Indianapolis Times, Volume 45, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 3 January 1934 — Page 18

PAGE 18

■—Your Health— REGULARITY OF HABITS NEEDED TO HELP CHILD Training Among Factors in Establishing Proper Body Functioning. BY DR. MORRIS FISH BE IN Editor Journal of the American Medical Association and of Ifvgria, the Health Magazine. One of your most important duties toward the health of your children is to see that their digestive habits are regular, to avoid constipation. The normal infant has three or four actions of the bowel in twentyfour hours. However, it is not, necessary to believe that any child having fewer actions is constipated, provid'd, nf course, that the eliminated materiel is normal in character and consistency. Some children have only one and some only two actions in twentyfour hours, and yet remain well and gain weight. Much depends on whether the child is fed at the breast or artificially. Much depends also on the nature of the food which he receives. Finally a great deal depends on the nature of the training given. Training Possible A child may be trained to control his digestive system exactly as an adult may train himself to good or bad habits. If your child is net trained to have regular movements, constipation may result. Children who are flabby in the construction of their bodies, those who have rickets and bulging abdomens, find it difficult to expel the waste matter. If there is an excess of fat in the infant’s diet, the bowel may react either by exceeding slowness of action and hardness of the excretion or, ip other cases, by exceeding looseness of the bowel and by greasy-looking material. One of the main causes of difficulties among children is the taking of an insufficient amount of water. Water is one of the most important substances for proper action of the body. Diet May Be Scanty Sometimes an infant who tends to have constipation is underfed. A child nursing at the breast may fail to gain weight and may develop the symptoms of constipation simply because it is not getting enough food. In older children the matter of training is much more important than in infants. Sometimes children go to schools in which attention to the bowel action is made so difficult that a child develops constipation rather than submit itself to censure by its teachers or school attendants. It also has been recognized by psychologists that children sometimes develop defenses against adult control or criticism by symptoms related to their bow'els, and that this type of constipation frequently is controlled by a complete change of environment. For older children the use in the ,of. staweri fruits, especially apples and prunes, the taking of plenty of water, and a su.tab o con rol of the food generally, frequently will relieve constipation. It is not well to form a cathartic or laxative habit early in life. This is one of the main evils of our lives today. PHYSICIAN WILL SPEAK Brookside Kindergarten Mothers to Hear Child Expert. Dr. Walter Stoeffler, child specialist, will speak before the Moth-rs’ Club of the Brookside kindergart ■ i on the subject "Contagious Diseases and How to Prevent Them,” this afternoon. Mrs. Earl Gardton. president, of the club, will preside. The meeting will be held at 3009 East Sixteenth street.

LI'CILLE HOF.CK 519 Marquette St., Davenport. lowa "My daughter Lucille is eighteen. She was terribly bothered with cramps which would force her to stay in bed a day or two every month. Lydia E.NPinkham's Tablets helped her wonderfully. She has no cramps whatsoever now. She is telling her girl friends how good this medicine is”. —.Mrr. A. Hoed.

"I Do All My Work" "1 am 20 years old. I always felt dizzy and aching and sometimes I had a spell with my heart about a week beforehand. I was always in bed four to five flays each month. Since I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets I do all my work and am on my feet all the time. I do not suffer at all.” —Madeline Gillispte, \.R. §5, Box 68, Gosport, Indiana.

LYDIA E. PINKHAM’S & TABLETS *

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HORIZONTAL Answer to Previous Puzzle 15 He also Is A 1 inth? Set”?* lanand. £LLEN 13 Rental CAM FWV" 7 u €JctenßiTe recontract k-EqACH Bearch of the -r. IjRATI fENOftM Jail NOMNO V;E L,l !s't|5MTQ 23 An<J „ crwm#d 1 SMMPA V I NI SicO'N ? nrnc 16 Beforo A T OMIT E Nln'e ■BIANiDI <ftr 17 He In a HraJ ) OMPjE. iAlPlkl ' Canadian un- MiTIW : versity. 19 To bind [THE WH E£ L 'Q : F LIT TEr ,‘ „ n,l ‘ 20 Drive (abbr.) Foem--21 Italian river. stances. VERTICAL 31 Sailor. 22 Alleged force 43 Practical joke . n . . 36;Toll 24 North Carolina 44 Epoch n . 3<;Blemish. 25 Spigot 46 To harvest. . ’ 39 One who Is 26 Little stream 48 Optical glass. 3 sh G Bga. ruined 28 Seeds of ce- 49 Caustic. 3 f 40 Rail (bird). real grasses 51 Killed. (abbr ). 42 Small berry 30 Southern Afri- 53 Native metal. 4 Oil shrub. can 54 Inability to 5 Goddess. 43 Valiant man. 32 Pertaining to speak due to a 6 Va < or cistern 44 t 0 resound, ids mental lesion '7 Tree having 45 Unless. 33 Ursine animal 56 Constellation. tough wood 47 Fairy. 34 Northeast 57 He lives in 8 Born. 48 Quantity. 35 Right , Canada 9 Provided. 49 Suitable. 37 Myself 58 He discovered 10 Almond. 50 Noise. 38 Second note , with the 11 Wide smile. 52 Pale. 39 Trappings. help of Dr. 12 He is a doctor 54 Form of “a." 41 Greasy sub- MacLeod. of . 55 Like. rrr^rj — ~w 55 ri- *■ n J W 34 -j hr H In II rm n 11.1

CITIZENS SEEK END OF DISANMEXATION Lawrence Property Owners Regret Dec. 30 Act. Suit to set aside aisannexation of the southwestern end of the town of Lawrence ivas filed yesterday in Marion circuit court by a group of twelve praperty owners living in other sections of the town. The disannexation was granted, effective Dec. 30. by the town board after filing of a disannexation petition by twenty-four property owners in the territory. The petition was protested by the C.C.C. & St. L. railroad, which claimed that its right-of-way, adjacent to the territory, also should have been included. Petitioners for the disannexation set out that they received no benefit from being a part of the town because their property could not be drained with the rest of the town, and that most of the territory is too far from the center of the community ever to receive improvements. Approximately 15.000.000 people in the United States are receiving relief aid.

CASH FOR OLD GOLD s 6 to 5 24 00 01. 1 LESS REFINING COST 1 Full Value for Old Gold and Silver—Any Condition. Broken Watches. Old Coins. Mail or Bring to Indiana Gold Refining Cos. 135 West Market Street Near Bus Station Federal License No. 32

KEEP ACTIVE EVERY DAY IN THE MONTH No busy housekeeper wants to spend one or two days in bed every month. No young girl wants to miss the good times other girls enjoy. No woman who works can afford to lose her pay through illness w hich might be avoided. Have you tried Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets? Get a bottle today. Take them regularly and see what a difference it makes.

MRS. R. KRAMER 808 E. Ogden Ave., Milwaukee, Wis. "I suffered with periodic headaches and backaches. Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets relieved them and stopped my nervousness. I am able to do my work now. I think your medicine is a wonder.”— Airs. R. Kramer.

No Escape! Taxes Must Be Paid Even Though Lights Fail. GTATE income tax blanks arc not as complicated as those of the federal government. But they are not so simple that they can be made out in the dark. This was proved at the statehouse yesterday when the lights went out in the income tax department. Dozens of persons were in the midst of making out their returns at desks in the corridors. The lights went out and business halted until anew switch was installed. Every one with an income of more than $666.67 from May 1 to Dec. 31, 1933, must pay 1 per cent in January.

Krause Bros GOING OUT OF BUSINESS S.\ UK 15fe to 50 r c Saving '‘Courthouse Ik Opposite Is"

ALADDIN KEROSENE LAMPS $6.95 Complete Slocks of Supplies for Aladdin Lamps. VONNEGUTS Downtown. Irv.. Ftn. Square, W. Side

Evening School Strong courses offered in Secretarial. Stenography, Accounting Bookkeeping anil kindred subjects, Spend part of your evenings in selfimprovement. Cost low. Central Business College Architects St Builders Building. I nl ia inipulis

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EMMA HVDF. R.F.D. #3. Box 58, Salem, W. Va. "I was rundown, nervous and restless all the time and I suffered periodically. I saw Lydia E. Pinkham's Tablets advertised in Comfort Magazme and they helped me. I recommend them to other women.” —Emma Hyde.

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

AUTHORITY ON FAR EAST WILL ADDRESS FORUM George E. Sokolsky to Talk on ‘Tinder Box of Asia’ Sunday. George E. Sokolsky, expert on far eastern affairs, will speak before the Indianapolis Open Forum at Kirshbaum Center, Twenty-third, and North Meridian streets. Sunday night. His subject will be "The Tinder Box of Asia.” Mr. Sokolsky, who returned to the United States last spring after fourteen years of uninterrupted residence in China and Japan, visited Indianapolis last winter and made such an impression that Open Forum officials were prevailed upon to place him on this winter's schedule. No other American newspaper man knows the far east in such detail as Mr. Sokolsky. it is said. He speaks Chinese fluently and served as official and observer to many ministries. A native of Utica, N. Y., Mr. Sokolsky attended Columbia university, where he made a record as a William student. In 1917. he went lo Russia to see the Russian revolution from a front-row seat, but instead stayed to edit the Russian Daily News in Petrograd, the only English language newspaper in the capital during the revolution. From August, 1917. to March, 1918, he edited this allied war paper, but his writings antagonized the Bolsheviks, who requested his abrnce from the country. He pushed on to China in March, 191 C where he became assistant editor of a newly established American newspaper in Tientsin, "The North China Star.” Three months later he became advisor to the police chief of Chihli province. From 1920 to 1930, Mr. Sokolsky served as political correspondent for many newspapers, including the New York Tiifies, New' York World. New' York Evening Post, the Phili adelphia. Public Ledger, the London Daily Express, and the Japan Advtrtiser, American newspaper in Tokio. Mr. Sokolsky's lecture Sunday ght, will start at 8:15.

★ Here Is the Latest Sensation in Radio imiaifeißSll §Bs Crosiey' TLJp|| FIVER lllMil® 19 Stunning New Design with 9j me POLICE'CALLS r ,h r won -$ 1 QsoHudu*^ 50 dor values. w K Fiver . ..$2.0 &T®&TJ|JIP :wnavs Priced from.... | Crosiey | ..free

The Talk of the Town! —This Great Sale of re's! MEN'S UNREDEEMED SUITS ItOVBRCOATS fl Don l lln-se hiiihli rChicago Jewelry and Loan Go. :n:t F WASHINGTON ST. Opposite Courthouse

H.H. Mayer S'GLASSES s^9B Prices as Low as Hi *" Mk Lenses These Beautiful Modern Glasses with stock lenses as illustrated, are selling as low as S2.CS. Buymg in large quantities enables us to quote ttu-se low p: ces. We have a registered expert optometrist to give you a perfect fit. ~ Our Method Is to See That You Are Satisfied If glasses do not suit you we exchange them FREE wl g A OF CHARGE. With our fitting of your glasses it will enable 3'on to see the smallest print (near or fan —CALL FOR FREE EYE EXAMINATION by our expert—Vi obligation if you do nor need glasses. Correction for Astigmatism and other ailments at slight wE additional cost. iiir " H^lA\\YfEfk |NC 1 “:r n . .. AK , f v . ■■■!..! .n Jr// cter t ■ .. . cTn'o'. l W. ** ASHINGION Optometrist si.oo A W KEK n,.„r* Eat irt Illinois street Honrs: 8:3(1 to 5.30. Wednesday Till 8:30. Saturday Till :I5

| RENT A A PI ANO PEARSON I Tiano Cos. 128 N. Penn.

friIARLP shoes at low eh ftucg SUW 2-‘>9 E. Wasningion st. -3- 303 W Washington St. STORES ion 111 S Illinois St.

HERE ARE “THREE LITTLE PIGS’” VOICES

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You’ve heard the voices of the "Three Little Pigs.” and here you see them, ready to chant a loud defiance to the big bad wolf. Left to right, the "voices” of the pigs of movie fame are Dorothy Compton, second pig; "Pinto" Colvig. third pig. and Mary Moder. first pig.

OPTOMETRISTS WILL HOLD STATE PARLEY Severin to Be Scene of Annual Convention. Thirty-seventh annual convention of Indiana Association of Optometrists will be held Sunday and Monday in the Severin. Demonstration of basic optometric technique will be given Sunday afternoon, with a postgraduate clinic on the eighteen-point examination given by the Terre Haute Association Sunday night. Business meeting will be held Monday morning, with Dr. J. Ray-

-6494 For Good Dry Cleaning I DYEINGS r w u u NOW F'RENCH steaZ OYE WORKS I !lU.i in Plant, 317 West Maryland St. RUGS, nRAFERIFS. CARPETS HATS Cleaned and Dyed FURS

Family Washing Delivered Damp—Ready to Iron Tuesday 5C Isa . O B f J ‘ ‘"X 4\\ C ll)y PROGRESS LAUNDRY

YllenA and )Vome*ix CLOTHING ON ens Y CREDIT ASTKIN C MARINE CQ s 127 W. WASHINGTON ST. *

mond Schutz, Manchester college, speaking Monday afternoon. A dinner and dance will be held Monday night. ANSWERS CALL: ROBBED Electrician Loses $23 to Two Unidentified Men. Two men w r ho stepped from behind a parked truck in the 1300 block Kentucky avenue, robbed Thomas Campbell, of Campbell Electric Company, 325 North Pennsylvania street, of $23. police were notified last night. Mr. Campbell said he had been lured to the address by a telephone call. The beaver catch in Alaska for 1933 is expected to exceed 20.000.

rgr. Customer! Twin Sizes • The spring is designed for use with either A Extra sturdy frame of heavy angle steel , . , , , . w guarantees long life, wood or metal beds! • The coils are extra deep and are secured at the top and bottom with heavy spring permanent resiliency. wire. January Store-Vide Clearance Sale! cLi 133-135 West Washington Street

T and > > > U MSSP'Yi Your Coal Bin W Every once in a while it pays to make fl an estimate of how much coal is still in the ‘f coal bin. 1 It’s a very uncomfortable feeling to approach the coal bin on a cold morning and I find that there is little coal left. Avoid the chance of a cold house and possible illness by using the ‘'CASH COAL MART”—which is published every day in the Want Ad section of The Times—as your shopping guide for the best place to buy coal. Dealers in The ;cash coal mart it i /'n i i\t published daily in Times the Lash Loal Mart Want Ads, is arranged for n , your convenience. Use it guarantee excellent the next time you need service at fair prices.

STATE TROOPS PATROL ELWOOD Business District Guarded Against Looting After Two Fires. Rjl I nitrd r>rtt ELWOOD. Ind.. Jan. 3.—While state troopers patrolled a large area of the business district, swept by two disastrous fires yesterday, plans for rebuilding went forward today. The quarter block occupied by the Leeson department store and several other two and three-story buildings was a smouldering mass

[wnw ta COLD jg] \ v /■' fi/£XTDAY-‘ /r , WITH TH.S TftaißL >/ /, f J M.TUOSt HILLS | j.You’ll say it’s amazing what a couple eases away ache and pain. Fights off of HILL’S COLD TABLETS and a cold germs. You feel like anew percouple of glasses of plain water, now son in a jiffy . . . and your cold goes and then, do to a cold. Relief is in a day. A cold is too serious to QUICK AND SURE. Because HILL’S trifle with. Get rid of it this gets at the root of the trouble and PROVEN. FASTER WAY. Ask any does three things necessary to break druggist for the genuine HILL’S up a cold. Ranishes poisonous mat- CASCARA QUININE tablets In ter from system. Checks fever and the red tin box.

_JAN. 3, 1934

today. Total damage was estimated at about $600,000. After firemen had brought the Leeson store fire under control, a second blaze broke out in the Alhambra theater. About forty persons, in the theater at the time, walked out to safety. The theater was damaged extensively from the fire, which started backstage. Troopers were called out to prevent looting of store windows which were unprotected when plate glass windows were broken in the confusion and by the intense heat. Mayor George Bonham, donning rubber boots, directed a force of the city's CWA workers in cleaning up debris from the streets. $25 Overcoat Stolen An overcoat valued at. $25 was stolen last night by thie\es who gained entrance by a pass key to the apartment of Earl Snider, 1702 North Alabama street.