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The Fresno Bee from Fresno, California • Page 23

Publication:
The Fresno Beei
Location:
Fresno, California
Issue Date:
Page:
23
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2--B MKK, JWIIIAV, AUGUST Daily Feature Pa NEWS Fresno Women Continue Games During Summer Fresno Girl Soon To Leave To Altend University At Scsitls Mips Mary Evelyn Johnson, who was a in from I Fresno High Schorl, plans to sail from San Francisco Seplcmbcr Fr have been A'STM' Jecting their bridge Ramcr. i i i the University of Washington. 1hp. Summer months, small will make her home with rela- rnretinp weekly at Iho various I i her father. Ernest Johnson, she will niolor to i Lake to-night to join Johnson who homes Barnes.

for luncheon and thrv join forrcp nnd form several lublt's. The group includes Me.sdames j. JX'Morgnn, J. B. Herbst.

H. Will- pon, A. Dnhlgrcn, Henry Haw- F.ori. S. S.

Hockrtt. Miles O. Hum-; plireys, B. B. Lamkin, Ernest Sled-! man, W.

T. Barr, Scott McKny a G. H. Nalzcl. SOJOURNS AT HAT CITY Mrs.

K. R. Bf.itty nnd a i have pone to San Francisco to spend several 31ETUKXS COAST Mrs. L. F.

Calbert has illumed from a vacation at Monterey and Santa Cruz. SOJOURNS TX SOUTH ilrs. A J. Dibert ha? gone to-Los Angeles for a sojourn of a month. RETURNS FROM TRIPS -Mr.

and Mrs. T. H. Elliot lia made several trips to thp const th Summer, duiing -which they vislto Monterey, San'a Cruz and Sa Francisco. RJETURNS TO COAST Mrs.

Peter H. Anderson, spent the week-end in Fresno, ha returned to Seabright where si- has had as her guest her mothe Mrs. E. M. Drury of Fowler.

YOUR BABY AND I By MYRTLE M. ELDRED If you have my quesfions you to axfc Eldred, to her in care The Bee. Enclose stamped, self-addressed MveJope and she will reply to you. personally. '-'Keep your child as cool as -possible during the Summer Mrs.

Eldred's leaflet Infants And Children In Summer, offers practical suggestions. Send a self-ad; dressed envelope bearing a three-cent stamp with your re- quest to the Your Baby And Mine department of this news; paper. BOES TOOK. BABY SPURN DRINKS OF WATER" Getting a child to drink wate one of those problems befor a mother goes down to defeat. We know that children havi definite fluid in th vernacular, "try to get them ti take, it" fluid requirements of the baby are figured at from two and one-half to three ounces of fluid for pound of his weight.

At liret glance this would seem amount, but of course the largest proportion of this fluid is furnished by thi breast or bottle feedings. The babv of seven jpunds, one day old, gets sbc feedings a. day of approximately two and, one-half ounces each. Thus fifteen of the necessary seventeen one-half to twenty-one ounces per day are taken care of. If he gets' only one ounce of water between each nursing, he -will consume his total fluid requirements.

'Babies who nurse three to three fccd one-half ounces would more than fulfill their fluid requirements, and are undoubtedly those babies into whom water can not he poured by bottle, cup, or spoon. There is nothing to worry about. "When babv mort water, he'li take it gladly. the mother is in any doubt wbout thft Amount of milk babv receives, the may a. point of weighing baby before and after nursing during tht twentv- four hours.

Add the total to find baby is getting AS much fluid he should have. Adding More There are tactful ways by which xnore fluid may be insinuated into the diet. More water may be added 1o the formula of the bottle baby. Oranpe juice may have a more liberal dilution. Water need not be given by bottle, but may be much inert by spoon, or by mp alter fourth or firth Eoccth.

Cool water more refreshing in Summer than warm Ore method we co r.ot a if the often juggerlcd one a sugar be added to the water. Sufar ie a food, not flavoring. The breast-fed baby net luM nd- tjiiional Fucar. F.r.d the bahy nets his full in formula. Fweet water is r.nt! ihirt-t if are arouse bsby'r of cr ri water.

raTi't i hor parents, Mr. and Mrs. K. S. IjOgan at i Summer home.

Mm. E. A. McCord is also a guest in the home. RETURNS FROM RESORT Mrs.

S. W. NIblock returned this week from Camp Sierra where she spent the Summer. She has her guests at her home on Hcri hoff A her daughter, Mrs. Jack Byfield.

Mid family of Bakersfield, who have been at Long Beach for several weeks. TRAVKT. IN EAST Mr. and Mrs. Claude Rowe are expected home next week from the East where they have been motoring.

They went to Chicago where they visited the Century Of Prog- i ress Exposition. SOJOURN AT BAY Cl'JCl' Mrs. C. L. Caine and daughters.

Misses Rosalie and Elva Cairie, left yesterday for San Francisco. RKTURN FROM CARMlil, Mr. and Mrs. John King. have returned from Carmel where they had as their guest Miss Margare't Garrard.

They also spent part of the Summer at Bass Lake. How To llreak Off Dorothy Dix ftKv.ii Stop RETURN FROM LAKE Charles W. Stewart has r. turned from Huntlngton where she was the guest of Dr. an Mrs.

J. E. Scruggs. SOJOURN TO NORTH Mrs. B.

Cornell and Mr George S. Smith are among th Fresnans who are spending th Summer months in San Francisc They are at the Hotel Canterbur PLAN FISHING TRIP Mr. and Mrs. Felix B. Holcom Mr.

and Mrs. Edward J. Wrigh Atiss Vinnie Webster' and Willia left Thursday for JLo Angeles where they will join othe "riends in a deep sea fishing exp dition. They plan to go near Sant Barbara. RETURN FROM NORTH Mr.

and Mrs. H. E. Barbour re- urned Tuesday night from a two veeks' motoring trip on the Red wood Highway to Crescent Cif nd to Lake County And Lak Tahoe. IS1TS HONOLULU Miss "Edith Lagerslrom of 103 Roosevelt Avenue is spending vacation at the Moana-Seasid Hotel on the beach at Waikik Honolulu.

7SIT TK SAN DIEGO Mrs. Walter Smith is in Sa 'iego, where she went by boat rom San Francisco in companj ith Mrs. Fred Hamlin of Santa arbara -whom she visited earlier the season. ETURNS TO SALINAS Miss Agnes Roach of Salinas, ho has been the house guest of iss Bertha Biehle. at her home on "ashington Street, has returned ome.

TTSIT AT DINKEV Mrs. George Hosier and Mrs. F. Wheeler have been spending- sev- ral days at Dinkey'Creek. Mrs.

O. Morrisson and family have also spending some time there siting her son, Jack Ducey. rtSITS FROM TEXAS Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Bird of oil Worth, Texas, are visiting their son-in-law and daughter.

Mr. and Hugh Brewster of North Van Ness Avenue. Stop The Heavy Parent Stuff If You Want To Break Of Your Child's Undesirable Love Affair, Advises Dorothy Dix Even' day get letters from agonized fathers and askln low they can break off unsuitable marriages (hit their children are determined to make. They see their fine, upright, hones John caught in the tolls of some silly Hill flapper without heart or brains or prln clples. and they know that if he marrie her It is bound to break his heart wreck his whole future.

They see their petted and adored Mary who h.is never known a hardship or evei an ungranted wish since the day she was bom, fascinated by some drunkard or pic turesque ne'er-do-well, and they know tha If she marries him she will bring down life-long misery on her head. But they are powerless to save their children from the catastrophes they are about to precipitate upon themselves. John and Mary turn a deaf ear to their parents' warnings and entreaties, and a and mother wring their a in futile anguish and ask whal can they do to prevent the tragedy. into gain. Perhaps Mary and the boy are not really ik love wit nofhlnV fa wouId slmn-er out an ith each other amount to But the minute father and mothe The contrariness Ve 'our br a kln8: TM atcl1 to 1 uit criticizing for a eyes as to force them to become The next the boy or gi nt the charms of a his or her.

champions. a 1 tS A hRn na Mary ceaselessly about Tom faults and find fault with everything- that Bob's eirl doei a a th! It makes them It Is a curious thing that parents ne Now there are many way which is their 3 mosfpolent a 11 case is tim Movie Activity Mounts As Strike Cloud Clears By LOUKLtA O. I'AKSQNS Aug. and furiously thes studios arc buying up available material. Tho slrike is OVB and I will be more activity in Hollywood Hi is coming Win a we a seen i long time.

Louis B. Mayer lia (riven a chunk fo Leo Jiirinski the rights to The SUmbou Iciest, deemed to be a Joan Crawford drama. William Sciter IK going to direct! "aurel and Hardy in a feature picture, lt'3 the first time Hal a a brought In an outside director Genevleve Tobln so you can see nsiders this an important picture. Genevieve Tobin, after a hectic season, went to Santa Barbara to recuperate a a immediately called on the telephone by Joyce and Selgnick. Warners were paging her with a very Interesting offer ome one of their stars.

She has igned the necessary papers and er first picture will Easy To You can wager your whole week's salary that Edna Best -will cave every! hing and stick to riend husband, Herbert. Marshall, he had one of Helen Hayes' pic ures offered her as well as lh eminine lead opposite Conrac agel in the stage play, There Is Always Juliet, but when Herber lanned to dash off to Honoluli the Cecil DeMllle Company he said "nothing doing." She wil ccompany her husband. She is girl who left John Gilbert wait- ng at the camera while she took fast train to New York to pay COD LIVER OIL AIDS GREATLY IN UUJULD1NG HEALTH husband will be a visit. Looks as a "Hollywood party" board the ship. Mrs.

Kathryn arver SJenjou is sailing for Hono- ulu for a noli- ay, and the ane Fire Com- any, with Virinia Cherrill, "ona a i a nd Lois Webr, who win the pie- ire, are also i the boai. tism blind merely suffer" a temporary ast'ijrn that would make the man or woman a misfit husba'nof' DOROTHY; DIX. Childre STORY TELLING Story telling is an essential part a. child's education. It makes is world richer, brings many valu- ble experiences to him when he not able to go after them.

It traduces new people, animals, nd ideas that the child might not eet in any other way. Fairies, jr example. JS'o child would ever eet a fairy if no fairy tales were Id to him and in my opinion that ould be an irreparable loss. Children are literal minded. A mind is severely restricted, one can see only what is shoved nder his nose, if he understands only what he can nee, smell, touch MUSICIAN and taste, he is going to lose the greater part of the joy ot living for he will not understand the people about him, nor what they do.

The literal minded person is isolated, unfriended and little loved. Imagination works a the human mind. It Chicago College, Inc. Oil Permanent CoapJelt FiEgcr Wave and Shampoo. 81.75 50c MidiMttd Staapoo Hair Dye riNGER WAVES 2 0 3 5 Too or for JTT.TON charm blurs the sharp edges of fact and leads one to understand, or to feel, that be 5'ond those well-defined lines lies a land of dreaming and reality, a land where one can wander and meet delightful and do In- and unusual things.

Fairy tales are our first Intimation that such a place exists and the Tories follow are charms that open he gates wider and point the secret and alluring bvwayi of the spirit. Little children can not talk, nor read, nor tell themselves stories. We older people have the privilege of opening this treasure trove for hem. It i our happy privilege to tell the first tales, to read the "first It would be a pity, both for ourselves and the children, were we to neglect this force for childhood's growth. We begin by telling stories, one sentence long, pcihapj.

but full of action, color and charm, for the child. Pat-a-cake, Pal-a-oake Baker's Man is a child story, so is Ban. Black Sheep, snd Little Boy Blue. Mother GOOEC. hle? and on up the road to litcra- there nre hosts of Afr trlling corner read! aloud ought 1o be a daily Pt.lctic" in a household where Ihfr'e children.

This reading it and a habil 'in readinr. It widens the children's Iicld of thought and hrtavjor. It ih'ir vo- HT.a th-ir rptrch. There i a tie adjust- ent requested the Katha! Hepburn contract a Joyce and Selznick are the lads -who are doing the talk- Ing. Seems tin Katharine Hepburn.

before physicions hod any idea of the virtues of cod liver ol in relationship to health and prevention of disease, it was used fishermen along the shores of the Baltic and North seas. Before modern scientific medicine, cod liver oil was prescribed for rheumatism, tuberculosis ant ail sorts of wasting disorders. In 1917, articles began to be written indicating the immense value of cod liver oil for the pre vention of rickets. In rickets there softening of the hones due to a failure of the body to use calcium and phosphorus properly. Strangely, there was apparently no rickets'in England until the development of window glass.

Today it is recognized that the rays of the sun, which produce vitamin in the human body, will not pass through ordinary window glass. Cod liver oil is especially rich in vitamin and is therefore of importance for the prevention of rickets. For this reason most doctors prescribe five drops three times a day for i a at two weeks of age, increasing ths dose after three weeks to ten drops, and gradually increasing it after a month so that two teaspoonfuls daily are being given at three of age. From four months of age on i a should receive three teaspoonfuls daily. Theje doses are not, however, the amount of cod liver oil recommended for treatment of rickets in babies or for curing the dip- ease.

If a child has ricknts or the 1 tendency to rickets, it should have prompt, medical attention so a suitable amounts of cod liver on A By ELY CULBERTSON World'i Champion Player And Creaks! Card Analysl TUB KNAVK OK CLUBS My editorial 'associate, Walter Malowan, once wrote story about the various unpleasant things that lad happened to him in connection with the knave of clubs. Probably lowever. after a experience of Ills in the experts' room nt Irockford's Club, where, no doubt, he best rubber bridge In the world played to-day, he will feel more tindly toward this card than he las felt in the past. Malowan, according to his original story, has ost games, slams and rubbers just ecause the knave of clubs had an unusual facility for i up where it should not be. His most ecent experience, however, has nul- ified all these former uphappy events.

The hand was: South, dealer. East West vulnerable; both part-score. GO. Mr. 4 7 a 9 0 9 3 2 4 10 9 6 S.

W. Pwk. Mr. Schfnkcn A A 10 4 9 4 10 7 0 A 2 Mr. The i i South West Xorth 10 INT Pass Pass Pass 20 Pass East Pass Pass West opened the king of hearts nd East played the heart 5.

West )en switched to the ace of spades, pon which East dropped the knave. small honrt. The ace of was, of course, marked In the West hand us East would not passed the one-Bpiulc bid twf'fl aces nor, a matter of fact, West have led the heart king lack-" Ing both tho queen and the Therefore Malowan played heart 10. West won with the BCD and returned another heart, which South won with tho queen. The declarer now had a perfect count on the West hand.

Obviously there had been five spades in as East had shown the pos" uion. of only two--three hearts anu diamonds--and, in consequence, there could be but ono club left. South could make his contract if held the opponents to one club, nnd it was thus a question of guessing' Ihe location of the knave of clubs. Malowan played a small spade from, ills hand, winning with the queen in dummy, and then led the ten of clubs. If East hod covered this card, all guess on the hand would have been avoided.

However, when. East played small. South had to make a guess. East had three clubs nnd West only one. Thereforo chances were three to one that East had the knave of clubs.

But Malowan remembered the bidding. East had shown the knave of spades, the knave of hearts and the ace of clubs, and it was extremely improbable that he would have passed his partner's one-spade- bid if he held the knave of clubs in addition. Quite probably, werft this the case he would have bid two clubs over West's one-spade bid, as this would have been sufficient to win the game and rubber Reviewing all these facts. Malowan was quite sure a the knave of clubs was in the West hand, a with confidence, played the king, dropping the blank knave and thereby making his three-diamond contract, sufficient for the game. In TO-MORROWS HAND what a should South outh won the second jades with the kinjr.

plan the play of the hand below Jt will be noted that the dummy as only one entry-card--the queen spades--the use of which must conserved until it can do the lost good. South now drew three rounds of round of at a contract of four spades, against which West, had opened or the right type of cod liver oil j'- 1 happily finding a break in concentrates may be prescribed suit. He then followed with the queen of cluDs. East won Cod liver oil is also widely rec-i a i the ace and returned ommended for cases of a tubercu- oua type, though it does not have my specific effect on tuberculosis. But cod liver oil aids the food in- good there is an exceptional demand on the mother to supply calciorn snd phosphorus for the infant If the mother's diet contains a sufficient ake and supplies good quantitiesjamount of calcium and phosphorus of vitamins, and is therefore as supplied by milk or dairy prod- lially useful in tuberculosis.

Cod liver oil has special value pregnancy. In which condition ucts, she may a the cod liver oil to aid the use of these materials by the body. South, dealer. Neither side vulnerable. 4 1 0 5 3 3 10 7 4 3 0 A 10 5 4 9 2 A 9 3 7 2 8 4 A 6 1 The a will I tn-irmrrow's 1 discussed lady was signed by P.adio -without any idea that she would become such a humdinger from the boi- office standpoint.

Her agreement called for two pictures a year will- the privilege of making a stage a i the interim. Joyce and Selznick are now agreeing to hree pictures but, oh, what a difference in salary. It's double what she received before she became Katharine the Great. Snapshots of Hollywood collect- at random: The amateur talent in Hollywood professional. Donald Ogden tewart, Eddie Goulding, Gregorv iatoft and Paul Gregory put on i free thow at a supper club that I worth 15 of anybody's money Jwight Fiske's sophisticated songs ad even' one in stitches.

He Is splendid entertainer. Gloria wanson. one of most appre- ative listeners. She ami Michael armer were in the party with the the Stew-! rts, William Fleishmann and Mrs ulian Allen. Bob Benchlcy orted pretty Louise Macy.

Joan Gene Markey, Adolphe enjou. the Lionel Barrymores, Itj and the Barons, oe Atkins Jobyna Howland. King idor -witrf a. tall beauty, among hose present. Edward (Mecca) raham flying to New Tork for opening of Marilyn Miller's now.

The new Sullivan baby Ij ailed Michael. Samuel Gold'wyn shat he has never heard dl- ctly from P.onald Colm.in thai is returning 1 the Goldwyn udios. Sam says Colman will 'be if he comes buck Colis now in South Africa for Travrlcn From All of World PLCLARK 1 LOS ANGELES ft-r a i i in i me llr-urs of h1 chort-r We BRAND THAT ALL AMERICA PREFERS ow to make good coffee everytime Co 15 cb'ffct In its most rlclicimis ani! inexpensive form. DcHcIoSs time! And it takes lot less coffee to make it (about 1 5 less). per Ib.

it. be tmazeri. Here's the simple war to make A Drip Maker simple device that permits "fresh" foiling water to ifiltcf julcMy and only once through a special coffee and a jihcr paper (sec illustration). Special! Prepared Schilling Irlp Schilling Drip Coffee is specially blended, tpcciaiiy roasted, and specially ground for the immediate extraction of ail its n'ch, fragrant flavor. Coffee intended for percolator is not adapted for the drip process in which the water drips through the coffee but once.

A iff paper rests below- the coiTcc to let through" nothing but tiie delicious htaithfiil amler drops. Rral Drip CoiTcc cannot he mad. For your iihrr papers are fsetti in fee) The SrhilliBg Drip Maker shown here, is of sturdy enamel endorsed "nv "The Good JJoiiKkrtpinp The color is ivnn-, irimmed in jreen in kerp-ng viih iht Jahlt service. she 5proal Off'r) '1'ry the Maker and the Coffrc frr a -vrek for i jnonjh. If, morning ar.rr moniinr, i'lry do not produce the drlirioiumfffe TOU ever lasted j-oiir J1.20 back instantly from your grocer or from u.

fafrodarforg Offer! 1 7 trip ijoffff MoktT onrf only 1 1.20. at Jfhf rttnntil mpfijv SchilliJ For PcrCOlalor or ordinary rofTr.c pnt UK St MiilKne sx.

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About The Fresno Bee Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1922-2024