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Show Friday, March 19, 1943_ _ __ _ __ _ __ _ _ _ _ THE SENTINEL, MIDVALE, U T A H - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - P a g e F i v e • Schools Open Drive To Buy 10,000 Jeeps little jeep which is serving T soHE nobly from Guadalcanal to SOCIET Y A N D CL U BS Africa has become the symbol of the gigantic efforts of millions of American school children in their War Savings program. Thousands of public, private and parochial schools soon will be displaying a certificate of honor from Secretary of the Treasury Henry Morgenthau, Jr., signifying that they have paid for at least one jeep by buying $900 in War Stamps and Bonds. Countless others will be flying the Schools At War banner awarded to schools with 90 percent pupil par· tlcipation in War Savings. Ten thousand jeeps and a hundred bombers! This is the new goal of America's schools as 30,000,000 children continue their Schools At War program under the auspices of the Treasury Department and the U. S. Office of Education. Results so far in the program ' re· ported by Dr. Homer W. Anderson, ~ ~sociate Field Director in charge IVA E. BARROWS, Society Editor Calvin Glov>er Honored By Relief Society Members Members of the East Midvale ward Relief Society met Tuesday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Glover in honor of their son, Calvin, who has been in the mission field a year. A sketch of the first organization of the Relief Society was given by Mrs. Marie Robbins. Musical numbers were rendered by the Relief Society chorus, by Mrs. Mary Yates, La Nome McCleary, Mrs. Tessie Rich and Mrs. LaNome McCleary. The lesson, "The Bible as Literature," was given by class leader, Mrs. Ada Clayton. Report of the missionary was given by Calvin's mother. Other reports were given by mothers of missionaries as follows: Mrs. William Young reported her son, Lowell Young, in Tennessee. Mrs. Zoe Adams reported her son Charles Adams in Hawaii, Mrs. Ada Pate reported her son, Alma in Washington and Mrs. Melva Evans reported her daughter Reatha also in Washington. Readings were given by Mrs. Annie Christensen. Refresh· ments were served to 33. Olson-Olson Nuptials Held at Ephraim In a quiet ceremony performed at the home of the bride's pal"ents in Ephraim, Saturday, Miss Bernice Olson became the bride of George W. Olson of Midvale. Mrs. Olson is a teacher in the Salt Lake City schools, and Mr. Olson is co-owner of the Olson Brothers ranch in West Jordan. Many social affairs have been given in their honor recently. Mr. and Mrs. Olson will be at home to their many friends at 122 South Main street. Engagement Announced Mr. and Mrs. Jess Thompson of Union announce the engagement of their daughter, Clara, and Reid Boggess, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Boggess also of Union. The marriage is scheduled to take place this week. Miss Lois Walker entertained at a kitchen shower at her home Friday evening honoring Miss Thompson. Decrations were suggestive .of St. Patrick's day. Games were played. Prizes were won by Bettie Condie and Mrs. Jess Thompson. Refreshments were served to 12. Mrs. Stewart to Talk At Union Sunday Mrs. Robert Stewart of East Midvale, will be the guest speaker at the regular Sunday evening service at the Union Second ward at 6 o'clock, March 21. Mrs. Stewart will lecture on the Story of the Book of Mormon. An invitation is extended to ward membership to be present and hear the talk which is very interesting and instructive. F riends hip Ring Enjoy Afternoon Mrs. Elmira Johnson, Mrs. Lawrence Freeman and Mrs. Heber Berrett, members of the Friendship Ring, whose birthdays occur this month, were guests of honor Thursday, when members of the Ring met at the home of Mrs. Oscar Olson in Union. A dinner was enjoyed. Business was followed by sewing. Mrs. J. F. Olson and Mrs. Eva Olson were special guests. Mrs.Elkington Hostess To Bridge Club Thursday Mrs. E. C. Elkington was hostess Thursday afternoon to members of her bridge club at her home on South State. Yellow Daffodils in a crystal holder formed a very pretty centerpiece for the table when luncheon was served at one o'clock. Happy Mothers Enjoy Luncheon Saturday Mrs. Leila Nix, Mrs. Ellen Nance, Mrs. Clara Boggess, Mrs. Nancy Milne, Mrs. Martha Milne, Mrs. Lucy Green, Mrs. Carrie Johnson, Mrs. Mary Van, Mrs. Kate Brady, Mrs. Bessie Forbush, and Mrs. Helda Smart, members of the Happy Mothers club, met Saturday at the home of Mrs. May Smart on Union avenue. Dinner was enjoyed and a social afternoon was spent. Mrs. Rae Wright of Salt Lake was a special guest. Riverton Ladies' Club Hears M rs. Boyer Mrs. Claire Stewart Boyer of Salt Lake City, gave a talk on "Personality," before members of the Riverton Ladies' Literary club Thursday, at 8 p. m. at the home of Mrs. M. J. Stringham. Mrs. LaVar Isaacson, president of the club conducted the meeting, after which refreshments were served by Mrs. Stringham. DuPle InstUute On Nourishing Our Nation An adequate diet is a phrase we hear a lot of nowadays. It used to be just words in the children's school books, but suddenly these words have come alive and are of personal importance to all of us homemakers. The Department of Agriculture radio programs stress it; the county demonstration agents urge us to practice it; our children bring home facts about it from their 4-H Club meetings. On every hand, in newspapers, magazines, and in the mail we are prodded into planning adequate diets for our families. It seems, sometimes, this complicated balancing of proteins and carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals, is closer to a diet kitchen than our own stoves. But when you strip the fancy names and figures from the facts you can plainly see it's just breakfast, lunch, and dinner for your families. The same hearty, simple meals we have served for years will still do, planned with greater care, however, to include more of the protective foods that nourish our minds and bodies. Too many of us American families have been living for generations on meat, potatoes, and pie-solid enough food as far as bulk and energy goes, but a starvation diet for our bones and nerves and blood. There's been food enough for most of us, but we've not eaten the right kinds. Living as we do, in a land of plenty, we Americans have shamefully depleted our vitality by poor eating, until most of us have ill nourished bodies. Think about your own teeth, and eyes, and the condition of. your nerves. Many of the simple things like these, which seem to give out sooner than they should with us, are plainly the results of the foods we've eaten all our lives. These minor ills can be prevented, or at least controlled; if not with us, certainly in the bodies of our children by feeoing them correctly from the start. ''U" Club Meet At Anderberg Home Gertrude Anderberg entertained for; members of the "U" Club, at her home on Pioneer avenue Wednesday evening. Supper was served at 7 o'clock followed by a program. ST. PATRICK'S DANCE Ladies of the Altar Society of the Church of the Little Flower of Midvale will give a St. Patrick's dance Saturday night at the junior high school gymnasium. The public is invited to attend. HEADQUARTERS FOR Butter.-Wra ppers ID the Jordan Valley We use the best quality vegetable parchment, and give you first class workmanship .and service. PRICE LIST: Unprinted: Per 100 --------··-----·-·--····-·-···--.. 25¢ Printed: 100 ______ _:_ _____________________ $1.2 5 200-----$1.75 500 -·-·---·-------·-·-··-·-· $2. 7 5 1,000 -·--·· ---------·-·-·-- $4.50 WHENEVER YOU NEED BUt t ERWRAPPERS, Remember THE SENTINEL Phone: Mid. By JEAN MERRITT Beln~ l78 Midvale, Utah We Will Start Buying LIVESTO CK O n M arch 24 Wholesale Meat Deliveries Will Begin April l A. BILLS & CO. W holesale Meafs Phones 31-196 An adequate diet means adding more foods to our menus and cooking these extra foods correctly. We all need milk and vegetables and fruits, enriched breads to which wheat germ and the outer hulls are added, eggs, butter, ce1eals, and meats. It is not always easy, in the country and smaller cities, to have a year-round supply of all the fresh foods required for proper nourishment. But that need not affect our body-building budget for the family at all. There are plenty of good foods, carefully prepared and packed in cans to retain the greatest possible nutritional value. stac~d up on our grocers' shelves. MoreL and more foods have been packea. in cans each year until we now have a choice of ov.er four hundred different kinds of canned foods. This variety ranges all the way from milk to meat, including every vegetable that you could think of and all the fruits we know. Then, too, there are so many excellent prepared and ready-to-serve foods that also add variety and vitamin-value to our meals-ovenbaked beans in a mellow, old-fashioned molasses sauce with chunks of fragrant country pork- macaroni cooked in creamy cheese sauce-spaghetti simmered in a spiced tomato sauce with a tang of sharp cheese added for extra flavor. And soups- twenty-three of them, all ready to heat and serve. There are delicate cream soups-thick, hearty chowders-your favorite vegetable soup teeming with vegetables from an American backyard garden-consomme, clear as amber, rich with the sustaining nutriment of pure beef broth-hot pepper pot and gumbo creole--bean soup, and the real country style chicken soup with rice. There are puddings, too, and mince meat for your pies and fruit cakes-seasonings and sauces to add flavor to your foods. With all of these to help you it will be no chore to add the extra foods your family needs for proper nourishment. Subscribe for The Sentinel and read all the local news. Rosebud is eight, and the most beautiful shade of caramel fudge. To her loving Mammy and Pappy she is known, on approximately al· ternate days, as "Angel" and "You devil child". It was on her devilchild days that Rosebud tied the knots in the shirts that Mammy had taken in for washing, and poured the whole of the vanilla bottle into the lamb stew, just, she said later through bitter tears, to "flavor it up some". On her angel da:~s Rosebud is equally imaginative even if a more restful occupant of the little shack down on Vinegar HilL Once when Mammy was out doing day work, Rosebud got a wave of cleaning fever and scoured every pot and pan in the kitchen so that they literally ~. ~ glistened. Another day, left alone, she tidied up Mammy's and Pappy's room to such a point of apple-pie order that it was a week before Pappy could find an undershirt. Rosebud is a great reader of the newspapers. Mammy and Pappy don't take one, but there are plenty of perfectly good newspapers blowing round Vinegar RilL It was out of one of them that Rosebud got her idea for spending the ten cents the Bunny had put under her pillow the night her tooth came out. After break· fas Rosebud disappeared down the Hill and reappeared soon after with a beautiful ten-cent War Stamp pasted firmly into a brand-new book with neat little squares for more stamps. She displayed her investment to Mammy. "I declare you're an angel child," Mammy said. Rosebud went on sitting on the kitchen floor staring with large brown eyes at the empty squares in her book. From time to time she took hold of one or another of her teeth and wiggled i't, gently. Mammy was engrossed in a particularly big washing. Rosebud was as quiet as a mouse and Mammy forgot about her until, coming in from the yard with her arms full of dry sheets, she encountered her child with a large hammer in her hand. Scenting the devil in her angel child, Mammy shouted at her, "Rosebud! Come yere with that hammer! What you planning on doing?" But what was done was done. In Rosebud's other hand was another tooth. Her mouth was stretched in a broad if slightly bloody smile. "I ain't doing nothing, Mammy," she said. "I'm just filling up my stamp book." <Story from an actual report in the files o! the Treasury Depart· ment.) • • • Say yes. Take your change in War Stamps. Your investment in War Bonds today wiJl save a payday for tomorrow. U.S. Treamry Department There are two freedoms-the false, where a man is free to do what he likes; the true, where a man is free to do what he ought. -Charles Kingsley 8att1e Flags of the Schools of the education section of the War Savings Staff, are: More than 7,000,000 elementa,.ryand high school students from 30,000 schools have prepared speciaL Schools At War scrapbooks for stat& and local exhibits. War Stamp and War Bond pur· chases may reach a 'grand total of $300,000,000 for the school ve~r. There is but one real attraction, that of Spirit. The pointing of the needle to the pole symbolizes this all-embracing power or the attraction of God, Di\·ine Mind.-Mary Baker Eddy Since nothing is settled until it is settled right, no matt~r how unlimited power a man may have, unless he exercise it fairly and justly his actions will return to plague him.-Frank A. Vanderlip. It is a strange desire, to seek: power, and to lose liberty; or to seek power over others, and to lose power over a ' man' s seLf. -Francis Bacon Power without justice is soon questioned. Justice and power must therefore be brought together, so that whatever is just may be powerful, and whatever is powerful may be just.-Pascal In the observance of the laws of God and in the promise of the Gospel of Jesus Christ there is the best guaranty of peace upon earth and the only hope of eternal life.-Benjamin Harrison. GIFTS gifts GIFTS gifts ~ BEAUTIFUL GIFTS 0 PHONE MID. 252 § FOR BIRTHDAYS. u.a HOLIDAYS, ANNIVERSARIES Or Any Other Event. . en ca Come in and see our fine assortment of .,... ..... ..... NOVELTY and ART PIECES tD .I 0 R CHID S AT -ALL TIME S tn ...... ""'O Every Day Is Flowe:r Day GIFTS gifts loi"J ...g Ph. Mid. 49 GIFTS ........en a...... Phelps Floral E-t IONDID SIIII:VIC. gifts P. c. GIFTS ttl GIFTS ' ~MARKET~ "THE OLD RELIABLE CREDIT STORE'' SPECIALS FOR FRI.-SAT., MAR.I9-20 Sugar, No. 12 Stamp, 10-~~s; 67c PEANUTS in Shell, lb. . .'.. 35c MILK, Tall, any brand 4-i:~s 39c EGGS, Fresh, lge., doz .... 43c JARS, qt., Buy Now, doz. 83c KERR LIDS, doz. . .......... tOe Old Fashioned Lids, doz. 25c Gerbers Baby Food, 3-cf:~s 21c FLOUR, Globe, A-1, 48lbs* ·····.. ·····.. 5 SYRUP, Karo, Dark, 5-lb. Liberty Bell Syrup, boUle Libbys Apple Bu·l ter, Green Tomato Slices, jar 47c 23c 32c 28c PEACHES, lge. cans ...... 25c PEARS, Sealed in Tin, can '2Sc PEAS, No.2, ungraded can llc Spring Garden Peas, Nco~~ 17c RAlSINS, Seedless, Lge. Pkgo, 2 for · · · · · CURRANTS, 2 Pkgs. for······,·····-········ Green String Beans 2-..f:~s 25c CORN, Delmaiz Niblels .. 13c NAPKINS, pkg. . .......... 10c Gauze Toilet .Tissue, 2 for 13c Paper Toweling, roll ...... 10c NUBORA, lge. pkg........ 57c LUX, lge. pkg. . ..... _..... 2Sc IVORY FLAKES, lge. pkg. 27c IVORY SNOW, lge. pkg ... 27c Peels Granulated Soap .... 29c FRESH VFGETABLES CABBAGE, New, lb ....... Sc Carrofs, Cal., 2 bunches 19c LETTUCE, lge. head ...... 15c Green Onions, 2 bunches 19c CELERY HEARTS ......... 17c· ASPARAGUS, lb. . ........ 29c |