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Great Bend Tribune du lieu suivant : Great Bend, Kansas • Page 8

Lieu:
Great Bend, Kansas
Date de parution:
Page:
8
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

PAGE 5 The Great Bend Daily Tribune SUNDAY, MARCH 28, 1954 April, RCA said. I 50 Years of Bridge Representatives of more than 50 Miss, (in Four TV parts, transmission and set 1 1 ht to improve promotion" I to improve programs" improve progr Chicago Neighborhood Tries To Recoup from Novice Driving the tea. The WSG banquet will be served Methodist Women Hard At Work On Plans For Big April Conference manufacturers attended the pio- gram at. the RCA Bloomlnglon -B- Sudonls of factory for a tour of the plant and jIiiSitiSi Presbytcrlun a detailed explanation of the RCA 1903( nnd color system. Charlie Dean.

Mrs. Ed at 6:30 p.m. in the Fresoycerian church and then the group will Chicago, IIP) A south side anymore, he made the zu leei from the second floor to the ground in record time. He was taken to the Illinois Central hospital with a dislocated shoulder return to the Methodist church withe evening session, at which On- The manufacturers were Mrs. Lvnn Hooson and eita Johnson and Mrs.

Paul Ar- to begin immediate production of Hill 'Daniel are still an color equipment, adapting i.lse,,;,v,:ji,; "We still and cuts. rington will be the speakers. At 8:30 a.m. Sunday a coffee RCA-developed system to their m. dogs at bridge," neighborhood was still trying to recover Saturday from Arlene Goerner's driving lesson.

Arlene, 16, took the wheel with her 21-year-old brother, Howard, beside her to tell her what to do; Here's what happened: She swerved to avoid a dog In an alley and rammed a station wagon. The station wagon rolled into a row of garbage cans. The gar methods through a licensee i ld one 0f them. Meanwhile Arlene hied herself to attend classes at Chicago hour will be held at the Parrish arrangement. hotel's Santa Fe room, followed by vocational school.

She left brother Howard to explain things. The 15-inch set, which Is slightly a favorite hymn sing led by Lois Patton, president of the re INSTRUMENT Police said Howard was "abus-e" in his explaining and arrested Bend WSG. The group then will go to the church to attend the regular him. larger than comparable black and white sets, will require about twice as much electricity to operate. The picture, as telecast through a closed circuit in the plant, was bright and clear without the lineal interference common to conventional sets.

bage cans smashed into a house back stairway. Arlene's mother, Mrs. ge Goerner went to the Hyde Park police station to bail out Howard. The stairway collapsed. Arthur Mankin, 33, having a Sunday morning service and at 12:45 p.m.

a luncheon will be served in the church dining room. Mrs. Ethel Strickland and Gertie Stiles will be the speakers at the concluding session following the luncheon. On her way out, Sgt. Harold meal with his wife on the second floor of the house, muttered Murphy stopped her.

A. Smith, a company vice- Here are two tickets for your president, said color reception is something must have happened our station wagon" and stepped possible in 35 cities, tie sain By Specialists A Music-Department" daughter," he said. "One for negligent driving, the other for having no driver's license." out to look. Since the stairway wasn't there by the end of the year, NBC will be color-casting two programs week from New York and a third from Burbank, Calif. Public Librarians duction later this year at a "some Throughout State to what" higher cost.

At the same time, they predicted mass produc Receiving Sets tion of 5500 sets in three to five years and a three-shows-a-week Attend Workshops During April, the Kansas Li color telecasting program irom NBC studios by the end of this brary association will cooperate with the three state teachers col For Color Video Info Production year. Other major manufacture have said that prediction of quii leges to sponsor workshops for the public librarians of the state. mass production of color TV sets Thi3 announcement was releas are premature. The "compatible" RCA ed by Ford Rockwell, president of Bloomlngton, (CP) Television's "color barrier" has been the Kansas Library association which can also receive standard librarian of Wichita black and white shows, should be Rockwell said that these work in store display rooms by mid shops were designed for librarians in the small public libraries broken by 15-inch color receiving sets rolling off a factory assembly line at the rate of 10 an hour. The sets, to retail for a suggested $1,000, were Introduced this week by the Radio Corporation of America to representatives of the state.

These people are oft-without facilities for supple X-L We Absolutely Guarantee That There Is FILLER IS IMPERIAL FEEDS menting their education and keep ing up to dale with modern for the 13th annual Women's Society of Christian GENERAL CONFERENCE com competing firms. POTATO CHIPS MADE IN GREAT BEND AT YOUR GROCERS RCA snokesmen said a 19-lnch Bend church; Great 'Bend set was expected ro go iu Rockwell stated that the program at each college will emphasize methods of book selection, ordering, cataloging and arrangement, with instruction being given public in (Tribune Photo) ijienn vveiruut-n, tu-um WSCS. The women of the Great Bend Methodist church we now I addi and a pledge GENERAL each area. A certificate will be issued to each attending librarian working nigm ana any un auau6cmi I service will be held, here during the coming week of the central Kansas con-; starUng gat. ference of the Women's Society of Christian Service and i day morning at riai com-the Weslevan Service Guild, which, combined, are expect- mittee reporis win be.

submitted Zelia French of the Kansas state traveling library in Topeka will be state chairman and will be as 6w INSURANCE Get IKAPERIAL In These Forms Meals Granules Cubes Pellets High Molasses Meal HIGH MOLASSES PELLETS HIGH MOLASSES CUBES WALNUT CREEK iMLfNG CO. GREAT BEND, KANSAS and an invitation to hold the 1955 annual meeting is to be presented sisted by the following local chair to the conference. Gertie Stiles man: Hays, Claude Settlemire; Emcoria, Orville L. Eaton, and ed to attract between 1,300 and 2,000 women to the city. The conference will be one of the largest church meetings ever staged in Great Bend, and will bring to the city delegates from 450 churches in 75 counties.

will present the address and re tiring officers will be recognized Pittsburg, John F. Harvey PAUL Q.LONG COX BUILDING PHONE 3951 Workshops will be held at the As the WSCS conference draws a close, the first phase of the The four-day meeting 'lnursaay, i ri rnnr.liidin" Sunday. gee, Okla president, Indian Mis- he riiviripri sion conference; Mrs. Joe T. Bog- following places and times: Hays, March 29-31; Emporia, April 7-9, and Pittsburg, April 14-16.

WSG meeting will be getting un der way. A conference Guild com mittee will be held at 10 a.m into two parts, it was explained, jers, Wichita, memoer geueiai On April 1, a and 3 the larger board of missions; Dr. Thomas A. of the two groups, the WSCS, will Williams, Hutchinsonn supenntend-nold its deliberations, ending with lent of Hutchinson district, and the mnrn-iRev. R.

P. Crawford, pastor of session Saturday morn Saturday at the Presbyterian V-Ouv. general the Great Bend church. tee will hold a luncheon at the Parrish hotel. The theme for the WSG meeting is "Show us anew Thy wondrous power." The first general session of the WSCS portion of the conference be held at 1:30 p.m.

inurs- day, at which time the organiza Service Guild Meets The second group, the Wesleyan Service Guild, whose members are chiefly business and professional women, will open its deliberations Saturday morning at 10 and these meetings will continue until Sunday afternoon. All sessions of the WSCS confer ence will be held in the Methodist tion will be carried out. The theme will be "Go Ye that others may have life." Dr. Williams will address the first meeting and the high school a cappella choir will furnish special music. At 5:30 p.m.

Thursday a dinner will be served for the executive committee and guests. Thursday evening, Miss will be the featured speaker, aiid Mrs. Clark Knight will play a -J ON A REDO Clii ill church and they will be open to the general public. "A prayer room will be open during the entire meeting," the program for the event points out. "It is hoped that every woman will take time to use this place violin solo while Delbert Sloan will sing a baritone solo.

A reception at her convenience for quiet med tation and earnest prayer." in the church sub-story will follow the meeting with the Great Bend Making arrangements for such a large meeting is a complicated Claflin, Ellinwood and Pawnee and, seemingly, never-e i groups as hostesses, task, and the women of the church Eevlew Missionary Work have been hard at work for the Irregularity due to insufficient bulk becomes more of a problem when you re eating less. You can avoid this common condition the dangers of the laxative simply by eating one ounce of All-Bran daily. You'll find it's a lot easier to live on fewer calories, too! PRESIDING OFFICER. Mrs. past two months on the big job.

In addition, the church has been largely redecorated to provide a proper setting for the sessions. Committee chairmen and members expect to be busy right up to the last minute in setting up the details of the conference, and a meeting of the general administrative committee is scheduled for 7 p.m. on March 31, the day before the conference opens, at the Zarah hotel. Speakers At 8:20 a.m. Friday sessions will get under way with a business session and reports from various officials on missionary and other work.

Mrs. Paul Arrington will deliver the principal address. Friday afternoon committee reports will be given, officers will be elected and the "Methodist Woman of the Year in the central Kansas conference" will be presented. Departmental clinics also will be held, and at 5:30 p.m. the conference banquet will be held in the church dining room.

Methodist women of Albert and Hoising- Merl Rosel, Lakin, is the president of the centra! I Kansas conference of the Women's Society for Christian Service and in that position will preside at the general sessions of the big meeting to be held here. General Session The first general session will start at 2 p.m. at the Methodist church with addresses by Mrs. Lee Chupco 'and Helen Schumacher followed by a business session. At 3:30 the Great Bend WSCS will serve tea and discussions of "How Speakers for the conference are COMPLEXION WORRIES ALONG WTTH DU GESTIVE DISTURBANCES MAY BE ADDED TO THE ORIGINAL OVERWEIGHT PROBLEM.

THE USE OF MEDICINAL LAXATIVES CAN BE AVOIDED ENTIRELY BY SIMPLY EATING ONE OUNCE (ABOUT Vs CUPFUL) OF KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN EVERY MORNING FOR BREAKFAST. When you go on a reducing diet whether for reasons of health or for appearance's sake, you want to be able to stick with it until you've lost the desired number of pounds. But, as so many dieters have found, when you change your eating habits, or eat less than usual, irregularity is apt to become a problem. When this happens the dieter is likely to relax the diet, possibly feel like giving it up altogether, or start taking mineral oil or medicinal-type laxative 1 Mrs. Paul Arrington, Jackson, ton are to be in charge of the vice-president, Women's Di- table decorations.

vision of Christian Service; Mar- A special musical treat is sched- garet Billingsley, executive secre- uled for Friday evening when the tary for Japan, Korea and thei Great Bend choir, under Mrs Philippines: Gertie Stiles, Ft. I Fred L. Conner, will repeat two of Smith, secretary, Wesleyan! the numbers it sang In Its spring Service Guild, south central juris- concert, "The Creation" and "Two diction; Mrs. Lee Chupco, Okmul-'Kings." Mrs. Paul Arrington will Modern reducing diets, particularly the new high- This "otmc of prevention" Vt the bulk, with fonlv 931, but it does supply its gentle, breakfasts show how a serving of All-Bran dovetails right into any diet 400-CALOR1E BREAKFAST (Recommended as part of a lUUU-caloi ic diet) Tomato juice (4 oz.

glass) All-Bran cup) served with 4 oz. milk, 2 teaspoons sugar Egg, one, boiled or poached Toast, one slice Coffee, unsweetened, black or with milk G00-CALORIE It HA FA ST (Recommended as part til a 1 100-culuiie diet) yt Grapefruit All-Bran 2 cup) with 4 oz. milk, 2 teaspoons sugar Toast, two slices Butler, one pat Eggs, two, boiled or poached Coffee or Tea, plain Of all the foods you could choose, few, indeed, give you so many benefits along with so few calories as does All-Bran. From one ounce you get 100 of your daily requirement of vitamin 50 of your niacin; 11 of your vitamin of your phosphorus; 33 of your iron. In addition, All-Bran gives you protein and calcium values PLUS THE SECRET OF DAILY REGULARITY AND THE FEELING OF SATISFACTION THAT MAKES DIETING EASIER THAN IT EVER WAS BEFORE! Kellogg's makes it easy for you to prove that (o your protein diets, are as low in ouir as uiey When the foods eaten every day supply too little bulk, the normal process of elimination is slowed up.

And, unless the dieter has advice from a doctor, he or she, sooner or later, may seek relief from the discomforts of constipation through use of a laxative pill or purgative. There are two good reasons why yon should think twice before taking this seemingly "easy way 1. Instead of correcting the underlying causes of the condition, a medicinal-type laxative can give only temporary relief. One dose so often leads to another that the vicious laxative habit takes hold and the condition, instead of getting better, gets steadily worse. 2.

The use of drug-type laxatives or mineral oil interferes with the normal process of digestion and causes a substantial loss of vitamins and minerals from the food eaten. WHEN YOU'RE ALREADY RESTRICTING YOURSELF TO A MINIMUM AMOUNT OF FOOD YOU CAN ILL AFFORD THIS NUTRI-TIONAL LOSS. WEAKNESS, LACK OF PEP OR natural laxation effect, needed to keep you regular while you are living on fewer calories. This natural laxative effect of All-Bran has been demonstrated time and again in actual clinical studies and reported in leading medical journals. On this basis alone it merits an important place in every modem reducing diet.

But there is yet another reason. THE SAME SMOOTH BULK WHICH AIDS THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM ALSO HELPS YOU DO WITH FEWER CALORIES. AS ALL-BRAN ABSORBS WATER AND LIQUIDS IT GIVES YOU THE FEELING THAT YOU HAVE EATEN MORE THAN YOU ACTUALLY HAVE. The feeling of satisfaction stays with you. There is less temptation to nibble between meals, less desire to go beyond your calorie budget at any time.

It's a wonderful feeling to be on a diet without being hungry. And you need not add one single extra calorie when you substitute a serving of All-Bran in your breakfast every- day. The most satisfactory diet plans allow up to one-third of your calorie allowance for this most important meal" of the day. The following typical self. Just eat All-Bran every morning lor iu days.

Then, if you're not completely satisfied, send the empty carton to Kellogg's, Battle Creek, Michigan-and get double your money back. 'I want you to know that I haven't had to take a laxative for the last 15 years. Ever since I started eating Kellogg's All-Bran. I've been just as regular as da vl: Mr. Fay Wright 367 North Eleanor i Pomona, California I took laxatives until I was sick and tired of them.

Then I tried Kellogg's All-Bran. For the first time in years I know what it is to be regular naturally." Mrs. Delia Gertrude Wobdring 3462 Third Avenue. North St. Petersburg, Florida READ HOW OTHER SUFFERERS FROM CONSTIPATION (duo to lack of bulk in the diet) HAVE BENEFITED: Natural 4.

Laxative Cercnl ,1 OFFICERS OF THE WSCS who have carried a large share of the burden of preparing for the conference are, left to right. Mrs. Thaine Ewing, treasurer; Mrs. W. H.

Strobel, vice-president; AArs. Glenn Weirauch, secretary, and Mrs. A. J. Zelenka, president.

(Tribune Photo) iuRRCHIVE. Mi ARCHIVE.

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