Wholesome Fruit
It wouia leem iike a paradox to say that fruit both warms and cools the body, but sueh is actually the case. In eummer its acids temper and equalJze the heat, and in winter its sugars warm. Sugar and acid, in fact, are so egually balanced in this food formed in the great laboratory of nature that Beither preponderates unduly or to the detriment of the other. We may take the testimony of the birds as to the helthfulness of fruit. The Arabs fonn a good example of a nation that, to a very large extent, Uves on fruit. Who can be more brave than the Arab. or who possesses more dash and elan? "Give an Englishman his beef and beer," says a writer. By all mea-ns. we say, Dut iet mm ana me American, too, combine with them good, wholesome fruit. As we have frequently pointed out in these columns, the employment of fruit as an article of diet is invaluable, and we are happy to say that its consumption in the United States is constantly increasing, and our California fruit is the finest in the world.
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Ann Arbor Argus
Old News