The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 187, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1982 Page: 62 of 66
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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/
)N CASUAL
FOOTWEAI
I 33 00
comfortable wc
a TH©y 'e rrsadf
e soft, cus' r e
>es. •••'
My
Husband’s
Snoring
Kept Me
Awake...
A True Story, bv
MRS. E. BRINGE
/Reprinted H-ith permumont
A lot of people think
"snoring" is funny. But if
| they had a spouse who
shores, they wouldn't
I think it was so funny. 1
I love my husband. But I
couldn't go.on being kept
! awake night after night—
bv his snormg. He didn't
MEAN it. And he
couldn't HELP it BIT
IT WAS WRECKING
OUR MARRIAGE
Lack of sleep made me too
tired to go anywhere with
! my friends, [ snapped at
my husband, yelled at my
children. My husband
TRIED to stop -noring
j But nothing worked Did
I that mean there was NO
j CURE for snoring?
Thank heaven I was too
stubborn to believe that.
Because’I finally FOUND
a cure for snoring and it
turned out :to be the
simplest thing. Not pills,
not drugs, not an
operation or psycho
therapy. Would you
believe just a simple
invention developed by a
Doctor at a renowned
research sleep center
But it really works. You
stop snoring instantly,
the first njgnt. And after
wearing it for 30days. the
habit is broken comp-
letely. You never snore
again. Personally I think
the doctor w-ho invented
this clever device should
get the Nobel prize. But
he won't., stopping snores
isn't “glamorous” enough.
It worked for me. I'm sure
(jt will work for you.
ev.Sa * :> ,a:a-'-ee
Sincerely,
Mrs. E. fringe.
rder pMr S
-
^ 1 SHlPPf-1’ c!
[)R. LEONARD. Dept FW 61 *
65-19th Street l M All-
Brooklyn NY 11232 1
19® Div of Modern Coupon Sys Brooklyn NY
W\
r
How Not to Raise
A Tiny monster
By Roberta Pfutzik
T
antrurfis tn the toy store,
refusals io gp to bed. con-
stanr demands foi surety
unwt&ngness to share
other children While moss
_ current child care books no
longer use tfie lerm spotted fot
j many parents this word sell describes
the kind erf troublesome behavior thai
starts with overeidujgence-
i. Yet parenfe have trouble gauging
Sou and when "spoiled behavior
starts They wonder as they pen tnio
a chrfd s room crammed with toys or
as thev chauffeur hole ones through
the whef of bethday parties, outings ‘
and activities that begin as early as the
preschool years, whether they’ve pro-
vided then chrfd with too much, too
soon - and thus created a nny
. mobster - : ■
Today s children do have more
material possessions and privileges
than those of previous generations
But experts contend that an abun
dance of toys and adventures
does not' necessarily produce a spoiled
chikj It s not what he has that spoils
a child, t’s how he gets it.” says Dr
. Jane Brode consulting psychologist
to the Newark, N J Preschool.Coun-
ci Does he get what he wants as a
reward for being good, or does he de
mand tr
Dr Brode s definition of a spoiled
youngster is one who exerts control
:r, an urabona) way and succeeds in
getting sbmctfrfng by means of a tan-
trum or other negative behavior
TSw Wiw. V. hagin fM»dklig »g«>nct
this behavior is when a child * 6 dr 8
months old and has begun to under
stand the meaning of “no ” The
Roberto Plus#* a the K> of :V hnh
coming Soot The Prvtw Lie oi Pwesti
<Euewt Home '. - -
problem s that many parents are .up
comfortable about setting, brats,'; says
Washington D C psychiatrist Ber,
nett Okhaker author of The Child as
o Wee* of An Reader s Digest Press;
I always tell them to be prepared lo
be disttked sometimes by thei kids
When kirns are set. you interfere with
a child s pleasure and that's frustrating
to him Yet it s healthy for a- child to.
know- he. can’t .get.’everything he
warns
How do parents- protect agams*
spoiling5 Parental constttncy says
Dr Biod* a the key- to steenng a
child away from serf indulgent or
spoiled’ behavior Pareinyuhofail to
take 'a stand .; who. let the child decide
wfiau nght tor- hint
- are ' on dangerous
, ground- She describes
a 4-year-oid' who <5e
manded to sleep *n hts
.- parents bed When
they med to move him
to his own room his
tantrums convinced
them it just wasn ’t
worth losing sleep over,
; even, i he was irsfnng .
tng on ther privacy.
"This child, by mast
" standards," Dr Brodie
remarks, "ts spoiled
■'-.but not forever - — as
long as the.- parents decide to do
something about it by. firmly putting
htm in hts room for several nights
This might be hard on the family for a
time, but .he’S'.eventualy team to atl
‘ another way ”
Here:.«e 'some other suggestions
from child development experts to
help parents deal with die problem
* When you buy things for your
child make sure thee purpose is to re-
ward him or her for good behavior,-
rather Aten oab bad behavior Reel
forte the positive aspects of your
child s behawx
• Remember that every time
spoiled behavior a catered to. the
situation wnl get * <n* worse
♦ Decide on a plan of action and
sack to 1, even f Jtdrsrupfs family ie
for a few weeks’ By- atlenng your
reactions to spotted behavior, you can
begin chan^ng the behavior
♦Sometimes; nothing short of a
IN A UNIQUELY AMERICAN COLLECTING TRADITION
total restructuring of the parent-child
re<abonsfnp wtf work to unspo# e
child Some parents are surprised to
find that it’s not the shmy new toy the
ehdd s asking for. but. the parent's
interest.Hi the chid when, he mgr ’
gves him me toe IAJ
Tar the first turn ever—
i definitive adketum of hand panted
mrmatun decoys portraying every species
of doth m North Amina • ■»
Thrty-su mtnaitety deteded mmiatum
^rated by the dean of American wood carvers,
wamer of the ’Best m World'. award >
rrihe dean of American wood carvers
I WBum J Koetpm has accepted a com
A nusMon from The Franklin Caller, to
cneyye a colection of decoys portraying all crf
theJ6 <h#rmit kinds of wid ducks native to
Morth America Each will be a superbly de-
fied miniature And each w«R be hind1
pwnted m its full natural cokes
In the long history of Afnencar decoy art
thts » the first collection of its kind And
perhaps no artiet te better guakfied to un-
derfake de creation of this cofiecbon than
William I -M" Koetpm
' His works are m ma)or art museums and,
prtvttt cuilrrtipns throughout the oountm
In 1974, he was chosen He» m W <rkT at the
tetortdl C'hamptonship Wild Fowl C arving
t nmpeWion He has been named ""Master
of die Guild' by the International Wbod
Carving Guild And our nation's most
prestagiouB wikQdr museum—the Lehigh
Itawkey Wbodson Art Museum -has cafitd
bam 'one of Ament a c premier artists '
B4 KoHpm s enormous talent will be tn
mdmcf throughout The Ducks of North
Amenta Mmature Decoy Coiecbon Work-
ing Jirrcth tn immature, hr wd) hand-carve
the iingjnal master for each sproes of duck
Each decoy m the co&ection will then be
irafted, through moidi taken from h» hand
cwred masters m a bknd of mans and wood -
which wdi capture every kne and curve of the
vulpaor's art
Next, each immature decoy wd be hand
oamtnt ai as many as twehe colors lo accu-
retefy define the hues and shadaigs bund tn
nature Fran the indtsrettt green of the Mal-
lard to the steel blue head and speckled
breast of the Hue-waged Teal
MINIATURE DECOY COLLECTION
by William J. Koelpm
Together these beautifully hand painted
miniatures will form an unprecedented de
play of sporting art in a umgurfv American
reflecting tradition
The Ducks of North America Minufun-
Drew Collection ts however, available only
by direct subsenphon from The Franklin Gal
ksyt It wiD not be sold through any stores or
art draten
lb enaer your subscription, return the ap
phcation by June 30, N82
ou&Qum
;ave 20%
MERRE CA
\CCESSO
iXCLUSIV
9.99 to
42 50 fo 2?
/efy eiega*"
■e's sc^e;-'-
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trnmn. aba. *«nMal wm 'WmgtInga»3Mln.
KD-MEASTH) MElCANSat
vW.Sm.arnHlM'Wnre
Knfini ngnair was *r an at I
Ejhb dftrtm wrii be mtammmk
9LIX W94CfD UAL
The Ducks of North Amnio
MM0UK oerov ooujction
Phase moil by tune 30. 1962
fiir fnwlli Gdfar*
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 187, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1982, newspaper, June 6, 1982; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1063677/m1/62/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.