The Omaha guide. (Omaha, Neb.) 1927-19??, March 23, 1956, Page Three, Image 3

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jYoung Set Has Parking Problems Too
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.-— - • •'»*••• . ■V«*V.V.VV.V.V.W*V,V.V,-.W. .v.v.v-.-.viii
Young Stuart Spencer, 6, looks a little woebegone, while Becky
Pierce, 8, seems a little irate, as Miami policeman, Dave Sbulman
prepares a parking ticket on their flashy little car. This scene might
be repeated years from now when the kids are grown up, for the
car in ^ ion is an exact miniature working model of Pontiac
Motor Division’s famous dream car, the “Club dc Mer.” The minia- ‘
tare really rt ns—on battery power, and is currently being shown
around the country in conjunction with the 1556 GM Motorama,
where its tig brother, the “Club dc Mer” is attracting thousands of ’
eager sports car enthusiasts to the Pontiac exhibit.
i How About That!
I
lTn home-dyeinq,removal of the old color is
necessary, when be fobric is unevenly faded
or spotted, when you'ne chanqinq from a
dark color io a l/qfrfer shade or
when switch/ nq to a different color.
Hitherto, packqqed color remover
worked well only on natural-fibers
like coflon.silk. linen and wool
- — ^ >•
iU linte* Home Economics Bureau
reports development of miracle formula*
color remover, uihich
is effective on both
mtural and mon
mo die fibers such as
acetate and nylon—
turihout boilinq/
Netuhormuia nasTUX)
r color- strippinq aqents. one -for
friendly natural fibers, the other
for hostile* synthetics. Its the second
aqent that does the trick, qoinq info
action when resistance is met.
m
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The Calcium Needs Of Mot ler And Child •<*!
Shortage of crlcium, the mineral most important to sound bones and
teeth has long posed a problem in prenatal care.
A frequent symptom of calcium deficiency is leg cramps. These ait
experienced by more than 50 per cent of expectant mothers. If the
deficiency becomes severe enough, the baby’s bone formation might
even be anected. It may also cre
ate health hazards for the mother.
However, calcium deficiencies can
exist silently in the mother’s sys
| tem, without the appearance of leg
cramps.
Medical science has always been
•cutely aware of the increased cal
cium needs of expectant mothers
•nd the growing child in her womb.
; To fill the additional requirements,
doctors have prescribed calcium—
•nd protein rich diets, vitamins,
, as well as a long-used prenatal
1 dietary supplement called dical
cium phosphate.
} Recent medical studies have
•hewn that calcium deficiency is
•ctr lly only one aspect of the
problem. The other is an over
•uppiy of phosphorous which acts
•s an antagonist to absorption of
the calcium that can enter the
blood stream of the mother and
.unborn child.
1 In fact, clinicians have reported
th. . the phosphates normally pres
ent in a rich protein diet, and in
the dicalcium phosphate supple
ment, actually lower the calcium
content in the blood of the preg
nant female and her unborn child
to the point of a rathei severe
Insufficiency.
1 An adequate quantity of calcium
is necessary to life not only be
cause the mineral supplies about
80 pei cent of the substances
nec sary foi healthy bone forma
tion, but is also essential to normal
heart action Calcium also plays
•n important role in the body’s
blood-clotting mechanism.
1 Furthermore, the mineral helps
the nervous system to function
properly, and makes it possible
for the body to obtain energy from
the food it consumes.
Although the ordinary North
American diet is ample to fulfill
these functions—its average cal
cium content is 0.85 gm. per day—
it does not provide enough of the
substance to fill the needs of
mother and child. According to
medical authorities this need rises
to 1.5 gm. in pregnancy, and
continues during the period of
lactation.
The answer to prenatal calcium
deficiency now seems to have been
found. Doctors who have tested a
new calcium supplement, called
Calcisalin, which is free of phos
phates, report the new remedy
notably raises calcium levels in
the blood and reduces the incidence
of leg cramps. Calcisalin is rein
forced with vitamins and minerals 1
known to be required in prenatal
supplementation. Aluminum hy
droxide gel is also added because
it reduces the amount of phos
phorous compounds absorbed jnto
the mother’s system.
POLICE!
*!?►* MOST FAMOUS RX1CS
[ORGANIZATION IN THE WORLD
IS SCOTLAND YARD ITS
16.000 MEN PATROL AND
SERVICE 754 S0UAR6
MILES OP LONDON. THE
POLICE FORCE. FOUNDED W
SR ROBERT PEEL WERE
rrst called ‘peelers’
later.'mmws:
^ TOLL CALL! .
(Before the invention of the telegraph,
MESSAGES WERE TRANSMITTED OVER HUNDREDS OP
MILES BY USE OF SEMAPHORES. TOWERS WERE
USED FOR TRANSMISSION-THE LONGEST SYSTEM
RAN FROM GERMANY TO RUSSIA, A D/STAUCE OF
, li , ■! r m pi pf—ypywryewn1"
BV INVESTING IN US. SAVINGS BONDS SENSIBLE,FORWARD LOOKING AMERICANS
ARE giving themselves a break bv looking to the future and
BUYING US.SAVINGS BONUS. WHY WAIT— START YOON
PROGRAM TOOAV.'__
Spring Frocks For Easter Parades
FRESH AS A SPRING BREEZE!—crisp and colorful as a new blossom
—that’s the look for Easter. Shown here are two dresses sure to be youi
pets through all the balmy days ... when spring fever strikes so reck
lessly. The one-piece printed silk and cotton sleeveless dress (left) ha*
the new torso waistline and a tricky, flattering criss-cross neckline.
Available in turqv-oise (stolen from a robin’s egg) sky blue and soft
blush pink. The or.e-piece printed sateen cotton (at right) has a full,
full skirt gathered into deep pleats at the low torso. Tiny cap sleeves, a
demure sweetheart neckline and a peek-a-boo ribbon belt complete a
dainty picture. In turquoise, green and gold. Both dresses in junior sizes
7 to 15 at Penney stores—Easter fashion centers.
► They’ll Lead The Easter Parade
RATING OH’S AND AH’S from the crowd—their little majesties join
the Easter Parade—hand in hand and adorably dressed up. The lady
wears a nylon velveray dress with a rayon acetate hoop slip (just like
the big girls wesr). Rosebuds and lace trim the nylon sheer bertha col
lar and the scalloped edge of the tunic skirt. Hair is kept neat and pretty
by the flower clip hat. Matching plastic bag is trimmed with roses. The
gentleman wears a butcher rayon tan and brown sport suit. His hat ia
of imported easy fitting straw cloth, a natural dress-up hat for Easter.
His jacket has three patch pockets, slacks have elasticized back and full
belu Both machine washable in navy, tan and brown. Boys’ and girls’
outfits in sizes 3 to 8 at Penney stores. -
SPRING STORAGE CUE: Take a tip from homemaking experts
and keep your portable typewriter handy when spring storage
time rolls around. Then, suggests the Royal Typewriter Company,
you can type up neat labels listing the contents of each storage
box—“Yellow Blankets,” “Children’s Snow Suits,” etc. Pasted on
the outside of the storage container, your typed label can be
read at a glance, and will save the trouble of opening every sin
gle box when hunting for one particular garment next fall. Your
typewriter’s handy for other household tasks too, including club
reports, shopping lists, writing out recipes and family corre
spondence. (ANS)
Give Thanks for Frozen Vegetables
5*sw: Pa • !W-;:»»»■■»[»■ •" v.yW7.Mim.»ta mmamnMMu.v. ...
WHEN IT COMES TIME TO PREPARE HOLIDAY MEALS, all
of us are grateful for time-savers. The bountiful Thanksgiving
dinner used to take hours . . . even days ... to prepare. But
nowadays, thanks to quick-frozen foods, the vegetables, at least,
can be prepared quickly. Perhaps you’ll serve asparagus spears,
arranged in bundles and garnished with a strip of pimento, or
green peas cooked with mint, and this creamy corn pudding,
easily made with Birds Eye golden sweet corn.
CREAMY CORN PUDDING
1 tablespoon butter VA cups milk (part cream, it desired)
1 tablespoon flour 1 teaspoon grated onion
VA teaspoons salt 2 eggs, slightly beaten
yA teaspoon sugar 1 box (10 ounces) quick-frozen
Va teaspoon pepper golden sweet corn, thawed *
1 tablespoon chopped pimento
Melt butter. Add flour, salt, sugar and pepper, mixing well
to blend. Add milk gradually, stirring until smooth. Cook and
stir over medium heat until thickened. Remove from heat, add
onion, eggs, and corn, and mix well. Then carefully stir in the
pimento. Spoon into 1-quart baking dish. Place in pan of hot
Water and bake, uncovered, in moderate oven (350° F.) 1 homy
or until firm. Makes 4 servings. (ANS)
Brighten Up Your Diet
Chief complaint of many dieters is not the quantity of food allowed,
but the monotony of most diets. It’s that longing for something really
different in flavor ... a zesty sauce or an intriguing dessert.
Now, it’s easy to turn out low-calorie dishes that rate high in flavoi
and appetite appeal. Help comes from the new non-caloric sweetener,
Sucaryl, which can be used to replace sugar in practically all your
cooking and baking. This is the sweetener that has a natural sugar
like sweetness, and never leaves a bitter aftertaste.
Any dieter can enjoy the glamorous Coffee Spanish Cream, pictured
here. Sucaryl does the sweetening job, and, as a result, each serving
contains just 45 calories. Ordinarily, when sweetened with sugar, the
same dessert would contain 110 calories almost times as many!
Coffee Spanish Cream
2 eggs 3 teaspoons instant coffee
Vi cup water 4 teaspoons Sucaryl solution
1 cup skim milk or 32 tablets
1 tablespoon gelatin Vi teaspoon salt
teaspoon vanilla
Separate eggs, putting whites into small mixer bowl. Set aside. Mix
egg yolks and remaining ingredients in top of double boiler; beat
enough to blend. Cook over boiling water 6 minutes until mixture
barely coats spoon, stirring constantly; remove from heat. Beat egg
whites until stiff; slowly add hot custard while beating on low speed.
Pour into a 3-cup mold or into 6 j^-cup molds. Chill until set,
at least 2 hours.
Makes 6 servings. Each serving contains 45 CALORIES, 4.9 grams
protein, 1.8 grams fat, 2.1 grams carbohydrate. If made with sugar,
each serving would contain 110 CALORIES.
'Easter Fun And Feasting
DECORATING EASTER *E«GTREES/
V.I’ ' ''V'T^'flRST HOLLOWED
PIERCING
TH ENDS, THEN
OWING OUT RAW
YTENTS. AFTER
ING BRIGHTLY
-ORED, THEY'RE
TACHED TO A 1
EE BOUGH OR.
BUSH WITH GAY
R<BBON LOOPS.
i
EAREY ABSTAINED from EATING
AT^ASTFBrTnr EM-7' HEMCE THEIR SYMBOLISM
' TucEtfJfTTi«E--™E ANCIENT PERSIANS WERE
THE FIRST TO COLOR HARD-BOILED EGGS. ^
LIKE EGGS, GOOD COFFEE IS AN IM
u??r7?NTr PART 0F EASTER FESTIVITIES
E66S FOR EASTER MORNING
FUN, STEAMING HOT COFFEE FOR
THE PERFECT EASTER PINNER.
BUT DON’T MIX THEM UP. YOU
_DON’T NEED EGGSHELLS To
CLEAR PROPERLY-BREWED
COFFEE, AND UNLIKE YOU
colored EGGS, COFFEE
never be BOILED.
A)
His Seven-League Marketing Boots
Every fifth ton of America's SIS billion export trade cornea
from its farmlands. One farm income dollar in eight cornea
from overseas sales. The prosperity of our farmers is directly
dependent on the strength of the American Merchant Marine
and the assured access its ships provide to foreign markets.
/What's Coming In 1966???V
iFirnm1
Bt sum i
‘HIGHWAYS' J
without mac
LIGHTS TKOM *
COAST TO COAST*
AND CHICAGO TO MIAMI.
. _ ''
$oooo commm^"
m now wwd py trucks
m mi id - m w numbtr m pkobubl y
MBit in to ym. , .,
PMYMKING (CACHING sw
loadid me mum on
railroad FLATCARS) AND f '
FISHWACKING (CmT
¥/ LOMD meTRNLlk) rf'v/
-r/ stcamsmpsj m bl mu me
■ merm in rmrocm men s goons.
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Phone Your News To HA0800