‘Thursday, September 21, 1944 UNION PRESS-COURIER, . PAGE SEVEN. - ——— Peanut butter and jelly sandwich- FE L LTH ALK |es, with a hard boiled egg, help to make a balanced ration. As Compiled by the Medical So Cheese sandwiches supply calcium, ciety of Pennsylvania. | especially when milk is not available. | A tomato and an orange or other What of the lunch boxes carried to | fruit are always important, school by Nellie and Freddie and Mil-| What ever food is put into the lun- licent and Cedric |ch box should be wrapped in clean, Will they answer the call of the | preferably waxed, paper. appetites of these healthy. happy, ea- | This not only keeps the food fresh 1S WAR TOD COSTLY? By Ruth Taylor. “War is the most expensive form of education.” I read that sentence a week or so ago and, frankly, I've puzzled over it ever since. 1s war really a great educator? Do we need war to reassess values? True, we learn in war. War teach- es us cooperation. War arouses in- 7 Santa Has A Lot of ve {but makes for attractiveness. and the 5 [out make or a genuity. War stimulates thought. War breaks down mental barriers. 1 grant you all of that. ger, care free school children. oll as oy Mothers are taxed to their atmo ¢ | children are definitely sensitive to others are taxed to their utmost|,, shpearance of food. to devise and prepare a satisfactory | Traveling to Do A : The child who eats a cold lunch at RM school lunch for their children. | school, should have a well balanced Of course, we learn from war—but ‘ v Lunes boxes get scuffed and soil-! ot evening meal. Wer is eg most Srbensive Hom of \t an ed on the outside. em ——— rt ——————— education. Are we so weak minded = Made On the inside they should be men | DO YOU KNOW? that we need a crisis to make us work ® ITRA- aculately clean, neat and appetizing.| There have been fourteen cases [constructively or live intelligently ? RB ERMS. They should contain a suitable and | with nine deaths due to botulism in| Common suffering welds people to- . 1. AP- satisfactory lunch. | the United Sates this year. All dea-|gether in time of war. Cannot com- J itchy, Quantity is not as important a fac- | ths were due to eating vegetables |mon aims, aspirations, ambitions, & =o: tes or tor, as are balance, quality, appeal | improperly canned at home. All home | weld people together in time of 1 Drug and selection. icanned food should be boiled for 15 |peace? If we worked one-tenth as oN to kill | hard and as seiflessly for peace as work for war, we could make peace permanent and assure to all the peo- | ples of all the earth a healthy adven- |: turous life. It is not impractical idealism to look ahead. The really practical souls are those who plan for peace; who create something for which to work; who admit imperfections; who, striv- ing alwarys toward perfection, try to corect mistakes, not by tearing down what has been built, but by salvaging the good and building up- on it. There is a paragraph from a speech by Philip marshall Brown that I ell expresses the sit-|. “Peace is indivisible. It does not emanate from governments but from people. This :1as been called a |: ‘People’s War.” There must likewise be a people's peace. Tranquility of], ad Milk, eggs, butter, fruits and veg-| minutes just before eating etables are desirable. | possible germs of botulism. ) fi - order results rrom the sum total of |] huma elationships. If me ’O- o ASIDE FROM FINDING MOST EVERYTHING CITY || men cannot agree to live justly snd fa STORES HAVE IN STOCK IN THESE WAR-TIME DAYS, ||peaccabiy in tneir own homes and in eir communities; 1 4 YOU'LL ALSO FIND MANY ITEMS OF MERCHANDISE [| chit communities; if employer and ted , LISTED AS ‘‘HARD-TO-GET” AT BINDER'S — ITEMS undeclared war; if racial hatreds are fostered; if religious denominations]. are antagonistic; all that can only conduce to general unrest, disunity and demoralization.” Peace can be made by governments. It can only be kept by people—and people means you and me, every one |} of us no matter what we are or at what task we work. War is too ex- |} pensive education. It is up to us to prove that peace can also teach! THAT REALLY ARE SCARCE. YOU'LL FIND OUR PRI: CES RIGHT, ALSO. Overseas Christmas Gifts Must Be Mailed Before the 15th 3% of October SANTA’S OFF TO AN EARLY START THIS YEAR. HIS ANNUAL CHRISTMAS JOURNEY WILL TAKE HIM AROUND THE GLOBE WITH STOPS AT LITTLE SUN-BAKED ISLANDS IN THE PACIFIC, AT THE SNOW COVERED ALEUTIANS, IN AFRICAN DESERTS, IN RUINED FRENCH AND ITALIAN VIL- LAGES, AND IN THE CROWDED CITIES OF ENGLAND AND AUSTRALIA. YES, CHRISTMAS WILL COME AS USUAL TO OUR SOLDIER BOYS IN THE FAR OFF CORNERS OF THE WORLD . ... THE LITTLE GIFTS THAT ARE A TOUCH OF HOME AND A TANGIBLE PROOF OF LOVE FROM THE DEAR; ONES BACK HOME WILL BRING GAYETY AND CHEER TO OUR BATTLE WEARY WARRIORS. MAIL YOUR GIFTS EARLY. ... DON'T DISAPPOINT THEM—YOU OWE IT To THEM TO DO 2 YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY, “SO PROUDLY WE HAIL” GIVES COMEDY IDEA TO PICTURE SOON AT GRAND Folding Cots Folding cots are a scarce item. We have a good 7 75 ° stock. Each Incidents which happen during the filming of one picture often lead a writer to incorporate one of them in- to a new picture. Therefore, because “So Proudly We Hail” was a serious emotional drama, Mark Sandrich has one of the funniest sequences in his current Paramount picture, “I Love A Soldier, that he has ever had in his previous twenty years devoted to directing comedy. This sounds more than slightly wacky, but its true. When making stark drama, especially with tricky, hard to do scenes in the rough surroundings, a movie crew in- variably finds outlet by doing a bit of clowning at lunch time. Boyish, practical jokes usually ensue. Several days on “SPWH” were put |} in amid scorching heat, dust and ha- zardous explosions at the Paramount ranch, and one day some one came up with a new one. He filled a paper cup with ice water, slipped it into anothers’ pocket and watched the fun. This situation was in front of Sand- rich’'s mind when he began planning “I Love A Soldier,” and he made the best of it. The picture comes to the Grand Theatre, Patton next Sunday | and Monday, with a mitnee on Sunday |, Cold Pack Canners The only logical way to can or preserve, $ 1 7.85 Holds 7 qt. jars ARR ER RT RA RR SR CR SR RR RR SR TR PA PR TR a TR a 0 oe Showers A shower all ready to install, with all necessary $7.79 fittings... Odora Chests Now is the time to get space to store those summer clothes. Moth-proof and dust-proof chests priced o : . . 2 . . ‘ Hb . oe Jars — Jars $3 49 TO $8 29 at 2:30. IE One Quart Jars 59¢ dozen » : Poulsise Goddard and Sonny Tufts | are the stars. & One Pint Jars 50c Dozen Another Gable Contribution to the War Effort! Gable’s Will Package and Mail the Overseas Gifts Chosen Here Postage Free! GABLE'S--Altoona SHOES STILL RATIONED. Official Greeter TT ERITRY OW We Kae Extension Ladders High quality extension lad- ders, 28, 30, 32, and 65¢ 36 ft. Per foot Step Ladders Extra strong and carrying a safety guarantee, 4, 5 and 6 foot step-ladders. 75 Cc Ay wpe Yard Clothes Line Save walking and all the trouble with wire or rope, by using the Yard Clothes Line $10.89 books will be used for voluntary stu-|and in other branches of the armed dy in the Army Education program | services Per foot Civilians cannot hope for an early | end of shoe rationing, WPB says, un- - ere——— less imports of hides increase or un- SCOTT —~ i? less there is a large cut back in mil- SCOTT S SCRAP BOOK By R. J SCOTT itary orders. Hide shortages continue in spite of a large domestic kill of cows and calves. Heavy civilian and military consumption and decreased imports account for the shortages. ve STOVE RATIONING. The rationing of coal and wood | stoves to consumers will end October | 15, the War Production Board and = Folding Gates Folding Gates have been off the market for months. We have Combinaticn Doors Bf ke $1.49 Both a screen door or a OPA have announced, although ra- 5-foot $1.89 storm door, to suit weather. tioning of oil and gas stoves will con- | 97- 6-light . $9.5 tinue. Supplies of coal ‘and wood 7-foot 9-licht $10.50 stoves have grown sufficiently since 9-foot y-igat pe nation-wide rationing began in Au- gust 1943, to make continued ration- ing unnecessary. LOOK OVER THIS SCARCEPMERCHANDISE AND GIVE US A CALL Aree BiLLioN DOLLARS in Gold V; WAS BURIED IN rrreeesmnmemerese WJ er———— INTO BUSINESS THEMSELVES. As many as three million returned veterans may choose to go into bus- iness for themselves after the war, 7 Al ' ER BROS HDWE : | according to estimates cited in an ar- A YaoRut Lot 1/4 — Na) : i ® : ticle in Domestic Commerce, monthly @ WH Bm . : BEAUTIFUL Claire Poe, 18-year-old |publication of the Department of THE BANK oF Pe ‘ high school girl, has been named an | Commerce. To help the veteran learn FRANCE IN Wio wroTe fie. B 3 . jofficial greeter for the city of Miami |something about small business - be- PARIS - A POINT | FIRST MODERN Beach, Fla., for the month of De- |fore he embarks on an enterprise, the BURIED LESS THAN] DEAECAivE Sony ? cember, Other girls will represent | Department of Commerce is prepar- UNDERNEATH 1000 Mes om the cify as greeters during October 'ing a series of text books covering ROCK ( STEEL = FROM THE POE - “Murpers { I :.. cori, (lntorsionny | oral business in many filda. Thess | ROCK STEEL | TSS rnow fi | A The ait ronast]