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Show LEHI FREE PRESS, LEH1, UTAH SetTn the Welfare ofCliild lUK Pour Pineal Future Dependent on Food Elements in Early Years; Calcium and Phosphorus Both Highly Important for Bones and Teeth. Oyter it bonea with tlssue- - . formation of good bones and Ctfc are calcium and phosphorus, Cicb Insure not only the growth of aiSO u Blcu&w- la body wuv" adults. They also day as do have a proportionately large To make oonnt of phosphorus. pnospuurua luuamu ldom SDU .,wrlv we must nave a uoerai D. In an article bonDt of vitamin flctor K. La oier, proiejstsur oi at CoiumDia university, jmlstry - Ib mada thnt thfa nrn. l uuu mat icrtion Is very important L Mn mnnlv our diets best with Cictom and phosphorus through the or a uoerai uuiuum oi Klasion ... inntn ajnt naa Whfila ac-tL,: gjso are valuable on this For vitamin D we depend Von ninshlne, ou, or roous fob nave been reinforced witn l 0Ce 1 LO HO . cod-liv- Part in other's Family Life the t louia ce to it t- - 1 1 ( Self-Sacrific- ecogmzeuj tijiin- m ; : e, Modern Days. home ! The ii best nail eacy." I That's for Juvenile antidote delin- - issia laid, he state Judge said that show that, by "an nome," he meant what added, "a home with a for Iter who can be found In It." New York A ently. 'hen fashioned Uav opinion, says an eminent Iran writer, there Is much to be for a borne with a mother al ls i in It We have but to think to our own childhood to the tiigeness of those rare occasions, Iffl, returning from school, we did mother In, to realize this. !i srinj solli my .1 mile at 3 And to fk dual tloa what did that However, old-fash- - mean to the woman who Is the mother "always In it?" la many Instances It meant a life 4 borne and narrow. It meant with petty detail 4 was all to the good, no doubt. e ber family's physical comfort la concerned, but which inevitably a void when it came to the men- comradeship, the real understand ing; companionship, which is the ira mother's aim, though she snot be 'orty always in the home. To j" at mm of Imagination a life of al- N.J. Wng in the home must have d a nigh! certain amount of bore- i tba f' h any age. And the ranks of I bit prematurely aced are recruited quit. pre go successfully as from umscribed tapation t T the bored. and ;nder, f ,th incla. . izzled es, to s the Mn I shoe e but r toM fi where did the husbands come nth these wives whom they mar- women and soon knew chiefiv aethers? That depended of course faat they expected from a wife. nr interest in this discussion a the children of a home, and they would be better off In fashioned home, with a moth- ys In it It seems to me the l that In each case we get g and we lose something Miot have our cake and eat It, rersODally. I feol that with n pntlous mother, the modern wav reter possibilities for her and ildren. Thp wav mniWn P women more, and thev rnn iHve l"1 children only as richly as nave received. I be- a mother dnoa rtnt- ha nz J UVf Ull) b fcVn ijays in tne nome to hold mogt oi the Interest of that home P V. V. uS? Worst "ample of the m,u, mod- - 6 one wno neglect Perverts her of her home and " tonging glances old:fasl1hSJ&tsuppose,the we took tne 0D W i RhPl6 1 jp,, - f tbe 100' "o would leave much vnu Makes for Forgetfulnew of One's Self. Faprma sb yoiki cup oysters SK whites 1 Melt butter, stir In flour and add milk and stir over low fire until thick and smooth. Stir in slightly beaten egg yolks. Fold in oysters and beaten egg whites. Pour Into Kreased casserole. Set In pan of hot water and bake about forty-fiv- e minutes in moderate oven (375 degrees F .), or until firm. F'3 Tapioca. cup granulated i teafpoon Bait tapioca H cups bollmg water H cup brown sugar 1 Baked Tuna Fish. cups canned tuna fish tablespoons butter tablespoons flour 2 cups strained tomatoes H teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper U teaspoon sugar 1 cup American cheese, grated cup chopped figg cup chopped nuts and boiling ; Co,ok ta"loca. together until clear. Add sugar )4 "It chill and serve with cream. Cauliflower With Mushrooms. head cauliflower 1 cup mushrooms 1 tablespoons butter tablespoons flour 'i cup thin cream or milk oalt and pepper 2 Boil cauliflower and then separate Into sections. Slice the mushrooms and cook iu about one cup of water until tender. Melt the bufter, stir in flour and pour In the mushrooms Flake tuna fish apart Slelt butter, add flour and mix until free from lumps. Add tomato Juice, salt, pepper and sugar. Bring slowly to the boiling point, stirring constantly nntil thick. Add tuna fish, pour Into a buttered casserole and cover top with cheese. Bake in a moderate oven (373 degrees Fahrenheit) twenty to twenty-livminutes. 6. Bell Syndicate WNU Serrlcs. Would Seem This Horse Used His "Think Tank" "PRINTS" ABOUT OLD AS FINGERS Proofs of Their Wide Use in Old Palestine, Of course. It is generally known in this day of wide use of fingerprints for purposes of identification that that merry old Missourian, Mark Twain, did not in truth invent the fingerprint for the use he made of it as an Interesting point In detailing "The Tragedy of Tudd'nliead Wilson." And less generally known is that the fingerprint sweeps back to Its use on official documents in China several centuries ago. But It was known only recently and then by very few persons that the fingerprint was employed in Palestine and possibly with purpose as long ago as six to a dozen centuries before Christ Dr. William F. Bade, professor of Semitic literature and languages In the Pacific School of Religion, In his capacity as director of the Palestine Institute of the Tell expedition, studying pottery and bits of earthenware recovered by searchers from a mound near Jerusalem in the last four years, has recognized a pattern of fingerprints running through many of the specimens that indicates that they were used then almost as we use trademarks In the Twentieth century. Prof. August Vollmer, former police chief in Berkeley, who is now teaching police administration In the Pacific school, aided Doctor Bade In the study, turning his knowledge of fingerprints and their distinctive characteristics to good account in classifying the groups of relics according to their makers. The knowledge thus gained has a practical value in determining periods. As the specimens were obtained at varying levels of the mound It was not Illogical to believe that the different levels represented different periods of history, with a spread, possibly, of several of a centuries. But Identification number of Jars found at different levels of the mound, bearing the same "prints," Indicates that the theory of hundreds of years separating the levels must be revised to suit tbe evidence. Several pottery vases In the collection have been identified as beIsralonging to the period when the elites were carried off Into exile In Babylonia. On the larger Jars the prints were regularly on the upper parts of the handles and give support to the belief that as the they were Intended to serve Jars potter's trademark. The smaller and may indiscriminately marked are have been nothing more than chance marks made in shaping the clay when it was soft True enough, these fingerprints and the may not have the clearness recidentification certainty that the the but bear, ords of modern prints suffImpressions are arcneolog-Ica- l icient to give new value to Louis research.-- St On the farm we once had a horse thnt developed the habit of getting out of the stable unassisted. After having been tied securely to the manger with a halter strap' and with the stable door latched, he would free himself, and later we would find him prowling about the yard with the halter strap dangling loose from the halter. This occurred several times. One day I decided to find out how he accomplished this feat. Concealing myself in the stable 1 watched long and patiently, but to no avail. He was a sly old rogue and never attempted to free himself while I was there, probably having sensed my presence In the stable. I tried again. This time I stealthily approached the stable from the outside and peered through a crack. We usually tied the halter strap In a half t leaving the end of the strap hanging loose. Before long I saw the horse seize the end of the strap with his teeth and pull out the loop. Thus free, he walked around to the stable door where he fumbled with the latch until he slid it back, then walked out Unknown to us he had probably watched us tie and untie the strap many times as well as latch and unlatch the door. And while such things as knots and latches present no problem to the human mind, they are so decidedly outside the province of a horse's mind, that It seemed a bit of clever equestrian thinking on his part to be able to extricate himself unassisted. It. G. Sebring In "Our Dumb Animals." bow-kno- Lucky Traffic "Cop." quaint custom, heartily favored by traffic policemen, is carried out each Epiphany day In Rome, Italy. On that day grateful motorists present gifts of all kinds to the traffic U on LEVEL Uaspoonful to m cup of flour for most rcips. Scientifically Dependable SPECIALISTS mad by baiing rwulta. to product powder KG BAKING bt POWDER Same Price Today as 44 Years Ago tmeet 35 Af far 2So You can also buy ! ounc cn for XM Sf ouno can ior Double 'Tested Doable-Actio- ROAR, BOYS, ROAR If n IT TASTES LIKE MORE t (Ik WHAT A good-nature- d WHAT A SAVOR FLAVOR W Z1PPITY-ZO- p vAivdil Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription makes weak women strong. No alcohol. Sold by druggist in tablets or liquid. Adv. GRAND IT'S W ANpHowr 32,-67- Once you taste Grape-Nut- s Flakes, youll cheer tool And it not only baa delicious flavor, but it's nourishing. One dishful, with milk or cream, contains more varied nourishment than many a hearty meal. Try it your Flakes is a product grocer has it I Crape-Nut- s of General Foods. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Baooma Dandruff Stop Hilr Filling Imparts Color and Beauty to Gray and Faded Hair 60e and (1 .00 at DruKgist. ITIwt Chgm. Wlii., Patf hosiw.M.T. Ideal for one in FLORESTON SHAMPOO connection with Parker's Hair Balsam. Makes the 60 cents of and hair flnffy. by mail or at drugt gists. Hiscox Chemical Works. Fatchogue, N. Y. 300-fo- d THE SALT LAKE'S NEWEST Radio for Every Room 200 Rooms 200 Bathx HOSTELRY i MOTEL 1 Distinctive Residence A Profitable and healthful too raising your own fresh, crisp vegetables from ''111 MiM-- U FERRY'S Purebred SEEDS Always fresh every packet doled. When you buy your flower seeds, few packeu choose le of choice vegetables as welL Mow Look for the FERRY t'0! SEED RACK at a near- by store. . -- if ... HOTEL Temple Square Rates $l.SO to $3.00 The Hotel Tempi Square has a highly desirable, friendly atmosphere. You will always find it immaculate, supremely comfortable, and thoroughly agreeable. You can therefore understand why this hotel Is: at Uii bmautitul RATES SINGLE $2.00 to $4.00 50to$4.50 400 Rooms 40O Baths hotelry TBE Hotel Ncwliouse 2 can also appreciate why: If a mark of distinction to stop You ERNEST Invites You DOUBLE HIGHLY RECOMMENDED d Mrs. J. R. Waters, An Abode., .renowned President Throughout the West Salt Lake's Most Hospitable HOTEL W. E. SUTTON, General Manager CHAUNCEY W. WEST Assitt. Gen. Manager C ROSSITER, Mgr. servlca. Soda Baking .1 . . Fk ;arc f glassware OY1 use a boiling solution of our STANDj i purposes, t War " " solution thoroughly cleans jelly glasses, preserve " A warm Soda . . . Our - ckaaes)one from . . . order a supply today cabinet cine fp&i wvfcr rT fl'f SUU a KI JUAtf UP MT LULUItU MAJtf AN miKU LABJI AOCmW helpful Soda serves many MM in the kitchen, Htift I one in the medi- - . Jf your grocer .. . Mail the coupon. Boalnaat 4 IAKINO " USES makes your keeps the baby's nursing bottles wholesome w niASi una mi na soo kIj DUCMINO Of lOft " radiantly clean and bright 1 II Itt J&V I Post Office Classes The class of a post office Is determined by the receipts. Those taking In $40,000 or more annually are made first class; between $8,000 and $40,000 are second class; $1,500 to $8,000 are third class, while the fourth class take in less than $1,500. There are 1,122 first class, 3,425 second class, 10,485 third class and 5 fourth class post offices In the United States. Pathfinder Magazine. A rulers. KcOTlOtnlCClJ One of the last arts to mature In a young society Is the art of conversation. At Its best, conversation U a kind of impromptu orchestra, each player improvising In perfect harmony, time and tune, tossing the theme from Instrument to instrument the themes developing and changing, discarded or resumed at the caprice of the players. This of course presupposes that the Bubject of the conversation be Impersonal, that It be free to range pretty much over the whole field of human experience. Such conversation is first met with In the form of shop-talk- , and the reason shop-tal- k among people of the same Interests or profession (in which is included school studies) Is so popular may be that here, perhaps for the first time, we learn how delightful It can be to exercise our minds In company with others to the total exclusion and of our tiresome selves. That Is why students talk so eagerly about their 6chool tasks, why business and professional people so madden Innocent with technical discussions of the minutiae of their trades; why artists, musicians and scholars persecute the public with their passionate dissertations. But there Is a stage beyond this, where human Interests are broad enough and deep enough to embrace everybody, where the whole of experience Is the subject "Clever but undiscriminating," because the past Is not alive to them." "Highbrow T Anything rather than that!" this Is a appraisal of how our sophisticated New Torkers make It appear to Europeans. The objection to them Is that they do not know enough, either about the past or their own country. But the condition Is temporary. A passion for learning has sprung up In our land since the war which, given time, should turn out a crop of men and women able to Interpret America to Europe as It really Is, and not as a glorified WIsecrackiana. After the fire of the World war, after the whirlwind of the Jazz decade, after the earthquake of the economic depression cometh the still small voice of the spirit "Uncle Dudley," In the Boston Globe. To cleanse milk pails and milk cans 11 TWO METHODS Some point tbe finger of scon and others use their fists. In all true growth the new rests oa the old. Soufflt. 4 .1-- NATURE'S LAW K cup milk Pepper S teaspoon salt fr,, at the same time WHY SHOP-TALIS SO POPULAR - tod V cup flour t"l tuufipi. and Ter lLese sea-a- 1 hMith! How fortunate we with what Is if e are endowed nd &001 ConstItutlon. B I n - aj T A tiPA the care which they deserve I Cthoice of a proper diet is very lirtKtint la promotion of well be- IW" ... i.f tint Irr iur m Willie lu tuunu vi mci i nt throughout life. It Is essential lj.iMhnod. Children must add I1?.,. cauliflower tablespoon, butter ...i fe Doumg point and over sUblihd lnthywl846 ' fi) tft |