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About Vernonia eagle. (Vernonia, Or.) 1922-1974 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 18, 1925)
Mac Says Christmas and Holl We’ve Moved! into the building day Gifts formerly occupied by the Mellinger Hdw. By so doing, we hope to better serve our many patrons with| an enlarged stock, and a more centrally located Store o We have’them on Call to display look them over while on your shopping trips. BEST WISHES OF THE SEASON MAC'S PHARMACY % How Butter Fat in Milk Is Broken Up window la to go In and charge It. The hardest thing for a young fellow to understand is that when he charges anything It ultimately has to be paid for." When I was a young chap on the farm it was the custom to have a run ning account at the grocery store in the village and at the dry goods store. When any one of the family wanted some article of clothing, or mother wanted groceries for the table, all we had to do was to go Into t£e store and order It. Father paid the bill at the end of the year. The trouble with the system was that the bill was always larger than he or any one of us had suspected There was much discussion before the bill was paid. There were many Item« we had all forgotten about, and the price always seemed larger when th- bill was to be paid than when th- original charge was made. We cam- to see that the merchant who carried the charge never did ao for nothing We paid In the end for more than the credit was worth. We learned that the cheapest and the safest way is t • i>ay cash for what you buy. Baldwin wandered Into my office a , few days ago so old and broken. s > gray and wrinkled, that I scarce! r knew him. He walked with a cane and he carried the stick not for show, but because be needed to bear hl* weight upon it And yet Baldwin was not really an old man. He had been I a gay youth prodlgnl of time and- money. He was strong and healthy and prided himself that he could stand any sort of physical and mental dlssl ■ pation. Ho worked all night often, he ate more than was good for him; he smoked and drank heavily; he could get on with very little Bleep, and he seemed for years to show very llttl- >11 effects from his uncertain habits. It was only another case of running a charge account, however. Nature always asks for a Anal settlement tn such cases, and She piles up compound Interest Baldwin was only paying hie charge account which had been run ning for so many years. Gregory tn bls junior year was hav ing trouble with his studies. He worked harder than he had ever done, he admitted, but he was not getting on. The college was getting more rigid, he claimed, the Instructors were tilling on the work as never before. The real facts were that Gregory was only settling his charge account—with Interest as always. He had loafed during bls first two year* he bad charged his Intellectual accounts, and now he was having to carry himself while paying the old debt. It la ao always. Whatever*we charge mental, moral, or financial, we shall ultimately have to pay with (added In terest Do you know what homogenization moons? Ninety-right out of loo house- wlves to whom the questloif re cently whs put admitted they couldn’t answer Gan you? But here It is explained by Miss Meta II. Given, food authority do ing research work at the Uni versity of Chi cago. "Homogen I z a- tion,” says Miss Given. "Is . the Fat Globules name of the proc In Raw Milk. ess which breaks up butter fat In evai*orated milk Into tiny particles so they blend evenly with the solids. Homogenization causes the butter fat globules to ud- liere to the albumin and the casein of the milk. In the process, milk Is forced through countless numbers of openings at a pressure of around 3,- XM) pounds. “In addition to preventing a cream and skim milk line, this breaking up of flit contributes to smoothness and perfect blending of foods such as '■ream satires, soups. Ice cream and In baked products. "It also has a digestive advantage for those who have difficulty In as similating milk. Many pediatricians recommend evaporated milk as a baby food,'although, like other substitutes for the natural supply, It should not be considered as a food complete In Itself. Addition of orange or tomato juice, barley water or lime water sro Important In providing adequate diet for the Infant. “All authorities recognize that normal mother's milk Is the beat ft>od for Infants, but this natural milk Is frequently ln- adequate tn quality and quan tity. Scientists say cow's milk Is the best sub stitute. But cow's milk must be modified and snp- piemen ted wlth other foods, The fat In mother's milk la In homo « ISM, Wsstsrn Nswspsper ’Uslaa.) geneous suspen ; 4 ++11 m 11 m i 111111 1 1111 >1 sion and being DIPPING INTO flocculent forms small enrds tn SCIENCE the stomach, bnt Hemogenlzatlon. i the fat In cow's W ' i <■< m »111 !■» »i mi >:: 11 milk la In relatively large globules, Old Songs '. I forma large tough enrde In the The lyric for Annie Laurie«^ J stomach and Is much harder to digest. ■ was Inspired by a benuttfuLr • In evaporated milk the fat Is broken woman of that name about 171)0», L up by homogenisation and the curds An earlier fn m I liar rhyme lnj-b ■ softened until in alee and digestibility song, however, was "Three Bllndip ! they resemble natural Infant food.” Mice,” 1009, while “Sing a Song,);; ’ of Sixpence" Is said to date<i , I f back to the Sixteenth century. * Others not so well known werwif I written even earlier. 1 CHARGE IT By THOMAS ARKLE CLARK Dena of Moo, University of Illinois. OWARD was broke, he said, and needing money badly. It was not H only that he was broke, bat he was ■r lonely la debt “The trouble with me,” he said. "Is i hat my credit's too good. All that I need to do when I see a suit of clothea og g sUk shirt or a blaaer in a shot r IS»« W««t»m Newspaper tTnSoa.)' -■-Ml i mt: . i-b +i > i f > I b i ANNOUNCEMENT. Nourishing Drink ^Jor Childre IDABIES and children,, the same as adults, grow weary -of being fed the same food in the same way each day. It Is true that most children take naturally to milk, but that does not mean that they must be fed It ad nauseam. On the contrary, that Is the very thing to be avoided. Pediatricians advise consumption by children of a quart of milk a day In one form or another. This does not mean skim milk, but whole milk, for the skimmed product Is lacking both in butter fat and the essential food element known as vitamin A, which Is found in butter fat. Many mothers do 'not appreciate that removal of cream from the top of a hottie of milk results In skim milk. In evaporated milk, a product rec ommended by many leading doctors for the use of infants and children and which is simply pure cow's milk sterilized In cans and with sixty per rent of the water removed, there Is no cream line. The milk in the top of a can is the same ns it Is in the bottom of the container. This re sults from a proems called homogeniz ation, in which the fat globules in the milk are broken up Into such microscopic bits that they remain in homogeneous suspension. Every drop of homogenized milk has a buttery taste because It contains butter fat. For this reason/ In evaporated milk, there Is none of the flat taste one flnds In drinking from the bottom of a bottle of market milk. In order to avoid feeding the baby or child plain milk three or four times a day. many authorities recommend the use of a mixture of fruit juice and milk, a highly palatable and refresh ing drink. Following is a recipe worked out by experts for an orange-milk drink: Mix In a fruit Jar % of a cupful of orange juice. U of a cupful of evap- ora'ed milk, three teaspoonfuls of wig: r, H tenspoonful of lemon juice und a few grains of salt Shake well heft re serving. ---------- «,---------- We have been delayed a week in our moving, but we will positive^ open in our new quarters on Mon day, December 21st. Don’t forget the new location—on the corner across from the bank and on your way to the postoffice. Our good.! will be of even higher quality than they have been in the past and we — also ’ will carry much more of a var iety. This is your new bakery—you have made it possible and we want you to come in and visit us whether you buy or not.—Vernonia Bakery. --------- ♦---------- Mistress—"So your matrimonial life was very unhappy. What was the trouble? December wedded to may.” Chloe Johnson—"Lan’s sake, no mam. It was Labor Day wedded to the Day ob Rest.” ----------*--------- In the future the Bank of Ver nonia will be open the second and fourth Saturday evenings of each month from 0:30 to 8 p. m. The bank will not be open even ings on the Saturday when t’nere is no pay day at the mill. Bank of Vernonia.—Adv. 191 Have you considered Fruit Cake as a Christmas gift? Our Fruit Cake is of the highest quality and your friends will appreciate it. Send some to the folks far away—time only in creases its goodness and it is easy to pack and mail.—Vernonia Bakery Appropriate Christmas Gifts for Men A ! Petersen’s Popular Prices