The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1967 Page: 10 of 115
one hundred fifteen pages : ill. ; page 15 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Dear Ruth
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THE HOUSTON CHAPTER AT LARGE
OF
Womens American
Mrs. Harvey Lieberman, President
KELLEY RESTAURANTS
•V RUDOFKER
GO FOR
SpecLatltfl bi genteeweev (o/utuxt-dttvit nentak
“Keep" Tooth paste
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PAGE 6
ROSE HASHANAH EDITION
5-7-2-8
5805Erg 9255 E83-Eb 18s30u 588a;8 55
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KELLEY'S STEAK HOUSE
Hempstead, Tex.
"Keep" removes stains,
cleans teeth batter.
ELIGHTFULLY FLAVORED
THE ORIGINAL KELLEY'S
3512 So. Main
KELLEY'S CHAMPION CORRAL
910 Texas Ave.
(Organization for Rehabilitation Through Training)
A MEMBERSHIP ORGANIZATION
EXTEND NEW YEAR GREETINGS
TO THE HOUSTON JEWISH COMMUNITY
I 2
2 f
Dear Ruth: My husband is 15
years older than I. He treats me
like a child and sometimes I think
that I don’t have any indepen-
dence. Do you have any sugges-
tions as to how I can handle this
problem?
Answer: You did not write as
to your age at marriage. Perhaps
you were looking for the “father
image” when you married a man
so many years your senior. At that
time it was perfectly in order for
him to treat you as a child—and
now that you have grown up he
still considers you in the same cat-
egory as when you were married.
My recommendation would be a
full introspection concerning your
own personality, and your own ap-
proach to your marriage. See what
is lacking and then seek out Sound
advice as to how to approach a
rather touchy subject of age, and
growing up with maturity and
the sense of judgment which has
come with the years.
xxxxxx
many factors . . . the times we
live in, the environment both at
home and in society, the long
search for thrills. I have discussed
similar problems before, but the
fact that this comes up so often
makes it imperative that steps be
taken in many directions and
counseling through a member of
our Agency will certainly aid the
individual. Oft times we suspect
and become alarmed, and then
hide the facts. This leads one to
further exploration for the “kicks”
and the “ride” and in time to more
serious addiction. Urge the family
to try and stop it now—the longer
it goes on the more dangerous the
situation becomes.
New Y ear Greetings to our Friends and Customers
aPPcf
ARAB TERRORISTS KILL ONE
ISRAELI, WOUND POLICEMAN
Tel Aviv, Oct. 2. (JTA)—El
Fatah raiders struck last night at
Kibbutz Hamadiyeh in the Beisa
Valley, placing explosive charges
under five houses there. A 20-
year-old soldier, home on leave,
was killed by bursts from assault
guns when he left his parents’
house to investigate suspicious
noises in the vicinity.
The gunfire aroused the settle-
ment. The men rushed to the arm-
ory for weapons and the women
shepherded the children to shel-
ters as some gunfire continued.
A huge explosion shattered one
building. The assailants then fled
toward the Jordan River, a mile
and a half distant, pursued by the
men of the kibbutz. At the water’s
edge they found tracks showing
that the marauders had crossed
the river.
An Israeli policeman was in-
jured when Arab terrorists attack-
ed a jeep patroling near Tubus
village, north of Nablus. A cur-
few was imposed on a number of
villages in the area and a house-
to-house search turned up a sub-
machinegun and a Russian assault
rifle.
r
p
* * * *
Dear Ruth: What can be done
with a child—a boy of 17—when
the parents suspect that he is
smoking marihuana? They have
done nothing about it, and al-
though I have suggested that they
talk to someone in your agency, I
don’t think they have made the ap-
proach as yet. I am writing this
letter because I hope that they will
read your answer in the Jewish
Herald-Voice.
Answer: The responsibility of
finding a solution depends upon
SWINGERS
Dear Ruth: Recently, I learned
through my teenage son that a girl
he knows has made an attempt at
committing suicide. This girl is
about 15 or 16. I have not been
able to sleep nights wondering
whether or not I should get in
touch with her parents. I do not
know them personally, but do
know who they are. My question
to myself was am I my brother’s
keeper? Are her parents aware of
some problem that this girl must
have? I may be assuming a great
deal, but when my son saw this
girl with a razor, having inad-
vertently come into the room, he
was upset because the girl admit-
ted that she w anted to commit sui-
cide. What would you do if you
were me?
Answer: One has to be careful
to delineate between fact and fic-
tion—not on the part of your son,
but on the part of the teenage girl.
It might be that she was trying to
be heroic or getting a sympathetic
ear—or it might be actually a case
of desperation. But in any event,
should the parents of the young
lady not know of this state of
mind it would be best to contact
the parents and make them aware
of it. One can never minimize the
threat of suicide and one does
have the responsibility of commu-
nicating this to the parents, who
should do something concerning
this mind set, if they had not al-
ready done so.
Whatever the •Sitneha UHJ fer^HOecasions
fe
P Willy’s
8 HOUSE OF FORMALS
- 1402 MAIN • CA 4-2039
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White, D. H. The Jewish Herald-Voice (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 5, 1967, newspaper, October 5, 1967; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1527819/m1/10/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .