Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 August 1945 — Page 10
THE DOCTOR SAYS: Losing? Then Eat, Rest ‘More v
The Dangers From
By WILLIAM A. O'BRIEN, M. D. | condition. Instead of eating more, WHILE leanness is desirable as; he rested more and in a short time : | regained the lost pounds. we grow older, marked underweight To gain weight we must change a any age should be corrected. or way of living as well as our There are not as many diseases as- | eating habits. sociated with underweight as with, underweight may result from a yerweight, but excessive thinness is disorder which interferes with asfai the cause of fa-| similation of food or from actual tigue and nerv- disease. "Underweights should have ousness, and it the benefit of a thorough physical makes us more examination. If disease is not pressusceptible todis- ent, in the majority of instances, ease, | eating too little will be the cause. Tuberculosis is 2.8 =n associated with MOST underweights
oe FO
though those of cause they compare the amount of normal weight| food they eat with the samount and above nor- others eat and conclude that food mal weight may cannot be responsible for their Dr. O'Brien
sase if exposed to an open case. Underweights either do not get snough food of the right kind, or hey use up too much energy, or oth,
eating a great deal. We cannot compare our food needs with those of other people because we all differ in our energy expenditures or in the way in which we assimilate our food. To gain weight the diet should be stepped up 500 to 1500 calories more. a day in addition to the food you A noted political leader who has| are now eating. scruples against eating too much ®» & = is said to have discovered that he DRINK an extra quart of paswas losing weight, and he and his| teurized milk each day and this will followers became alarmed about his|add 700 calories. Eat fatty meats,
” » & WEIGHT can be increased by sating more food, or by resting
| - [FOUR Underweight, SOLDIERS DEAD
rich salad dressings, and gravies, cream soups, dessert, and ice cream. | Fresh fruits and vegetables will] stimulate your appetite. | Do not eat between meals as this| may take away your appetite, but eat before you go to bed, \was reported killed in Europe and Get a good sleep each night and pig jerome King, South Bend; Pfc learn to relax and you will gain| 0 leach, Hebron. and Plo.
One Killed in Europe, Three Die in Pacific. |
|
for your thinness, Certain drugs oo ia : | c theater. | have been used as artificial appetite . | stimulants, but after they were dis-| The following men are missing in
continued the extra weight was lost {the Pacific:. Cpl. Yearby Ashby,
believe underweight, al-| themselves to be hearty eaters, be-|
contract this dis-| underweight as they are already {ing of the Indiana Old Age Pen-|
: . ' Evansville; Quartermaster 3-c SylRy the old eating habits were re | vester Catozzi, Bedford; Radioman | Stine. ee [3-c Glen Halstead, Lynn; Seaman | PENSION GROUP MEETING |1-c William Moss, Richmond; Boat-
B. J. Brown will speak and Wil-|SWain’s Mate 1-c Eugene Robison,
liam Rhoads will show motion pictures of world war II and comic strips tomorrow at the mass meet-
Boggstown, and Lt. Arthur Todd, Ft. Wayne. | Marine 8S. Sgt. Theodore Gore, | Evansville, was wounded in the Pa-|
sion group nine. The meeting will | AC:
eu oD 55 Juch Bole) ADIES OF EAGLES
chapel, 2401 Martindale ave.
RESUME ENLISTMENTS | PLAN WEEKLY PARTY
WASHINGTON, Aug. 30 (U. P.).| The Ladies auxiliary of the Fra—President Truman by executive ternal Order of Eagles will hold order today permitted resumption their weekly card party tomorrow of voluntary enlistments in the at 8 p. m. in their hall, Room 211, American armed forces. Voluntary 43 West Vermont st. enlistments were suspended on Dec.! Mrs. Clara O'Keefe, Mrs, Nellie 5, 1942, Mr. Truman's action re- Shaw and Mrs. Helen Jepsen comvoked this suspension. pose the arrangements committee.
Chose
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TERMS meY °° arranged y : desired!
Charge:
a ___ THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
INDIANA
Iceland Bride
Sgt. Elbert Hawkins, Bloomington, | 3
weight if there is no organic cause | pro old V.ker, Elkhart doy in the .
Mrs, Margaret Boeky, of Iceland, wife of Sgt. John Boeky, holds her 2-year-old daughter, Greta, at Red Cross headquarters in New York. She and 31 young women from Iceland, married there to American soldiers, arrived ahoard a navy transport,
Twenty-one of them had babies,
Mrs. Boeky and her daughter are headed for reunion with Sgt. Boeky at his home in Pennsylvania.
LOT OF REST
: {thousands streaming through In-
| Jobs back, they simply don't want
: (easy for a long, long time.
\
@
A flat tire may lead to unexpected pleasures . . .
FIRST 6I GOAL
Cold on Schooling; Just ‘Maybe’ on Old Jobs.
By JUNE McKOWN Peace—it's confusing, That's the consensus today of G.1's, as reflected by some of the
dianapolis’ Union station daily. Of those interviewed, all but one
The idea. of government loans was spurned. Although most of them may have theif old
them, Most of all they want to take it
Risking being caught in the rush as dozens of ex-soldiers, still wearing khaki, campaign ribbons and that beautiful discharge emblem, hurried: through the station to the trains, we asked them what they are going to do in civilian life. Through With School
Only one said he was going to college. Sgt. Charles Struble, Gary, who had been in the South Pacific, sald he was going to Purdue, “maybe.” But he was outnumbered by those who would have none of it. T. 5th Gr. Jerome Eberhardt, Massillon, O., who was a dead ringer for movie actor Alan Hale at 25. was back from 31 months overseas. He said, “I'm going back to the steel mills for a month or so, then I don't how. ... 2» Pfc. Kenneth Roosa, Winchester, (had worked in a glass factory there prior to induction. “My job is waiting,” Pfc. Roosa said, “but I'm not going to do a darned thing for a long time, then I'll probably go back there.”
...But a flat drink is always dismal!"
Wants to Fish | Sgt. Hayden Fletcher, Hopkins-| {ville, Ky., who had been out of the| |army just four hours, grinned and {said, “I'm going to fish and hunt! { for about six months.” | T. 5th Gr. George R. Morin, { Providence, R. I, was a carpenter |for the navy before the army got | him, “but I guess the navy’'s going| out of the carpenter business, so I'll have to look around for something else.” “That G. L loan business is just ia lot of hooey,” Pfc. Roland Relue, Defiance, O., said as he sweated \ /
out the last train ride at govern- Where there's life
ment expense. 2 ! /] | \\
“A soldier with any gumption can y you'll hear-
borrow at any good bank,” Pfc. |Relue declared. “I don't want any {of that schooling, either. I was a | filling station attendant, and I may |go back to that, but I'm going to {think about it awhile.” For Vagabond Career . T. 5th Gr. James Kridler, Steubenville, O., who came out of the| Pacific theater with only a slight] limp, said, “I'm going to be a vaga-| bond.” | Pvt. Charles Weatherford, Louis- | ville, Ky., was a salesman before | the war, and his old job is waiting | if he wants ft, but he wants to be, his own boss in his own business. | A train thundered in overhead, | and another group of soldiers made | for the gate. An MP shook a red-| headed corporal who was dozing on a bench. “What're you going to do when you get home, soldier?” we yelled. | “Me? Why I reckon I'm just] gonria sleep about a hundred years.” |
CANADA DRY WATER is the preferred club soda in fine bars, hotels and clubs. “PIN-PQINT CARBONATION”. .. millions of tinfer bubbles . . . keeps drinks full of sparkle and zip, to the last sip. And Canada Dry’s special formula points up the fla. vor of any tall drink. For drinks that taste better, sound bet» ter... ask for sparkling Canada Dry Water when you're out. | serve it in your home.
If you prefer a mixer with a fuller flavor, there's nothing as good as “the Champagne of Ginger Ales”... Canada Dry.
“ g y g — when this was the
last word in beach costumes.
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