The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 24 July 1936 — Page 4

THE DAILY BANNER, GREENCASTuE, INDIANA FRIDAY, JULY 24, 19J6.

Renews Fight to Escape Chair

A TKIBl'TK TO MRS. LOUSE M. OGO

What, No Interviews

SEN. OIT'T’V TO SPEAK GAKY, July 24 United States Senator, Kyan Uuffy of Wisconsin will be one of the national figures to address the two-day conclave af the Young Democrats of Indiana in Gary' on August 7 and 8, Joseph L. Melzer. president of the Young Democrats of the First District announced today. A Roosevcltian Democrat and an ardent supporter of the New Deal in all its phases, Senator Duffy, whose home is in Fond Du Lac, was elected to the Senate in the 1932 Roosevelt landslide. Conforming to the progressive traditions of Wisconsin, the Senator is ranked among the most powerful orators of the day. Senator Duffy will speak over a National hook-up in the Memorial Auditorium at the concluding session of the conclave on Saturday, August 8. Lieutenant Governor M. Clifford Townsend, Democratic nominee for governor, will be the principal speaker at the banquet to be held in con-

^ Mr*. Dorothy Sherwood * Maintaining that she drowned her son "to keep him from starving*’, Mrs Dorothy Sherwood refused to plead guilty to manslaughter when she appeared In court at Newburgh. N Y., above. She had previously been sentenced to die In the electric chair but was granted a new trial. She la scheduled to stand trial on first degree murder charges. Sept 14.

nection with the conclave on August 7 at the Lake Hotel. Democratic state candidates will be the guests of honor and Governor Paul V. McNutt will introduce the gubemational nominee. United States Senators Fredrick Van Nuys and Sherman Minton will be among other luminaries to raise their voices in defense of the New Deal.

urday. This time he is presented as a cowboy on a ranch west of the Rockies. He is involved in a scries of escapades with a woman who runs an adjoining ranch, and a bunch of unscrupulous cowboys. "We Went to College,” featuring Charles Butterworth, Walter Abel, Hugh Herbert and Una Merkel, is the picture tonight.

Previews and Reviews | AT LOCAL THEATERS •5* — -!• Voncastle “Buck Jones is starred in "Branded,” showing at- the Voncastle Sat-

Chateau “Kid Courageous,” with Bob Steele in the title role, is the attraction at the Chateau tonight and Saturday. A serial and two comedies complete the bill.

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Another friend has joined the "Choir Invisible.” Another home is vacant and has become simply a house for sale. | The brave spirit that animated it has gone to join her life-long partner, who so recently preceded her, and help to build another home in the new country to which she has journeyed. Both Mr. and Mrs. Ogg were fine public spirited citizens and cooperated actively in all movements for the good not only of our local community, but for the state of Indiana, i Both were engaged by the agricultural department of Purdue university to give talks in our rural communities. They engaged in these activities for several years to the satisfaction both of Purdue and the various communities to which they were sent. They were both strong temperance advocates, and both greatly interested in all movements of the Methodist church. ; Having lost their own children in early infancy they took into their * home and hearts the children of an invalid sister and gave them the ! same care and training they would have given to their own. These nephew's and nieces have amply repaid ; them in loving devotion. Mrs. Ogg had an unusually active, inquiring mind, and contributed largely to the success not only of our local clubs but to that of the state federation. She always preserved her independence of outlook, and the courage of her convictions. She was possessed of a cheery optimism that made life interesting both to herself and her friends, and a wit and humor and vivacity that brought much entertainment to the various groups with w'hich she was associated. For more than a year she had been shut out by ill health from active participation in public affairs, and had been greatly missed by her friends who were still able to carry on in these activities. Perhaps her most dominant trait was the courage with which she faced the problems which life brought to her; but even that was greatly shattered by continued ill health and the d ( eath of her husband. She will be long remembered in this community. Fare you well Mrs. Ogg. Miss Elizabeth Ames.

Alice Roosevelt Longworth Alice Roosevelt Longworth, whose latest picture is shown above, has long been a source of news, but her new policy of refusing interviews threatens to eliminate many of the headlines which have featured the doings of the late "T. R.’s" daughter, now bound for New Mexico to visit Ruth Hanna McCormick Simms.

EAT MOKE—FEEL BETTER 1 NEW HAVEN Conn., i UP)—“Eat, drink, and be merry”—five times a day, if need be, because, w'hen you feel tired you’re not weary—you're hungry! That is the advice of two Yale authorities. Have you lost your appetite? Is it hard for you to start working in the morning. Do you get grouchy toward noon and around quitting time? Does this happen even though you lead a sensible, normal, healthy life and eat well-balanced meals ? Because, if it does, your trouble may be nothing but hunger. These revolutionary statements, affecting the cooking of countless dieticians, chefs and housewives, and the eating habits of millions, are ad’ vanced by Dr. Howard Haggard and Dr. Leon A. Greenberg of the Department of Applied Physiology at Yale. According to their studies, too much emphasis has been placed on the quality and quantity of food and tu little on the time intervals at which it is eaten. Three meals a day, and no eating between them, long has been a hard and fast dietary mixim in America It is taught to growing children. It is a rule followed by factory workers farmers, professional people, young, old and middle-aged alike. And whenever anyone breaks it with a bar of candy or an ice cream soda, he or she is likely to feel that the sharp edge of appetite has been unduly

dulled.

Yet the custom of three meals a day is almost strictly American. In England, afternoon tea constitutes a regular repast, and some people eat two breakfasts one when they get up and one at about 10 o'clock. In lermany. two breakfasts are always in order, as well as an afternoon lunch and a raid on the pantry before

ct'ring.

While such practices are not unheatd in this country, the general attitude seems to favor just three meals It Is belicvel that a person hould eat only when hungry, that the appetite should be the guide to hunger, and that everyone should permit the ligestive system to rest. The investigat ons of the two Yale physologists refute all these ideas. The fact that the output of workers 'n industrial operations is lower in the latter part of the morning and of the afternoon, has been attributed to fatigue, but the physiologists’ searches tend to show that the rise and fall of muscular efficiency and industrial output is correlated with! the frequency of meals. Such was thCj

conclusion of Dr. Haggard and Dr. Greenberg as a result of experiments conducted among factory employes making rubber footwear. The physiologists found that when a glass of milk and six-ounces of cake was served to the workers in the middle of the morning and the afternoon, their efficiency was heartily improved and their dispositions considerably bright-

er.

The operation selected for the study at the footwear factory was the sewing together of the canvas parts of the tops of tennis shoes, because it necessitated virtually no mechanical delays. The operation also represented, as nearly as possible, a true measure of the actual effort of the individual operator, since a minimum hourly wage was guaranteed regardless of production, plus a production bonus for all work over a certain amount. The operations were divided into two equal groups of 10 each, one serving as the control group and the other as the experimental group. They were studied over a period of 10 weeks. The average hourly production for the control group, eating three meals a day, remained around 183.5 through out the 10 weeks. The average hourly production however, varied directly with the number of meals taken. In addition, the workers voluntarily stated that they felt less tired on those days when they had five instead of the customary meals. The physiologists point out that it is not frequent meals, but large meals that put a burden on digestion. That lazy-feeling and the difficulty in concentration that follows large meals is due to the diversion of the blood supply from the brain to the work of digestion Those effects do not follow small meals taken at frequent intervals. The chief disadvantage in frequent eating, lies in a possibly unwise choice of food for the smaller meals,

the new delux VONCASTLE Always Comfortably Cool

Final Tonight -Mss | We Went To uj

SATURDAY 2 TILL 11 P- >!■

20c BAL

M.\I\l0 <* < hii-dken

We Always Have The Best Western! Wild West Whirlwind Dromal|' yfl BUOi JON BRA*' ^ Rcugh-Ridinn Pomareu of Love and Adventure

Chap. 6 “FLASH GORDON” and NOVELTY KIDDIES — Free Gifts To Every Kid Saturday May

Saturday Midnight, Sunday and Monday Marion Davies, Dick Powell, Charlie Ruggles, Edw. Everett gj “HEARTS DIVIDED”

as there is a tendency to cat such foods as sandwiches, candy, pastry and soft drinks, with the result that the diet becomes unbalanced. Consequently, in aiding supplementary meals, care should be taken to select

give the greatc.st effioi^ ami freedom from distJ which the individual is ea[»j meals a day yield the mata

efficiency."

Their studies show furUiel

foods with a view to supporting the j five meals a clay, a workerpl

balance of the general diet, the physiologists advise. Although milk and cake were given to the factory workers in the experiment, the experimenters themselves would have preferred a salad vegetable in place of the cake, and soup or stew as a change from the milk occasionally. As a result of the investigation. Haggard and Greenberg conclude that "the practice common in this country of eating the day’s supply of food in three installments does not

hours of high muscular efficJ three meals, about four. aat| meals, a little more than twt 1

UTAH FARMERS TO'

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Styles of Yesteryear Mark New Formal?

Midseason evening frocks for dining and dancing are going in for lighter colored materials this sum-

mer. but the styling is still

taffeta foundation its bouffant lines

tuated by fringe edged ruffles

are accen-

Use of a rich look-

ing and lovely fabric for an evening t simplicity is illustrated by the model * Glenda Farrell. It is of heavy white ^ ren splashed with a smart and beautiful June Travis is quite aware of the * n! P or bcl ifi looking crisp and cool in hot weather Her ^ white marganza has diminutive sleeves. ® collar and artificial flower* at the waist-