OCR Text |
Show ' THE M1DVALE SENTINEL - PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY Entered as Second Class Matter at the Postofflce at Midvale, Utah, under the Act of March 9. 1878. HOWARD C & IVA E. BARROWS, Owners PETER B. WOOLLEY. Editor & Publisher Subscription Rate, per year Out of State, per year .32.00 By COLLIER , -- Ipuiii ! ? : ' W , I "Yon wouldn't let that torch be torn from her hand bnt some people think they can crush freedom of enterprise without annihilating Libert; !" Still State Street naively conceited as to think that the raps we've been taking at the condtion of State street the last few weeks had anything to do with the slight improvement noted this week. The "workers" on the highway have actually filled a few have actually done a little grading. You can holes here & there now average five miles per hour instead of two & a half. But in spite of this slight improvement the road is still a disbe grace to the government & people of Utah. We should ashamed of ourselves. Why can't we have good roads here. Do we lack the talent? Or is it just that we lack talent to elect officials who can Sx. will see that we get them? Speaking of roads we'd like to put this out for what it is worth. This state needs two principal highways. One east & west from Wyoming to Nevada the other north & south from Idaho to Arizona. These should be super highways. Dualed & parked in between to prevent head collisions. They should be as straight & level as modern engineering can make them. They should skirt all cities to avoid congestion of & for through traffic. They should be built without grade crossings & traffic lights. They should be engineered so that the average speed of 60 miles per hour & upward can be maintained without driver fatigue. Serious consideration should be given to prohibiting their use by trucks except light panel trucks which can be operated similarly to passenger cars. Other states can build such highways why not Utah. Witthe g in ness the Pittsburgh-HarrisburPennsylvania, turnpike New Merritt Parkway in Connecticut, the roads of California & Jersey, to mention a few. Without such a highway the development of Utah is seriously impeded. How about it? We'd be the last to be so Cars In Czechosavakia There's no trouble in buying a car in Czechosolvakia, where the automobile industry has been nationalized &, like practically all other enterprise, is run by the state. All you have to do is to walk into an agency & plunk down the money. The only catch is the price. The available car, a two door sedan costs more than 415,000 crowns, which is about $S,300. That sum represents 80 months of the average worker's pay. The car according to an A P, dispatch is "considerably smaller than the 1933 Chevrolet." If you have a ration permit providing your need of a car, other than a desire to own one, you can get it for about $4,000. That is an excellent example of how regimented economies, which have abolished all competition & all free enterprise, pro duce goods for the people. There" is no need to improve quality or reduce prices the customer takes what the government offers him or does without. Absolute monoply prevails. Only the ' 'elite" class or office holder has sufficient income or political pull to live beyond a subsistence level. Riiss Changes Are Logical The recent shifts of key men within the Soviet government have stirred up an apparently endless discussion as to whether this may be the prelude to some new tangent in Krerrdin policy. The iron curtain is so opaque that no one can answer that with certitude at this distance. However, the experts, after mulling over all the available facts & guesses, have generally come to the conclusion that the changes stem from perfectly logical reasons, which have a relatively small influence on the relations of Russia with the West. The key to the whole business may be found in conditions Within, the Soviet Union & her satellite. Things aren't going as well as the Communists want. The difficulties with Tito have provided the most publicized example of this. But what is happening in Yugoslavia is also happening, though in a different way & on a smaller scale, in Hungary, Bulgaria & elsewhere. governments are experiencing special trouble in bringing the peasants into line. Soviet-dominat- ed HONEYBELLE THESE KIDS OF OURS . . . 15, 1S49 Page 9 SPRAGUE ANDREW By TRY 1HV9 ON STUMPY.' y P. M. Mickelsen Director of Pupil Personnel Jordan School District QVARREL1SQ FREEDOM IS WHOLE . The MIDVALE SENTINEL Friday, April CI11LDREX I have two girls, one is 8 years of age. the other 12. These girls are always quarreling & fighting & seem to think the other gets the best of everything. We try to treat them both the same & I am sure we love one as much as the other. The older one wants & expects a lot of attention & is always ready to be loved. The younger stays away from me, resents my loving her & seems to avoid me. Can you tell me what the matter is & what I can do to help? Mrs C B This letter poses quite a problem & one on which I hesitate to express an opinion without further study & diagnosis. Certainly the overt behavior mentioned by Mrs B indicates that her girls are having difficulty in adjusting to each other & to their enviornment. Since all behavior is the caused somewhere along course of their development these children have had real or imagined experiences which make them react the way they do. If we can find the cause we can hope to eliminate the symptom which is their behavior today. It would be useless to attack the symptoms without treating the cause. I would suggest to this mother that she think about experiences which might recall wether or not the first child was adequately prepared for the coming of the second. It is always a distinct shock to a child when realization comes to her that she must share the attentions, the love & the care of her parents with a newcomer into the family circle. Much of this feeling of being supplanted by careful preparation for the coming of the baby sister & by wise actions after her arrival. When the new baby came did you & your husband make such a fuss over her that you failed to notice your other child? If there is a time when we should go overboard in lavishing affection on our child it is when a new arrival comes. Include her in all your plans for the baby, give her an opportunity to share in its care & take it for granted that she will love her baby sister. Remember that all babies are selfish creatures & that consideration for oth- ers must be learned. We cannot expect a child who has been the center of her universe for four years to willingly submit to sharing that center with another unless she has been adequately prepared. Your older child gives evidence of craving attention & of wanting to be reasured. She seems to have missed being your sole interest & resents her sister as an interloper. She wants to be loved & I suggest that you let her know how important she is & how much you do love her. It might be well for you or your husband or both to take her with you to some activity where she can have you to herself. Share confidences with her & let her feel that she, being older, can do & understand many things her sister cannot. Be sure to develop the Idea that as she receives more privileges because of being older so also she should assume more responsibilities & show more understanding towards her sister. If you can get her to adopt a protective, sympathetic, tolerant toward her siser quarrels should lessen. As to your younger child; maybe she is just an independent personality who does not want attention at this time. Maybe she is just surfeited with attention & wants to be let alone. Perhaps she is jealous of her sister & takes on an aloof attitude in an attempt to punish you. It might even be that she has had her own way too much. Often older children have ben made to "give in" indiscriminately to the baby. When they rebel the younger child will resort to devious means in order to maintain the status quo. A little quarreling & bickering is natural among children in a family. Perhaps sorme of it is even necessary to rub off a few of the rough edges & is Just an incident in the process of growing up. But too much strife should not be tolerated. When such a condition prevails it is well to seek out the causes of friction & eliminate them where possible. at-itu- de X Jake's ( M COM fM tT CtMfftAl MAHjItli IC fWCMJ fttGMTS iiY? ; By Arlene "Jake" Jacobson Know who started going steady last Sunday night? Well, if you don't, then maybe you've noticed a certain girl wearing a certain boy's sweater. Anyway that certain girl is Alton Wright & the sweater she is wearing belongs to Ray Hansen. (Even if she is wearing it, it's still his!) Jackie Miner's & Joyce Gordons party turned out to be a lot of fun. The few who were there included the following Joyce Gor don & Calvin Jenkins, Jackie Miner & Ronald Johnson, Albert Williams (the honored guest) & Lillian Wallgren, Russell Robinson & Maurine Bingham, Gayle , Miner & Doone Larson, Bob Bush i& Beverly Jensen, Richard Rosse & Carol Leonard, Jerry VanDam & Ellen Price, Bob Thomas & Francis Brown. Gary Crane came stag. They spent most of the evening dancing & the rest of it playing games & eating. The party let out about 11:30. A few kids from Jordan went to the Rainbow Randevu Sat urday night to see "The Ink Spots." Sophy Pappas went with Bob Archer from Park City & Dale Owsley took Janet Sjoblom. It was so crowded that it was hard to recognize anybody you knew. (Those Inkspots are really that he had also requested promotional literature f rom other states for distribution in Europe. "The Uah material is by far the best promotion I've seen or received from any of the other U S tourist areas & that includes New Orleans, Cheyenne, Niagara Falls, Seattle, Miami, etc.. Its a more intelligent job all around" he wrote. I t ah Beat For Poultry The low humidity, climate, favorable altitude & absence of poultry diseases makes southeastern Utah ideal for turkey raising, declares Elsworth Jewkes, prominent Carbon & Emery county poultryman. Sunday afternoon Clifton Green & June Dean & Verl Harrison & Donna Allen took a cruise to the zoo. There, now do you see what I mean? (About Cupid & Spring & love etc.) There's a lot more couples seen together lately than before. If you watch you'll notice it. Last night was the Mothers & Daughters "Night Out." With the program that was prepared I think every mother ( & her daughter too) really had a lot of fun. With Ruby Glover in charge, who wouldn't have fun?) Did you know that "Mitch" Price was awarded with a four year scholarship to attend Columbia university? Well, he was. (I sure wish that 1 had a little mental ability.) Enclosed order fpr R: new please my Midvale scription. find money Sentinel sub- Mary E Shewell Riverton, Utah Sir: I will appreciate very much if you will send me a receipt for the $2 I am sending you for my Sentinel subscription. Thank you very much. Hazel II on II Sir Here is $2.50 for another year of the Sentinel. However, my subscription was paid up until Jan 1, 1949, instead of November as your statement reads. An error occured in this way: I sent $2 in January 1948, before the statement arrived asking $2.50. So I sent an ad to the publisher & added the 50 cents to the check for the ad. Apparently it was never accredited. Thank you for adjustment & for a fine paper. Ora Stewart Sirt Your circulation must b e climbing with the picture coverage you give. Keep it up. I like it I'll keep on buying it. One of Riverton's '"Old Folks." Sir: As a commuter to Midvale, I believe I voice the opinion of my fellows when I deplore the bus service between Midvale & Salt Spotlighting n UTAH THESE WOMEN! By d'Alessio would look the 150 at f11.-- . thit picture O u -- 4 c r4 iww i Mnn naa ino equivalent vxfjutuiv ui Made with an exposure of . : i i . Kmc Ogden, Utah i & Equivalent Cxprnure By John Van Guilder If spring foliage seem to call for color, don't think its beauty can't be captured in black & white prints skillfully made. Cross lighting, back lighting, the wise use of filters & a high quality film-- all help suggest the rich tints of photospring in monochrome graphy. Even without the young miss with the rake, the foliage in today's illustration would be sufficient to mark this picture as an spring shot. For this is the characteristic glow ot yellow leaves in fall, heightened by cross lighting. The same effect can be secured in back lighted pictures or by using a yellow filter say a K2 which not only lightens the By Edith Have NutritionVery High Eggs al Value Have you had your egg today? For an ideal nutrition program, you should have an egg every day though adults can get along very well with' about five a week. If your food budget will permit the children should be given one every day. Almost every one likps eggs for breakfast, but sometimes cost is a factor which prevents their being served regularly at this meal. Again, they are useful for luncheon & supper dishes & also as an ingredient of a souffle or a muffin, a cake or dessert. They have just as much food value when they are used in this way, of course, as when they are cooked separtely. With the coming Spring & warm wether the hens tegin to lay better so the price per dozen is always less & quality is at its best. Now about the nutrition contribution of eggs. The protein is that is to say, it con- tains all the essential amino acids. Two eggs supply just about the same amount as an average size meat seiving. While this is important it is the mineral & vitamin content that we find particularly valuable. They supply the A & a number of the vitamins of the B complex & also vitamin D. They are the only natural foodstuff which supplies the latter. The color of the shell, by the way, has nothing to do with the food value of the egg. Once in we'll hear some one say, "Brown eggs are richer" or "The white eggs are more delicate in flavor." Actually there is no difference. As you probably know, most of the food value is con centrated in the yolk. This is the reason why little children are sometimes given the yolk by lf for from this they get most of the minerals & vitamins. Thus they do not need the extra protein which is supplied by the white. Of course, this is only true when they ore given full quota of milk. Eggs, by the way, have the same value whether they are raw or cooked but are perhaps more easily digested after cooking. A four-oun- One who won- SMART GIRL: One who knows its-se- "Mommy, bow long will it b before I'll be big enough to wear short pants?" leaves in your prbit but emphasizes cloud formations when they appear as a background. However, you'll want to use a longer exposure than normal to compensate for back or side lighting, for the filter, or both. Don't think, however, that you'r re dependent on technical tricks to get all thej feeling of spring. A good choice of subject matter bespeaks the season vith all or a calendar's aut lority. By combining this subject matter of spring with the pictorial effects of foliage, you can get any number of pictures which represent this season of blossoms. And you'll find they help to round out your camera record of the year. Your Food PROBLEMS complete, ders what the younger generation is coming to. , NIECE: What babies crawl on before they learn to walk. what she's talking about & no's what he's thinking about. DRIP: A man who wears his toupee sidesaddle. GENIUS: The talent of a man who's dead. DOUGHNUT: Proof that two halves make a hole. STRAPLESS GOWN: An article of clothing that dfies the law of gravity. t $2 for which please re- DafByf ynitions Paul H Gilbert OLD-TIME- ' - Sir: Lake. Although I live in Salt Lake I happen to work in Midvale & am forced to use the bus line service traveling back & forth. The schedule of busses betw-oemy residence & my job is, I think, lamentable. I During the hours in which I must travel buses run at the rate L'tahn In Foreign Sercices Thanks of one an hour. Almost inevitPID For Literature ably this delays commuters who The UPID has received a word are in a hurry. Overcrowding on the buses is also quite common. of thanks from M Condon, forI for one believe that a more mer Utah publisher & editor now in the U S Diplomatic Service in reasonaWe schedule, should be worked out by the bus company. Greece, for a batch of Utah publiMidvale deserves far better bus city literature. "When I received the big box service than it is currently reof 'Utah Propaganda from you ceiving. A Commuter the other day I was mighty thank- ful that Utah still has a State Executive: A man who sends Publicity Department" wrote Mr his secretary for the bicarbonate Condon. He pointed out in his letter of soda. I 4 V Letteis To The Editoz i neat!) CfheSNAPSNOT GUILD M Barber low temperature is desirable for the sake of that tender texture which makes us enjoy our eggs more. The basic methods for soft & hard cooked eggs as outlined by the Poultry & Egg National Board follow: i SOFT COOKED EGGS Cold Water Method: Place eggs in pan, covering them completely with cold or lukewarm water. B;ng rapidly to boiling. Turn off heat & if necessary set pan off burner to prevent further boiling. Cover & let stand 2 to 4 minutes depending on individual taste. Cool eggs promptly in cold water for several seconds to prevent further cooking & to make them easy to handle. Boiling Water Method: Bring water in pan to rapid boiling, using enough to cover eggs completely. Meanwhile warm very cold eggs slightly in warm water to avoid cracked shells. Trans"-fe-r eggs to water with spoon, turn off heat, & if necessary set pan off burner to prevent further boiling. Cover & let stand six to eight, minutes. Cool as above. Cooking More Than Four Eggs: Use either method. Do not turn off but reduce heat to keep water below simmering. Hold four to six minutes. Cool as above. HARD COOKED EGGS Cold Water Method: Follow did rections for Water Method. Let stand 15 minutes. Cool promptly & thouroughly in cold water this makes the shell easier to remove & helps prevent dark surface on Soft-Cook- ed Eggs-Col- yolks. Brigham City Gets Navajo In- dian School A bill has been signed by Presi- dent Harry Truman to transfer the Brigham City Bushnell Hospital a 15 million dollar wartime project to the bureau of Indian affairs. The bureau plans to convert the big hospital into a school for Navajo Indian children & a center for housing &' training Indians for off reservation employment. vvjuiAijin: jomeunng uiais Possessed by poor people who have money. |