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The Decatur Daily Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 6

The Decatur Daily Review from Decatur, Illinois • Page 6

Location:
Decatur, Illinois
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

SIX THE DECATUR REVIEW Saturday, June 8, 1946. Party for Betty Lytle Mrs. Ross Lytle, the former Betty Ann Bailey, entertained Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss Betty Lytle, whose engagement to Harold Acton was announced recently by her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur E.

Lytle, 1054 West Marietta. The party will be a miscellaneous shower in the home of Mrs. Lytle's parents. Mr. and Mrs.

Earl W. Bailey, 8 Fairview place. Tri Psis Initiate Two Decatur Mothers Tri Psi sorority, mothers of Tri Delta girls, initiated Mrs. H. C.

Barnhart, Lost Bridge road, and Mrs. Herman Jackson. 469 West Wood street, yesterday afternoon following dessert bridge in the chapter house. They are mothers respectively of. Barbara Barnhart and Lois Jackson.

Tentative plans were made to send a delegate to the Tri Psi national convention in the Brown Palace hotel of Denver, on Oct. 1 and 2. Virginia Morton Is Engaged Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.

Morton, 521 East North street, announce the engagement of their daughter Virginia and Jack Smith, son of Mrs. Ernest Young, 905 West Macon street. No date is set for the wedding. She was with the Decatur Club, and he is employed in the A. J.

Willis grocery since his recent discharge from the navy. Margaret Bradley Is Bride of Robert Herter Miss Margaret E. Bradley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles E.

Bradley, 1804 North Union street, and Robert A. Herter, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward C. Herter of Springfield, were married May 16 in St.

Thomas church by Rev. Fr. Andrew Smith. The bride wore an aqua suit with white accessories and flowers. Breakfast followed in the Bradley home.

The couple will live in Springfield where he is with AllisChalmers. Two Honored At U. of I. R. L.

Bohon, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lynn H. Bohon, 720 South Seigel, has been initiated into Sigma Tau, engineering honorary, at the University of Illinois according to word received from there. John R.

Leek, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. Leek, 443 West Eldorado, is one of the eight new members in Chi Epsilon, civil engineering honorary, at the university. Showers for Virginia Osborne Miss Virginia Osborne who is to be married to Bernard L.

Walser on June 15 in St. James Catholic church is being honored with several showers. Miss Norma Spriggs is planning a miscellaneous. shower for next Tuesday evening in 125 North Edward street. Thursday night Miss Theresa and Miss Virginia Walser, sisters of Miss Osborne's fiance, gave a kitchen shower in the Walser home, 140 South Jasper street, with 25 guests attending.

Miss Houk and Miss Harriet Plunk were hostesses in the Plunk home, 310 South Webster street, Wednesday night for a personal shower honoring the bride to be. Mrs. Fenton Heads Junior Woman's Club Forty members of Junior Woman's club were entertained Thursday evening by Mrs. Arthur Wait and Mrs. Henry Kippenhan in the former's home, 815 West Main.

Mrs. Harold Fenton was installed as president of the group and Mrs. A. W. Neureuther is outgoing To Los Angeles Mr.

and Mrs. George Hannon, 960 West Packard street, are leaving Monday for Los Angeles, where they will visit for two weeks with relatives. Marjorie McPherson and Orville L. Brush, both of Robinson, were married by Rev. C.

T. Todd in Charleston United Brethren church, on June 4. The bride wore green Mr. and Mrs. E.

W. McPherson and white. She is the daughter of Robinson. Mr. Brush, son of Mr.

and Mrs. David Brush of Robinson, served three years in the air force, 21 months in Europe, as radio operator. Both were graduated May 28 from Robinson high school. Miss Helen Gough, daughter of Mrs. Jennie Gough of Kansas, and Otis Sandy, ex-army man and son of Mr.

and Mrs. Francis Sandy of Westfield, were married May 29 in the Methodist parsonage in Kansas. Attendants were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gough.

The bride is a graduate nurse, having received her training at St. Anthony's hospital in Terre Haute. They will live on a farm southwest of Ashmore. FILMS Developed and printed. Modern equipment.

20 vears oh ishing experience. OPEN 8 a. m. to 8 p. m.

HUBBARD STUDIOS 1337 E. Lawrence. Decatur, Ill. Phone 8201 PIANO IS CENTER OF STAR'S HOME Annamary Dickey, popular Dickey believes that each home lamp and an old-fashioned concert star, strikes an -in- should have a piano to encour- music box. Miss Dickey likes formal at the in her age the youngsters in their love modern painting and the charm pose piano for music.

Near the piano is a of white woodwork against dark spacious apartment. Miss loveseat and on the table is a walls. The Home of Annamary Dickey Beauty, Spaciousness Reflect Personality By MARION ATKINS The piano, says Miss Dickey, is As I walked into Annamary Dickey's spacious Park Avenue apartment, which is as modern in feeling as the Museum of Modern Art, I asked her point-blank; "Do you like modern music, too?" She's such a lively and gay young person, I was prepared for her answer in the affirmative. Therefore, it was with surprise that I heard her say instead, "Not too much." I felt at home with her immediately and we settled down in easy chairs before the large windowfocal point of interest in the living room of her apartment-to talk. Annamary Dickey is an easy and pleasant person to know and her apartment reflects this spirit of cordiality.

Chairs are arranged for pleasant conversation, placed so that you can drop down into them easily and find yourself near enough to someone also for comfortable conversation despite the large dimensions of the room. There is a feeling of open spaces in the room--the amount of furniture is almost scanty according to some standards, but the overall effect is one of ease and pleasing spaciousness. It is her home, and everything in it reflects her personality. In the small foyer there hangs a life-size portrait of Annamary Dickey in concert dress. On side walls are interesting modern paintings, softly lighted, and on a fourth wall over an antique chest painted white hangs a mirror in white baroque frame.

flanked with pots of ivy. It is a charming entrance hall and leads directly into the large living room with its well-dressed window. studio piano, fireplace and bookfilled credenza. This room furnished in soft shades of beige and green opens into a large dining room of more conventional dress, where Miss Dickey provides convincing evidence of her culinary skill. In these two rooms, Miss Dickey and her husband, Arthur Edward Laue, are gracious hosts.

Tongue Tells Of Body Ills JAMES W. BARTON, M. D. Many of us remember when the physician not only took the pulse and temperature of the patient but also looked at his tongue. It was our thought that physician found the tongue was "coated" he prescribed a laxative or purgative.

The purgative not only cleared out all the wastes in the large bowel but also cleared out much of the poison in the blood. For many years physicians have not been looking at the tongue but today physicians look at the tongue, because, aside from any coating, it tells much about the general condition of the body. In the Bulletin, New England Medical Center. Dr. Harold Jeghers (Boston University) states that "changes in the tongue are numerous and reflect, or are actually diagnostic of many systemic Dr.

Jeghers has not in mind the local diseases or even cancer or syphilis but even when. tongue is nearly normal in appearance changes that can be seen by the naked eye or low power mag- Painful Burn GET QUICK RELIEF FASTER HEALING Sperti BIO-DYNE OINTMENT Only a tube FOR MINOR BURNS, CUTS, ABRASIONS- BLONDIE -By CHIC YOUNG REALLY! LET'S TRY MR. BUMSTEAD, IT HELLO, MR. IT'S A NICE 0 YES, ALVIN, DID YOU KNOW DAY IF IT TRY YOU CAN TALK NICE DOESN'T COUNTING THRU A HOSE DAY, TO TEN, LIKE A ISN'T IT? RAIN MR. (TELEPHONE BUMSTEAD! oic 6-8 YOUNG Copt.

1946. King Features Syndicate, Inc. Id nights reserved. LITTLE ANNIE ROONEY -By DARRELL McCLURE GOOD HEAVENS, NO! AND IF MRS. MEANY EVEN MRS.

MEANY'S COMING REMEMBER NO MATTER THINKS YOU'RE TO VISIT US TODAY -SHE'S ALL HOW FUNNY SHE IS, DON'T AT HER FACE, SHE'LL BEEN SICK- -HER FACE BLACK? LAUGH DON'T SMILE- MAKE YOU WISH IS ALL BLACK IS SHE LOOK SAD AND SERIOUS- YOU WERE DEADPLAYING A GAME: DICKIE DARE -By ODIN BURVIK DICKIE ROARS UP A LOADING INTO AN EMPTY BUILDING HE SWUNG TO TH' LEFT JUST IN TIME U.S. GOV'T. EB PROPERTY KEEP OUT Odin SCORCHY SMITH--By EDMOND GOOD VAL! WELL DONE, SON! THIS YOU'RE IS CAPTAIN BLEEK) WE SAFE OF THE COAST GUARD HOWDY HELPING US THOUGHT SNAG A GANG OF MAYBE YOU'D SEAL PIRATES! LIKE A LI'L Reg. U.S. Pet.

On. LAP HOMER FOOPEE -By RAND YOU WIN, DOC! I'M BATTY HOOPEE- A I'LL BELFRY! GO TAKE ME AWAY, VERY AS YOU DISAPPOINT ME EXCEEDINGLY, MR. HOOPEE! FOR A MOMENT I THOUGHT, YOU HAD REAL POSSIBILITIES! OAKY DOAKS -By R. B. FULLER TAKE YOUR TIME, A MR.

THERE'S NO HURRY! IT'S A IMPORTANT QUESTION DO YOU THINK YOU'RE, CRAZY? I DUNNO WHETHER A NIGHTMARE. DRAT IT! YE DIDN'T OR A REAL HAFTA KICK DOWN TH' DOOR TO COME IN OUTA TH' RAIN! 6-8 GA I PETER PLINK -By QUINN HALL Now HE'S A FLAT HOMETOWN WHILE PRACTICDAY BLMAPED MGR. SAYS THAT IMA GUY ON THE CLUB YOUR SON foton Plink 6-8 LAUGHING DARRELL MSCLURE COME ON, YOUNGSTER -LET'S GO SKYRIDING -I WANT TO FIND OUT IF THE WHITE CLOUDS ARE MADE OF COTTON OR BABY LAMB'S WOOLGLORYOSKY! Copt. 1946, King Inc, World nights Etiquet Parents May Be Attendants By EMILY POST Dear Mrs. Post: Would it be out of place to have my mother as my attendant? The groom is having his father as best man and there would be only those two attendants.

I am a widow of 22. Answer: In the usual situation of which you speak, I see no impropriety in this Ringbearer Dear Mrs. Post: How young may a ringbearer be? Answer: Expert behavior of one younger than four is rather uncertain. Five and above is quite safe. Seating Mothers Dear Mrs.

Post: We are giving a dinner at school for our mothers Each girl is to have her mother. How shall we seat our guests? Answer: Each hostess should put her own mother on her right. Semi-Formal Dress Dear Mrs. Post: What does it mean when an invitation stipulates Answer: It means a dress with a long skirt but with high-necked bodice for the women and tuxedos for the men. Housewarming Dear Mrs.

Post: Having been invited to a housewarming for a young couple recently settled in a new house, I am wondering now whether it is customary to take presents to a party like this given for them by their friends as a surprise. What kind of present? Answer: Any very small trifle, either ornamental, useful or edible would be proper. Corsage or Bouquet? Dear Mrs. Post: Is there any objection to my wearing a corsage on my long afternoon dress at my wedding? A friend told me that she thought you said a corsage was the more suitable choice for tailored clothes. Answer: It is entirely proper that the bride wear a corsage if she prefers it to a bouquet.

But the more elaborate and bride-like her dress, the greater the need for a bouquet. She also might remember that nearly all people are very conscious of empty-handedness when they know they are being observed. of the stomach causes a persistent coated tongue. Where only one side of tongue is affected it is usually due to some "nerve" disorder. Tonight! DICK Powell JOAN Bennett Murder My Sweet 7:00 WSOY Frigidaire Hollywood Star Time Decatur's POTATO CHIPS Jot over 26 Years I'LL GET DICKIE BEFORE CRASHES MISSED DICKIE HE WHAT? the most important piece in her home.

She believes that every home should have at least one piano, and attributes her success as a concert singer to the fact that in her own girlhood home there were three pianos and she was made to practice by her mother, who taught music. She likes to cook and dashes from the kitchen to the living room as she practices at homemusic, career and domesticity happily fused. To someone constantly in the public eye, there is ever need for a room for relaxation and rest, and in her apartment, Miss Dickey finds both in an informal sitting room used with her husband for evenings at home. This is an intimate room with easy chairs, lamps for reading, book shelves and radio. It is a comfortable room without style.

In the hall that separates it from the more formal rooms hang the picof and by Miss Dickey-a pictorial record of her trials and triumphs from about the age of ten. She admits laughingly that she is in all them. Born in Decatur, Annamary Dickey has achieved her success the hard -school through scholarships, a a penny-pinching time until her first contract and hard work. Today she has reached the goal every aspiring young artist dreams about--a life filled with opera, radio, concert tours, supper appearances at important hotels, and a happy home. Perhaps it is this familiarity with the pattern of struggle early in her career that prompts Annamary Dickey to say "Violetta" in La Traviata is her favorite role.

She's a sentimental young woman at heart. She met and married the brother of a childhood chum after only two and a half weeks of courtship. As a hobby Miss Dickey collects antique musical instruments. Her first piece is an old Hungarian accordion. nifying glass.

Thus dryness of the tongue, especially if output of urine below normal or urine is too heavy, is a reliable sign that the body is dehydrated--lacks water in the cells and tissues. Dryness of the tongue may result from lack of nicotinic acid or vitamin complex. Disease of salivary (digestive) glands such as mumps may cause tongue and lining of mouth to be dry. For years it has been known that much tongue discomfort-pain, itching, burning-may be caused by pernicious anemia. "Pain in the tongue may result also from irritation caused by teeth, tobacco, dentures, being allergic or sensilive drugs and mouth washes, local disease of the tongue and derangement of the joint between upper and lower jaws.

A coated -tongue, brown in color is a definite sign of lack of water in the tissues, and tongue appears A coated tongue is common in tonsilitis and the 'strawberry" tongue is a common symp-1 tom in scarlet fever. An "upset" stomach, or a chronic inflammation OPEN 24 HOURS 7 DAYS DANIELS 1601 West Grand Ave. Phone 2-7077 Complete Line of GROCERIES. MEATS, Fresh and Cold Cuts: Fresh Fruits and Vegetables, Novelties, Comic Books, Sunday Papers COLD HOT COFFEE ICE CREAM, MILKSHAKES Also Stove Gas and Kerosene STOP AT DANIELS! WHEN WE SAW YEP, SAVED BY THE U.S. YOU ENGULFED COAST GUARD, M' HUSKIES IN THAT RIVER 'N' THIS LOST GREAT STUFF FER HOPE, SOURDOUGH IT THAT'S WHAT CALL TIMING 6-E DEAR MISJUDGED MY DISTANCE ING SLIDING THE OTHER HEAVY INTO A POST.

THE THE LEVELEST HEADED P.S.. ITS FUNNY HES JUST STARTED SAYING THAT. Reg. U.S. Pat.

OW. AP Newsfeatures YOU'RE AS MEAN IM You SANE AS I AM! NOT CRAZY AFTER ALL? BUT AP Newsfectures WELCOME TO SPEND TH' NIGHT HERE! RAND Reg 1 OR 49 LIFE'S LIKE THAT--By FRED NEHER SUGAR'N' SPICE 6-8-46 FLED NEHEL. "It's only a stick of gum He isn't used to buying things for me he can't afford yet." To make celery curls, cut short To make carrots curl, cut a thin pieces of celery lengthwise in thin slice of carrot with a vegetable cutter, roll around the finger and shreds to within inch of one in small bowl of ice place a water end. Place in ice water and curl. for one hour.

Drain and serve. Reg. U.S. Pat. Of.

d. Qun HALL.

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About The Decatur Daily Review Archive

Pages Available:
441,956
Years Available:
1878-1980