Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 23 April 1943 — Page 11
Tekan
Sq aeage, demanding money and
“served 10 months
+ T@gain today.
‘Repeats Holdup - Two Years Later . DENVER, April 23 (U. P)—
-8¢eld up.a restaurant. He handed ~® note to the girl in the cashier's
Warning that he carried a reI%olver in his pocket. : She handed him $10. Later Edmondson was arrested and in the state
ae
#
waa
* penitentiary. 3 > Edmondson was under arrest
+ There was a different girl in the y@ashier's cage, but it was the same restaurant—and - the same note. The girl handed him $10.45 this time. Edmondson was caught «8s he fled. “This happens to me whenever 3 get drunk,” he said.
Spree,
3D OTERMA COMET DISCOVERY CLAIMED
By Science Service ‘CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 23—
| CHILD HEALTH
URGES CARE OF
Authority Asks Examination Of Those Planning To Take Jobs.
By Science Service WASHINGTON, . April 23. — A physical examination of every boy or girl should be made before he or
she is granted a work certificate,]
Miss Katharine P. Lenroot, chief of the U. S. children’s bureau, declared at a press conference here. The “special measures” for the protection of working boys and girls of high school age called for in President Roosevelt's proclamation of May 1 as child health day were explained at the conference. Under the stimulus of war, more than 2,000,000 boys and girls between 14 and 18 years of age were employed as of October, 1942, the children’s bureau estimates. More than 3,000,000 were employed dur-
"ight ascension was 12 hours, 19 minutes, and its declination plus
1 degree, 12 minutes.
(As comets are named after their @iscoverers, this will be known as
the third Oterma comet.
ing the 1942 summer vacation. An even larger number is expected to be ai work this summer. The physical examinations, Miss Lenroot explained, are needed to make sure that a child with defects of vision or hearing, with incipient hernia, or with unsuspected tuberculosis or heart disease, is not subjected to work which will further impair his health. Many such children should not work at all. Others might work in certain jobs under careful supervision. Too long hours of work are another health hazard to boys and girls of high school age. The child labor laws of 42 states now have a maximum work week or 48 hours or less for workers up to 16 or 18 years in a varying range of occupations, No child under 18, the children’s bureau maintains, should be permitted to work more than eight hours a day or 48 hours a week either on farms or on other jobs.
WPB LIFTS QUOTAS
—A war production board order issued ® today permitiing increased production of baby carriages will result
Indianapolis to Have WAAC
Indianapolis is to have a WAAC color guard. The jon is teaching the young women procedure and their duties, The three enlisted women in the center form the color guard. They are Cpl. Erma Vargo, Sgt. left of them is Li. Anne Hatfield and to the right, Lt. Gertrude Pratt, attached to the WAAC office here. That's Sgt. Emil Jurbala at the ‘left, Cpl. James Conley, right, and Sgt. Walter Finkler at
extreme right.
ON BABY CARRIAGES
WASHINGTON, April 23 (U. PJ).
in more carriages being turned out in 1943 than were made in an average pre-war year. :
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The lunch pail
lunch with’a sandwich and a sweet drink has become the popular but undesirable habit of a great many people, either because of the agli brief, hurried ¢ lunch - hour
cost of a satisfactory meal—
So tutes a real Wa meal, Dr. Masters Actually, the average adult doing physical work will require about 1000 calories at this meal—and a proportional third of the daily protein should by all means be included. The one-third of the vitamins should be present also, and to assure a sufficiency of the’latter, the. meal should "have nutritional variety as well as quantity. A good lunch includes milk, fruit or vegetable, a main dish of meat, cheese, fish or eggs. The caloric value of the meal may be completed with bread and butter or oleomargarine. : Such 2 meal can be set up in the average lunch pail with great possibilities of variety. The allowance of milk may be taken in
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LEADERS APPOINTED FOR SCHOOL PARTY
Committees for the Warren Central high school senior community party, Friday night, April 30, have been announced by the co-chair-men, Janet: Burwell, Loren Cannaday and Arnold Behrman, as follows: General Arr ts—Ruthe Da . angemen 5 on. Charles Glasier, Dorothy Piersall, Joyce Johnson, Mueller, Vera Rejko, Steinbrook, William Allen, Caroline Gioe, Louise Brown and Joseph Birnell. Piel, chairman; Ww James Berry, lens Wiese, Joan Fry, Betty Boyd, Butler, Donnas Gale, Harold Tignor, Jo Ellen Russel, Charles Martin and
ly James Ge: . Dorothy Echakel and Mar-
Loren Cannaday, chair fe Reasner,
man; Bruce k, ‘Preece, Jeffers, Shirley West, John
Norwal Piel, Norman Dill and’ e Mithoefer. . A Floor Show—Arnold Behr-
ner, o and Joyce Johnson.
Marie Sheppard and Cpl. Mina Joehl
Health Column Lunch Pail Is Worker's : Main Source of Energy
By DR. THOMAS D. MASTERS : is the personal self-serve restaurant of the millions of workers in the nation’s war plants. : That pail should contain at least one-third of the whole day's nutritional requirements. For the noonday meal, whether made up at home and.taken to work, or eaten in a factory cafeteria, is the chief source of enery for the day’s work. The phenomenon of a too-quick
Colo
| COLUMBUS, April 23 (U. P)—
| Women war workers who must do
To
2 thermos bottle. The vegetable or fruit in the fresh state is more readily transported, and the outer coating, usually removed in the cooked or canned varieties, is most often the richest source of the minerals and vitamins that make these foods so valuable. Meat and cheese can, of course, be made info sandwiches—as can cooked fish and eggs. After these foods (with added bread and butter) have been provided for, the meal can be topped off with a sweet, chocolate, etc., by way -of dessert—which gives calories, but little other nutriment.
Between-Meal Snacks
The lunch box should also cone tain extra milk, cookies, or fruit that may be taken between meals. A brief interlude and a Small inter-meal feeding may help avoid fatigue and greatly heighten the efficiency of the worker. Attention should be paid to cleanliness and the general atiractiveness of the food’s layout. Color and freshness, with a variety of flavors represented, please the senses and therefore accelerate digestion. :
Hot Soup in Thermeos
It is well to remember that as this meal supplies one-third of the day’s nutrition, it should be. planned in conjunction with the other meals that precede and follow it. : If ‘it is possible to secure milk at the place of lunching, it is often advisable to put hot soup in the thermos instead, to initiate a flow of digestive juices.
Mary Eleanor Ward is decorations chairmsn and Loren Cannaday is parent sponsors committee chairman.
WAR WORKERS : "Keep Feeling Fit...Keep Production Up”
TAKE EFFERVESCENT
al nig)
CELERY
ig , A Pa TIROY. TX XI 422 7
7 If You Suffer Distress From™
«*' FEMALE
ps 3 ‘ods of the blues—due to functional monthly
two jobs—ome at home and one ai; the factory—represent one of : the leading causes ‘of absenteeism, Dr. C. D. Selby, Detroit, General Motors Corp. medical director, said yesterday. “More women are guilty of absenteeism . proportionately than men,” Dr. Selby told the fourteenth all-Ohio safety congress, “and no wonder. They must worry about maintaining their homes, the safety of their children and shopping in addition to their war work.” He urged that war plants arrange “shopping leave” for women as & means of reducing absenteeism.
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SHARON, Pa., April 23 (U. P.). —Six field interviewers from the bureau of census came here to find out whether there was really a shortage of rooms in this area.
LONDON, April 28 (U. P)—
Jugoslav patriots wiped out four Ttalian garrisons in heavy fighting throughout Bosnia in the past two months, reports from Europe said
They found there was.
In fact the shortage was so critical that the investigators had to go to Youngstown; O., some 15 miles away, fo get hotel rooms
for themselves.
LUTHERAN PIONEER DIES AUBURN, April 28 (U. P.).—Funeral services for William ¥. Sander, 82-year-old native of Ft. Wayne, will be held tomorrow. He died yesterday following an extended illness. Mr. Sander was prominent in | organizing the English Lutheran church of the Redeemer in Ft. Wayne.
today. Jugoslav sources, that fighting was heaviest in the Sarajevo region, said three railway stations were ‘destroyed and all but a few houses in one village ruined. The German-controlled Zagreb press has admitted destruction of a vital bridge connecting the interior of Jugoslavia with the Adriatic coast, these sources said.
TOWNSEND CLUB TO MEET
Townsend club 25 will meet at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in McClain's
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