Friday, August 13, 1965 THE NEW BERN MIRROR, NEW BERN, N. C. Page Three Your baby has probably put himself on some kind of schedule. With a little firm ness, you can adjust his rhythm to lit Into your preferred house hold pattern. If you want the day to begin, say, at 7 o’clock, feed the baby then and let the rest of the day follow almost automati cally. Feeding four hours apart would fall around II and 3 and so on. If, on the other hand, you want to start earUer, waken the baby at 6 a. m. to feed him. Each household has Its own pattern, and the baby can fit com fortably to any system which Is reasonably consistent from day to day and which considers his own hunger interval. It’s a help to both you and the baby to work around some kind of plan. On the other hand, • Ceramic Tile e Quarry Porches e Marble Fireplaces e Rubber & Asphalt Tile G. H. BRYAN Tile Contractor Mi 7-541S J. W. SMITH AGENCY, INC. General Insurance Premiums Financed Hotel Governor Tryon Telephones ME 7-5500 ME 7-2344 MASONIC STARTING FRIDAY M-G-M PresenIsASEVENARTS-HAMMER PRODUCTION KSCOPE* TECHNICOLOR* URSULA ANDRESS THISn IT for those who think young! fEEKEHD ’S PEPSI PEPSI-COIA 6$t an extra earton today! MASONIC STARTING FRIDAY don’t let a schedule dominate. You get flustered If you can’t maintain It. He becomes Ir ritable at being prodded or forced to wait when for some reason his stomach Is on a dif ferent timetable. After awhile, the baby omits one nl^t feeding. Let the baby sleep as long as he will after 6 o’clock (or evening) feeding. Nine out of ten babies will skip one night feeding at about 3 or 4 weeks of age. If you are using bottles, re distribute the formula into the number of bottles you now will be using. Sometime thereafter, by 2 or 3 months of age, most babies will go through the night without taking food from about 6 p. m. to 5 a. m. When yours is content with four bottles, divide the entire formula into these four parts. For awhile, the baby may waken earlier then you’d like, but you can change him to a more con venient hour as time goes by. Some parents like to waken the baby for a night feeding before they retire. There Is no objection to this practice, but there comes a point when tte baby will make an adjustment naturally to a long sleep at ni^t If left to waken himself, MIRROR MORSELS No genuine observer can de cide otherwise than that the homes of a nation are the bul warks of personal and national safety and thrift,—Holland, In all the world there is no thing so remarkable as a great man, nothing so rare, nothing which so well repays study,— Theodore Parker, Truth is not exciting enough to those who depend on the characters and lives of their Veterans Still Can Restart Gl Insurance Less than ten months remain for eligible veterans to take advantage of the new GI In surance which will remain on sale until midnight May 2,1966, according to Judson D. 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The imusual motion picture combines ro mance, spectacle and fantasy. neighbors for all their amuse ment.—Bancroft, Everything that looks to the future elevates human nature; for never is life so low or so little as when occupied with the present,—Landor, We often pretend to fear what we really despise, and more often to despise what we really fear,—Colton, There Is nothing so small but that we may honor God by asking His guidance of it, or Insult Him by taking it into our own hands,—Ruskln, His dally prayer, far better understood in acts than words, was simply doing good.—Whit tier, ’ ,We are disgusted by gossip; yet it is of Importance to keep the angels In their proprie ties,—Emerson, Folly Is like the growth of weeds, always luxurious and spontiuieous; wisdom, like flow ers, requires cultivation,— Hosea Ballou, The head learns new things, but the heart forevermore practices old experiences. Therefore our life is but a new form of the way men have lived from the beginning,— Henry Ward Beecher, Not in the achievement, but in the endurance of the human soul, does it show Its divine grandeur and its alliance with the infinite God,—Chapin, Every duty we omit obscures some truth we should have known,—Ruskln, Dependence is a perpetual call upon humanity, and a greater Incitement to tender ness and pity than any other motive whatever.—Addison, It is a little thing to speak a phrase of common comfort, which by dally use has almost lost its sense; yet on the ear of him who thought to die un mourned It will fall like choicest music,—Talfourd, We may have the confidence of another without possessing his heart. If his heart be ours, there is no need for revela tion or confidence.—Du Coeur, Art is based on a strong sentiment of religion, on a pro found and mighty earnestness; hence it Is so prone to cooper ate with religion.—Goethe. 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