“How do you expect to get that
“Get all the other girls abusing
me for all they're worth.”
A little boy went up to his grand-
father and said, ‘“Are you very, very
old, grandpa?"
The old man said, “I'm 95, my
son.”
Then: the youngster asked him,
“Have you lost all your teeth?”
And grandpa said, “Yes, my boy,
I haven't got a tooth in my head.”
' So the lad said, “Well, that's all
right. You can mind my roasted
peanuts.”
NOT A MECHANIC
First Artist—Did you ever make
Second Artist—No, success has
AROUND
the HOUSE
“& Items of Interest
ol to the Housewife
Led gn LN SE
For Baby's Safety.—Keep the
handles of kettles on the stove
Lowering High Ceilings.—One
way to help make a ceiling look
lower is to use simple valances at
high windows.
* * »
Cleaning Isinglass.—Apply vine
gar on a cloth to the stains on
isinglass on stoves. With a little
rubbing, the stains will come off.
. * -
For Coffee Stains.—Remove cof-
fee stains from table linen with
glycerin, Apply glycerin and let
stand three or four hours or until
stain disappears.
. + »
Save Your Back.—Whether to
buy a stove with a working sur-
face over a low oven or a high
oven, it may pay to.remember
that bending requires four times
as much energy as standing.
- » *
Use for Old Christmas Cards, —
When you are through with your
Christmas cards, the children will
enjoy cutting, pasting and redeco-
rating them,
Flavoring Mashed Potatoes.—
One teaspoon of onion juice or half
a sliced raw onion added to
mashed potatoes gives them a dif-
ferent flavor.
* - -
For Gravy or Soup.—When you
wish to make gravy or soup with
the water in which meat has been
cooked, wring a cloth out in cold
water and strain the liquor
through it. No grease will go
through.
* * *
The Child's Chair.—A child's
dining chair should be only deep
enough to support his back and
yet shallow enough to allow his
knees to bend, and it should have
a support if the child's feet do not
reach the floor.
Fragrant Incense
When gratitude overflows the
swelling heart, and breathes in
free and uncorrupted praise for
benefit received, propitious Heav-
en takes such acknowledgment
as fragrant incense, and doubles
all its blessings.—Lillo,
flat crepe,
tton blouse and
in tie silk or
h a silk or c«
skirt
Monastic Dress for Girls,
is the success of the sea-
and it's the easiest thing
make with the dia-
s¢ and straight
and
fullness
is fastened round
ho wears 10-to-16
this charming
Ik print, flat
1lder yoke,
* yr arnnfisl
i‘, Braceiul
wool
The Patterns.
lesigned for sizes, 12, 14,
Size 14 requires
! naterial for
louse; 2% yards
of 54
i 40
2 yards
for the skirt.
ined “or sizes 10, 13,
With short
aterial; with long
: 5% yards for con-
to The Sewing
Dept., 247 W.
New York,
rns, 15 cents
icate —WNU Bervice,
r Constipated? You 7)
Should Get at the Cause!
Lots of people think they can't be
“regular” without frequent trips
to the medicine chest. “I just
dose up and get it over,” they tell
you. But doctors know they
don’t “get it over” af all-until they
get at the couse of the trouble!
Chances are it's simple to find
the cause if you eat only what
most opie do — meat, bread,
potatoes. It's likely you don’t pet
enough “bulk” And “bulk”
doesn't mean a Jot of food. It's a
kind of food that isn't consumed
in the body, but leaves a soft
“bulky” mass in the intestines
and helps a bowel movement.
If that fits you, ticket is a
crunchy break! cereal — Kel-
Jogg’s All-Bran. It' contains
intestinal tonio, vitamin B,, ©
Reh, Al)-Bran every day, drink
iy TS world’ ow Rr
o wor 1
\ Jade by Xellors ‘a Batlle Crest.
Acknowledging Faults
It is a greater thing to know
how to acknowledge a fault than
to know how not to commit one.—
Cardinal de Retz.
POSITIVELY!
“Luden’s are ‘double-
LUDEN’'S
MINTHOL COUGH DROPS Be