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The Indianapolis News from Indianapolis, Indiana • 18

Location:
Indianapolis, Indiana
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Ttf It THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS MonJiV. lun. 26, Wife Objects To Husband At Home SXj DEAR ABBY I once told my son that perhaps he ought to just give her the money and let her buy what she wants, but he said she did not like to receive money as a gift because it was so crass, and lacking in warmth and sentiment. Have you any suggestions? TIRED OF SHOPPING DEAR. SHOPPING: If it's "warmth" and sentiment the woman likes, tell your son to send her a warm, sentimental card.

And If money is too bow about a gift certificate? Probemi? Truit Abbf. for ptttonal repy, writ to Abby, in can of Th Indlanapolii Ntwt, and neoi itamptd, aiitouti amtlopo. (ADVERTISEMENT) DOCTOR TESTED PLAN REVEALS: QUICK MIGHT LOSS want to have anything to do with her husband at night because he came to bed smelling like a brewery. You sure didn't give her much help. You should have told that woman to put a glass of mouthwash by the side of his bed, and also a spitoon.

The reason this world is so messed up is because we can't meet each other half way. CONCERNED DEAR ABBY: My son works long hours daily and when gift-giving time comes along, he asks me if I will please shop for a gift to give his wife. I do not mind shopping, although it is not easy for me, but no matter what I select, my son's wife always takes it back and exchanges it for something else. (I know her size, but it seems I can never choose a color or style she likes well enough to keep.) Since have yet to select a gift that she has kept, I feel I am wasting my time to buy gifts for her. WITHOUT DANGEROUS DRUGS: Miss Mildred Adams, (center), year veteran of the center.

Miss consults with Atterbury Job Corps Adams has had a career as a "patron i'Center youths Jerry Rogers (left) of youth." and Kenneth Scott (right). A seven Work With Children Brings Peace To Mildred Adams Recently a beautiful 19-month child crawled up on to a chair and took a bottle of iron tablets out of the cupboard. Thinking they were candies, he screwed off the cap and before he could be stopped, swallowed some 50 tablets. He was rushed to the hospital but died 45 minutes later. That child is just as dead as if he had swallowed rat poison.

Please, please, warn others. STILL GRIEVING IN HILLSBOROUGH DEAR STILL GRIEVING: If your letter saves one child, it's well worth printing. Thank, you for warning others. DEAR ABBY: A woman wrote in saying she didn't Now you ran loss weight this week, fet rid of unhealthy pound, un-sightly inches without dangerous drugs, strenuous xercises, and without ever milling meaL Slim-Mint, a doctor tested chewing gum plan has been used and acclaimed by thousands across the country for over 15 years. Chew By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Do you know how this new idea of working a four-day week is going over? Several men where my husband is employed recently, went on that four-day workweek and now my husband is considering going on it.

I suppose there are some advantages, but I'm not so sure how I would like that setup. It would mean having my husband around the house an extra day, and in the past some of those long holiday weekends have -seemed awfully long to me. I would like to discourage it in a subtle way, of course, but I don't want him to get the wrong idea. Anything you can tell me about it will be appreciated. N.Y.

POST READER DEAR READER: If your husband gets the wrong idea, you're in the clear. It's the right idea you don't want him to get. Malcolm S. Forbes Editor-in-Chief of Forbes magazine says the men love the four-day workweek, but their wives aren't so crazy about having their husbands home that much. Malcolm must be reading your mind.

DEAR ABBY: Parents are warned repeatedly to keep cleaning fluids, drugs ana poisons locked away where children cannot reach them. But nowhere have I seen a similar warning concerning iron tablets, which can be fatal if taken in large We've got something special PlZzAIfUT from their truck garden and flowers from their greenhouse. Miss Adams says she still hears from many of the children she and her parents helped raise. Now adults with their own families, the former wards often seek her out to thank her for the help and goodness her family extended. "I guess God has me on earth to be kind to children.

I feel at ease and at peace with myself when I am around them," she says as she describes herself, "I am a great lover of youth." A seven-year veteran of the center, she works as a vocational records clerk and was recently honored by the Vocational Training Department as the "staff member of the month." Recalling her days as surrogate mother to many, Miss Adams says she and her family began their self-styled adoption home in Whiteland, with as many as seven children in the household at one time. The Adams family then moved to a five-acre plant farm in Bargersville where the parents and their charges worked together growing their own food. They raised household and pocket money by selling vegetables Vfm Jrv Mor Pitta Than Anyona Hit In Th. World. WJtSia- rl I II 3T If tT The Unique in ladies' fine Footwear including the beautiful high heels.

CLEMENS SHOE SALON 9 E. 38th 923-9203 SHELBYVILLE 8 Indianapolis Locations 61 IS Alllsonvill Rd. 3312 Southeast (Rl. 31) 1421 N. Arlington 4983 franWln M- 7023 Madison Ave.

3744 Lafiyetle Rl 3851 N. Post Rd. 3648 N. High School Rd. Special to Hm Newt EDINBURG, Ind.

-It might be considered chic to be a patron of the arts, but Mildred Adams takes pride in the fact that she is a very Special "patron of youth." Now an Atterbury Job Corps Center employe, Miss Adams began her work with young people in 1936. From 1936 to 1961, she and her parents cared for and reared 34 children from the Children's Guardian Home in Indianapolis. They took care of many of their wards until they reached adulthood or until their families were again able to support them. When Atterbury opened, Miss Adams knew that she wanted a job there because vTHE FINEST DECORATED CAKES FOR I SAME DAY SERVICE ORDERS IN BY 10:00 A.M. I READY AFTER 4:00 P.M.

SWEETHEART: 5 BAKERY 3009 N. SHERMAN DR. PHONE 546-7385 i Starting Maybe you'd life to get out oiee a Henley-Wilier Vows Are Read Special to Th News PINE VILLAGE, Ind. -Miss Maria K. Wilier and William H.

Henley were married May 25 in Pine Village Christian Church. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall G. Wilier.

She is a graduate of Indiana State University. The bridegroom, a graduate of Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Henley, 3102 N.

Campbell, Indianapolis. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega Fraternity. The bride's sister, Miss Karla R. Wilier, and Terry Helson, Joliet, III, were honor attendants. Slim.Mint before and between meals.

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ALL THE PIZZA SALAD $129 You Can Ear I man. rnru Check helpful. Tuesday June 27 thru 6MWSVC CIOCT nilSIITV SW that Kneitels Live In San Francisco Special ts The Newi SAN FRANCISCO Miss Mary Diane Weber became the bride of Dr. Alan Ivan Kneitel May 27. The bride is the daughter of Mrs.

Albert R. Weber, 6185 Washington and the late Mr. Weber. She attended Butler University and is a graduate of Manhattan-ville College, Purchase, N.Y. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma Sorority.

Her husband, a graduate of Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kneitel, Los Angeles. He is a graduate of the University of Southern California School of Medicine, Los Angeles. The couple is living in San Francisco.

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Pages Available:
1,324,294
Years Available:
1869-1999