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Show Lv MARCpO, 1942 --1 , ,. 1 THE mTTTPTIN BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH PAGE FIVE By JEAN MERRITT Heinj Home Institute , family disputes or discussions during mealtime. He should not be admonished or advised too much, nor should he be nagged about his table manners, but ra-ther encouraged, gently, to eat carefully and well. Generally he should be allowed to eat quietly without too much social conver-sation from adults who are try-ing to divert his attention. The physical mechanics of his eating should be made as con-venient as possible. His high chair should be comfortable. He should be propped up close to his tray-tabl- e, so that he will not have to reach for his food. His bib should be generous-ly proportioned to cover him well, and should be tied loosely enough at the neck so that it will not bind. Children's spoons should be de-signed to fit their tiny hands, too. The average baby spoon is apt to be heavier than a baby can hold easily, and its big rounded bowl is often too large for a baby's mouth. Try serving your baby from a tiny demitasse spoon, and see how delighted he is with something sized down to his own scale. Be careful, also, that foods FURTHER FACTS IN GOOD EATING HABITS When you begin to teach good hubits to your baby you will rejoice that there are pre-pared strained food, now on the market, designed specially for very young babies. Infancy is the time to lay the foundation of these most important habits; and strained foods, which are intro-duced during infancy are the per- fect medium for this teaching. By introducing strained foods to your baby at four or five months, or as soon as your doctor advises serving them, you can get off to an early start in this training, which will be of inestimable val-ue to your child in later life. For when children are taught the ru-diments of good eating while they are very, very tiny, these habits will seem perfectly natur-al to them as they grow older. Of course, the lessons a baby can grasp must be simple. But he can learn, at a very early age, to like his food and eat with gusto to eat all the food that is put before him and relish a wide variety to eat according to a regular schedule and to manage the simple mechanics of good eating with some skill. It may take years to make a child adept at all these things, but a lot can be accomplished by promoting the development of these habits from the start. Now, one of the most impor-tant ways to develop good eat-ing habits is to have peaceful mealtimes. From the start, meals should be associated in your child's mind with pleasant things. An affable, friendly mealtime is one of the surest aids to good digestion a boon for which your child will be grateful later on in life. A child should never hear, either at the family dinner ta-ble or when he eats alone, any are not too runny and serving plates too shallow. These tiny de-tails may seem trivial, but they are often the source of real eat-ing problems to our children la-ter on. It is also well not to have too many diverting accessories on baby's table. Dishes adorned with fascinating figures and table-cloths trimmed like fairy tales are not apt to slow up the pace of baby's eating and interfere seriously with his enthusiasm for his food. Serving a variety of foods is another important trick in train-ing your baby to eat enthusiasti-cally and well. By introducing him, first, to the prepared strain-ed foods; then, as he grows older, serving the ready-to-us- e junior foods, you will have a range of twenty-si- x different varieties soups, cereals, vegetables, fruits, and desserts each with a distinc-tive flavor and a fine bright col-or that will be sure to delight the eye and please the palate of your child. jhy be satisfied with less than the best, when you can get this famous Kentucky whiskey 0 at so moderate a price! TzQggJy bottled in-bon- c,;; 100 Proof Nuttonal Distillor Products Corp., N. Y. COME OUT OF THE KITCHEN I JJJ gJQ SCrJBI STORE feW, LINE OF SnosTEiNsip- - Foo ds THESE DELICIOUS Birds Eye Frosted Foods Order SomeVToday! FRUITS PEACHES 6 Ounces 29CI RASPBERRIES !0 Ounces 29C I STRAWBERRIES 16 Ounces You can now make delicious strawberry shortcake out I of season with Birds Eye famous strawberries. VEGETABLES H ASPARAGUS TIPS 12 Ounces.... ASPARAGUS CUTS 12 Ounces. JSC GREEN BEANS 1,'"... .; 24C GREEN BEANS ,732. 270 LIMA BEANS 12 Ounces WAX BEANS 10 Ounces 24 I BROCCOLI 13 Ounces.... BRUSSELS SPROUTS 13 Ounces... CAULIFLOWER 13 Ounces.. CORN ON COB 2 Ears 24C PEAS 12 Ounces 27C I PEAS ANU CARROTS 12 Ounces... 25C H SPINACH 14 Ounces 25 I SQUASH 16 Ounces 21 I Fish COD FISH ,. 36C HADDOCK FILLETS Pound RED PERCH FILLETS Pound.... Shell Fish OYSTERS 12 in Package.... 52C 8 SCALLOPS 12 in Package 47 I SHRIMPS 12 in 35CI Package crjg ,. : I.G.A. I ffM TOMATO JUICE fSl cL0u!"......................... ..20C 13 i-- 2 Ounce L'r Can If Bingham Merc. THE BIG STORE PHONE 1415 t & ' ' s Jjgging (lie longest Trcntli ever plowed liy Man .. . One of the big defense activ ities of the Bell Telephone .System is the placing of the new 1600-mil- e Omaha-Sacrament- o underground cable lines at a cost of twenty million dollars. They cross the Mountain States terri-tory through Wyoming and Utah, with a spur from Cheyenne to Denver. ,The 20-to- n cable-layin- g telephone "tanks" used on the job travel almost as the crow flies and do their work in almost any kind of ground except soft swamps, or solid rock. Driving steadily ahead, they are digging the deep trench for 1600 miles, laying two cables in it and fill-ing in the earth, all in one continuous process. It is a major defense project because when completed late this year it will provide for the first time a coast-to-coa- st all cable route free from most hazards, and it w ill materially increase the number of transcontinen-tal telephone circuits as well. San forth , ffuture . . . Buy ' Defente Bond and Stamp The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. WE SERVE GOOD EATS-GI-VE US A TRY PASTIME INN AND CAFE CHINESE DISHES A SPECIALTY CIGARS, CIGARETTES, BEER PW" 1?Sf MONEY J,.J.u.l-M,..B...I.- ..x gg THE ADS LOCALNOTES A film showing methods of combating incendiary bombs was shown Tuesday afternoon to the Bingham high school student body by Fire Chief Ray Tatton and John J. Crecdon, president of the joint firemen's organiza-tion. At 7:30 p.m. the same film was shown the public in the Cop-perto- n auditorium. Mrs. Paul Kuhni entertained the Bingham LDS ward Primary association teachers and officers at the monthly preparation meet-ing last evening. Mrs. Robert Jimas was cohostess. Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Carrigan of Midvale entertained for the family of Mr. and Mrs. George Carrigan of Union Saturday ev-ening. Attending from Bingham Canyon were Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Johanson and Mr. and Mrs. Dale Johnston. Those present from Copperton were Mr. and Mrs. V. S. Barlow, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hansen. Prizes at cards went to Mrs. Johnston, Mrs. Jack Martin, Grant Carrigan and Mr. John-ston. Refreshments were served to eighteen. Mrs. Koyle Simmons of 79 Carr Fork was taken to Bingham hos-pital March 12 for treatment and rest. N Mrs. Raymond Hodde and dau-ghter, Lila, guests the past two month of Dr. and Mrs. O. J. Gra-ham, left Sunday evening by train from Salt Lake City for their home in Springfield, 111. Mrs. Hodde and Mrs. Graham are sisters. KjjP PEMOUKAIY by Mat lN FOUR. MONTHS IN 16$8 IN CAMPS IN THE ') US 20,738 CASES OP TYPHOID DEVELOPED AMONG 107 973 OFFICERS AND MEN-NEAR- LV 20.-- S FOUR, MONTHS! N ?M pLvUAfty TO MAY) IN AN WWHICH GREW TO 1,200,000 OFFICERS AND VfN IN CAMPS AND BARRACKS, NOT ONE CASE y TYPHOD IN ANY ONE OF THE 48 STATES. i v IN THE JUSTICE'S COURT OF THE TENTH PRECINCT. SALT LAKE COUNTY. UTAH. SUMMONS Arthur C. Cole, Plaintiff, vs Kenneth L. Miller, Defendant. THE STATE OF UTAH TO THE SAID DEFENDANT: You are hereby summoned to appear before the above entitled court within ten days after the service of this summons upon you, if served in the county in which this action is brought, oth-erwise within twenty days after service hereof, and defend the above entitled action, brought against you to recover on a cer-tain promissory note dated Feb-ruary 4th, 1942 for $50, court costs and attorney's fees and interest as per the said note, and in case of your failure so to do, judg-ment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint. FRANCIS A. MILLER Justice of the Peace of the Tenth Precinct, Salt Lake County, Utah. Dated this 4th day of March, 1942. First publication, March 13, 1942. Last publication, April 10, 1942. NOW YOUR NEIGHBOR ( r p.a.u. CHILECOASTAL EMPIRE in defense of the ideals of the New World moves toward deci-sion, will turn with more and more eagerness toward Chile's desert storehouse. For nitrate, with its iodine, is a principal item in the manufac-ture of explosives. A necessity of war, both for the making and mending of wounds, it is priceless too, as a nutrient for man and his husbandry. In times of peace and normal demand, Chilean nitrate was sec-ond only to Chilean copper, an-other war need now. As a world-produc- er of this metal, Chile is outranked only by the United States. The country has, in addi-tion, surpluses of iron and coal. After more than a hundred years, the mining of gold has been re-sumed. Recent discoveries of oil seepages may be herald of anoth-er great industry to come. Chile's is a republican form of government, with executive, leg-islatives and judicial brances. Its present constitution dates back only to September 18, 1925, but it retains many of the important features of one adopted nearly a hundred years before it. This old-er constitution was largely the work of the great statesman Di-ego Portales, Minister of State under President Prieto from 1831 to 1841. This constitution, in turn, superseded a still older one, Chi-le's first. It was drafted by a committee appointed by the fa-mous General O'Higgins short-ly after the Chileans, with the help of the Argentine patriot and soldier. General San Martin, defeated Spanish royalist forces. This triumph, the Battle of Mai-p- o, April 5, 1818, marks the end of Spanish power in Chile and the birth of the Republic. is one of a series descrip-- f our neighbor nations pre-b- y the Pan American for the information of in the Inter-ca- n Student Forum, and leir parents, teachers and 3, ... hat drop of iodine smeared bruise or abrasion could the intelligence and ten'- s of its human beneficiary, uld, likely enough, have to say of its unappreciated y and importance, in war peace; of its parent, nitrate a; of nitrate's power in life eath in the human family; aally of the world's only ter of natural nitrates on mercial scale the Republic ile. e, an empire In itself, a ribbon of 286,306 square spread along the rim of icific for nearly 3,000 miles, farther south than any nation of the American lent. It is sometimes referr-as;;th- e California of South ca. If there is some simi-a- s to relative location, and topography, the paral-fn- ot be carried far. 'California, nearly, could rained within the bounda- -' Chile. They would hold "jy. Belgium, Denmark, and Switzerland. Cape and the Chilean archipela-abou- t as far from the bleak country of the north, are. the nitrate fields, as rancisco is from New York. line, at its broadest, is the distance from Weshing-- 1 New York . tched out between the .ean mountain range and tfic, Chile has a climate man the heat of the bak-?- 5 desert to the snow e oi the stormy deep south. has portioned the coun- - nft lt0 three Produc-Sttt- S the extreme south, 2 we strait of Magellan, grazing areas where raising is a rapidly deve-Jdustr- y. To the north is ?L Antral Valley, famed Lu world's garden LaU the Products of zone and most of boJ rPical climatds cuSv,e,Uied and the most part of the ere' in fertile val" :&mountains and sea, '80 On'Si capital city f LhVoast' only 116 ,fof1SVatSally isth'k"1 by no means The eyX the "itrat? Id u,iof the nations of LLthe struggle BOOKS COPPERTON LIBRARY. Books recently placed on the shelves at the Bingham high school library, open Thursday evening of each week from 3:00 to 6:00 p.m., are listed as fol-lows: Adult non fiction Good House-keeping Marriage Book; Will Rogers, by his wife; Soap Be-hind the Ears, Cornelia Otis skin-ner; Looking for Trouble, Cowles; Adult Fiction My Friend Flicks, Mary O'Hara; Each Dawn I die, Odium; All That Glitters, Keyes; My Son, My Son, Spring; The Town Is Full of Rumors, Wilson; Up At the Villa, Maugh-am' Todav and Forever, Pearl Buck; The Texan Triumph, Alt-chelu- r; The Rulers of the Lakes, Altcheler; Lorrie, Abbott; There Goes Lana Henry, Banks; Career For Jennifer, De Leeuw; Mare's Nest, Coffin; Lynch Rope Law, Dresser; Doctors Wife, Maysie Greig; Forgive Us Our Trespas-ses, Douglas. Other books added March 11 Detzer, Carl Sandburg; Ann Car-men- y, Birney; Emily of New Moon, Montgomery; Flaming' Forest, Atwater; Midnight Moon, Lyons; Mulberry Square, Lam-more- - Nathalie Moves Ahead, Hutchison; Racing Start, Beach; Silver Spoon, Killand; Song of Years, Aldrich; Susie Stuart M. D Chandler; Yankee Ships in Pirate Waters, Holland; 100,000 -- 000 Guinea P'KfUet and Schlink; Into the Wind, O Henry Memorial Award Prize Stories, Brickell; The Revolution Is On, Fodor; Pony Jungle, Davis. 'i Letters from Pvt. Edward West, on duty in the Philippine Islands, were received last Friday and Saturday by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John T. West. The weather and description of native plants and animals were subject matter of the communications. Pictures of camp and of Pvt. West were enclosed, along with greetings to friends. Most recent of the let-ters was dated January 27. |