Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 84, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 8, 1980 Page: 2 of 10
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2—THE NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Taxas, Tuesday, April 8,1980.
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Carla Rulien of Dallas will be
the guest speaker for the Junior
Waverly-Dial Study Clubs
meeting Thursday, April 10.
Ms. Rulien received European
training in skin care and make-
up at Renee Cosmotology
Center in Dallas. She formerly
demonstrated skin care and
maike-up techniques at
NeimanrMarcus in Dallas. She
is presently a free-lance make-
up artist giving private con-
sultations. The program will
begin at 7:30 p.m. in the
Woman’s Building with Ms.
Rulien giving some personal
make-up tips to members
arriving early.
Staff members at the •
Hopkins County Opportunity
Center will attend a day-long
seminar in" Denton Friday,
April 11. The program will
focus on Infant Stimulation.
Staff members planning to
attend are Jane Peugh, Dottie
Sewell, Faye Comunale, and
Doris Rawls. Regular volun-
teers serving at the Center this
week are Dana Jordan, itR.
Peugh, Barbara McKenzie,
Oleta Williams, and Gail
hospitals
Kfc
Mr. and Mrs. I,eon Leggett Of
Sulphur Springs have returned
to their home following a trip to
Tyler where they spent the
Easter holidays with their
daughter.
WHO CAN MAKE the funniest face? That seems to be the game that 9-year-old Teresa
Garza is playing with this dragon sculpture. The work was entered in one of fiO contests
being conducted nationwide to select winners of the 53rd annual Scholastic Art Awards. The
Scholastic Magazine competition for students in grades seven through 12 is the largest of its
kind in the world. \ "
Neil Henderson of Sulphur
Springs is a patient in Baylor
Hospital in Dallas, He was
admitted after sustaining a
fractured leg recently.
Symptoms, signals of cancer
1
DEAR DR LAMB - My
inquiry is about cancer and-
how many symptoms of can-
cer there are 1 understand
there are seven I’m sure I
know five but most of my
heal; 3) Unusual bleeding or
discharge (that includes bleed-
ing from the uterus, bowels*or
coughing up blood), 4) Thick-
ening or lump in the breast or
elsewhere; 5) Indigestion or
health
Lawrence E. Lamb. M.D.
friends don't even know one.
If that's true here in this city,
it must bo true all over the
country Would you list the
symptoms and what to do
about them?
DEAR READER ' There
are innumerable symptoms of
cancer since you can have a
cancer anywhere in the body
involving almost any tissue 1
suspect you’re talking about
the seven danger signals of
cancer that are provided by
the American Cancer Society.
These are; 1) Change in
bowel habit, either unex-
plained loose stools or consti-
pation; 2) A sore that does not
difficulty in swallowing, 6)
Obvious change in a wart or
mole;. 7) Nagging cough or
hoarseness.
Now, you can have any one
of these and not have a
cancer, but they’re warning
signs that deserve an immedi-
ate checkup. 1 would add to
the list weight loss and anem-
ia with weakness and fatigue.
To illustrate how varied the
symptoms of cancer can be. a
persbn may develop painless
jaundice from a cancer of the
pancreas that obstructs the
bile duct. Still others may
develop pain as the only indi-
cation, such as bone pain from
spread to the spine or other
bones The list is unending
I'm sending you The Health
Letter number 14-8, Cancer A
Fact of Life Other readers
who want this issue can spnd
75 cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it'
Send your request to me, in
care of this newspaper, P.O.'
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019 This
issue will give you more infor-
mation about signs of cancer
and what you can do to pre-
vent cancer
I’m very impressed with
what could be done to prevent
a large number of cancers in
our society. In many instances
if prevention was used we
wouldn't need to worry about
a cure. This particularly
applies to cancer of the lungs
associated with cigarette
smoking
The early detection that has
led to early cure of many can-
cers has also been dramatic.
Deaths from cancer of the
uterus have decreased to one-
third of what they used to be.
That's primarily because of
public education and * early
detection.
There has also been a simi-
lar decrease in deaths from
cancer of the breast. We're
hoping that there will be
decreases in the incidence of
ms
~ "-■?--*■■■■ -A--—A_-.
'A
Buffet
(Pizza & Salad)
ALL YOU
' CAN EAT
(Children ( t Under FREE)
cancer of the colon and rec-
tum in both men and women
and cancer of the prostate in
men.
Public education, appropri
ate regular examinations for
early detection and proper
treatment will improve, the
cure rate in cancer even
more You might be interest-
ed to know that today one out
of three cancer victims will
live five years or more. So
there’s a lot of good life left
for a lot of people after they^
first hear that they have
cancer In many instances, if
detection is early enough a
complete cure may be effect-
ed.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
Admitted
Robert Anglin, 508 Jefferson.
Mns. Marvin Johnson, Lone
Oak.
Mrs. Effie Huie, 1098 Church,
Mrs. Ennis Christenberry,
Mount Vernon.
Chester Eddins, 713 Pampa.
Amy Ward, Mount Pleasant.
Barren Edwards, 410 5.
Locust.
Ruby' Weaver, • Sulphur
-Springs.
Thomas Johnson Jr., Mount
Pleasant.
Wesley Lawrence, Mount
Vernon.
Ms. Horace Coker, Yantis.
Mrs. Mary Carter, 106
Whitworth.
Mrs. Harold Jones, Cooper.
Jerry Gilbreath, Yantis.
Westley Woolverton, Pickton.
Tina Hare, Sulphur Bluff..
Robert Boughtom, Box 768.
Dismissed
Mrs. Randall Hill, Southgate
Apts.
Clifford Branscum, 1811
Main.
Mrs. Betty Murphey, Como.
Kelli Lynch, 201 Lou.
Mrs. Katherine Gilbert, 1411
Airport Road.
Charles Askew, Route 5.
Mrs. John White, Emory.
Mrs. Tim Heddens and baby
girl, 404 St. James.
Mrs. Roosavelt Wood, 704
Camp.
WMU quarterly
session scheduled
The Woman’s Missionary
Union of Rehoboth Baptist
Association will meet at Martin
Springs Baptist Church
Thursday at 10 a.m. for the.
quarterly meeting. Gail Kerr,
Baptist young women director,
will be in charge of the
program.
Glyn and Kathy Jones, First
Baptist Church, Mount Vernon
will bring special music. Tile
speaker will be Gene Ferrell of
Denison.
A salad luncheon will be
served at noon, followed by a
book review of the history of
Texas WMU, “Century One —
A Pilgrimage of Faith” by Inez
Boyle Hunt.
Wjnni'e D. Miller,
associational WMU director,
invites uU interested persons to
attend.
Greenpond church
to host musical
The adult choir of the First
Baptist Church of Winnsboro
will present the post-
resurrection musical, “Living
Witnesses" by Rick Cook at 7
p.m. Wednesday in the
Greenpond Baptist Church at
Como. „ -
The music-drama recreates
the events of Jesus’ appearance
to. his followers after the
resurrection. It was presented
at the Winnsboro church
Sunday and again Monday.
Fourteen costumed
characters will create the
drama and a 37-member choir
will be singing.
Organs
Concert and church organs
may weigh as much as 150
tons and have anywhere from
10,000 to more than 27,000
pipes, ranging from only,J
three-eighths of an inch up to
64 feet in length.
At Wit's End
/ <
By Erma Bombeck
All my life I’ve heard about “Everyone Else’s'
mother.”
Every time I told my kids they had to have the car
home by 11, I was informed, “Everyone Else’s
mother said they could stay out until 2.”
When I stood firm that they could not have a phone
of their own or a separate listing, they grumbled,
“Everyone Else’s mother lets them have their own
phone.”
No bathing suit was too revealing for Everyone
Else’s mother to put her stamp of approval on. No
allowance was too generous for her to shell out. She
was the Good Queen of children everywhere.
My friends and I used to talk about this mother a
lot. Was she a myth created in the minds of children-
who wanted to be free from the parental decrees, or
did she really exist?'
All I really knew was that she was always with us ..
following us around from city to .city, school to
school, year in and year out.
You cannot imagine my surprise recently when I.
met Everyone Else face to face. She called herself
Jan, but I knew from the moment she opened her
mouth she was “Everyone Else” with the famous -
mother.
From the moment she was born she got to do
whatever she wanted to do. She went to bed when she
felt like it, and got up the same way.. If she- craved
jelly beans and coffee for breakfast, she got it. No one
nagged her to shut the door, sit up straight, clear the
table, or make her own bed. She could drink out of
everyone’s glass at parties... if she wanted to.
She drank milk out of the carton and no one yelled
at her. She was rude to people and never had to
apologize. She made mistakes and never had to be
accountable for them,
She picked her own clothes, her own schools, her
own friends. She was the envy of all her con-
temporaries.
Finally, I could stand it no longer. “Jan, for years
I’ve.heard about your mother. Somehow, she’s the
perfection that none of us has been able to touch. I
would love to meet her.”
“Everyone Else” just looked at me and slowly
repeated the word, “love.” You’d have thought it was
the first time she had ever heard it.
Copyright 1980, Field Enterprises, Inc.
"American Express Money Orders Sold Here"
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 84, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 8, 1980, newspaper, April 8, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth823741/m1/2/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.