Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 168, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 16, 1980 Page: 3 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hopkins County Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Hopkins County Genealogical Society.
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V
'1
S
Church seeks to help the
hungry of the world —
hospitals
Th» First Baptist Church is
sponsoring a group of
programs concerning the
“World Hunger Problem,”
beginning Wednesday and
ending after services Sunday
night. The purpose of the events
is to call attention to a problem
and provide a means of
responding to the dilemma. The
goal is to raise $3,000.
Pastor Jack Robbins and
missions committee director
Don Smith are emphasizing the
“role of Christians in a hungry-
starving world during the week
of July 13 - 20.
The Thursday session begins
with a meal in the church gym
at 6 p.m. followed at 6:30 with a
program on world hunger. This
is a “W.U.M.” husbandwife
meeting.
Sunday morning services will
feature Bob and Jan Salley who
will present a musical concert
and program cm world hunger.
The Salley’s are founders of
World Hunger Relief, Inc., a
Christian, non-profit
organization founded in May,
1976 to promote awareness of
world hunger and raise funds to
alleviate the problem.
The Salley’s own a 17 acre
farm near Waco that is used as
a training ground for volun-
teers willing to help
“agriculture-educate” the
hungry of the world.
Fred Sorrel will present the
Sunday evening service. Sorrel
is a 26-year-old Southern
Baptist Agri-missionary who
has spent two years in Tan-
zania, Africa. He is scheduled
to leave for Burundi, Africa
later this year.
The pastors of the church problem of World Hunger to
invite anyone Interested in the attend the meetings.
Loss of taste
DEAR DR. LAMB - 1 am
finally convinced that for the
rest of my life I’ll be a lym-
phoma victim. After a year of
chemotherapy injections and
taking Cytoxan tablets regu-
larly, I have learned to handle
this drug but I have no taste
for my food which causes loss
of weight and nausea, etc. I
tion here would be to roast
beef with apples. Since meat
often contains a hidden
amount of fat, if the cancer
patient really cuts back on
meats, he may be significant-
ly cutting back on his needed
calorie intake.
Since I’m sure you want
more general information
HEALTH
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
eat almost everything to stay
alive but the pleasure of liv-
ing is only about 50 percent.
I’m sorry to say the doctors in
the cancer program where
I’m being seen apparently
don’t have any interest in my
lack of taste or are bored with
hearing such a complaint.
Please help if you can.
DEAR READER - There
are several reasons for weight
loss from cancer but one of
them is loss of taste for food
or the food actually tastes
bad. A loss of taste in cancer
patients is sometimes associ-
ated with the zinc deficiency.
Your doctors could give you
some zinc tablets that might
help if that’s part of the prob-
lem.
In addition, cancer patients
have a decreased sensitivity
to sweet substances. You can
perhaps make your sweet
foods taste better by using
more sweetener than you
were previously accustomed
to using.
Then cancer patients some-
times don't like meat because
it suddenly tastes bitter to
them. That’s because of a dif-
ferent sensitivity to the urea
in meat. Increased seasoning
or different types of seasoning
may mask this and help
improve the taste of the meat.
Depending on your own taste
sensation, actually sweetening
the meat sometimes help dis-
guise the flavor. An illustra-
about cancer, I'm sending you
The Health Letter number 14-
8, Cancer: A Fact of Life.
Other readers who want this
issue can send 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.
Finally, I’d like to add that
lymphoma and other cancer
problems may often be like
living with other chronic
diseases. With medicine and
available modern treatment,
often such problems may be
kept in relative remission for
long periods of time. Under
these circumstances, it
becomes analogous to the dia-
betic who lives with regular
treatment such as insulin and
diet. It’s important to realize
that with modem treatment,
many cancer patients can live
for many useful years.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I had
a heart attack four years ago
and my heart specialist put
me on Coumadin. I’ve been
told that after you've taken
this for a period of time that it
is no longer effective. Is that
true?
DEAR READER - No,
that’s not correct. Coumadin
is an anti-clotting agent. It is
true that the amount a person
needs to control the tendency
of the blood to clot can vary.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN) ,
Hunger helpers
Jan and Bob Salley will be the featured speakers during the up-
coming activities sponsored by the First Baptist Church to em-
phasize the dilemma of world hunger. The Salley's are the
founders of World Hunger Relief, Inc. They will present programs
at 8:15 a.m. and 10:45 a.m., Sunday in the First Baptist Church
auditorium. The public is invited to attend.
Job hunting tips
COMMERCE - Sulphur
Springs area residents who are
searching for new jobs can pick
up a few tips in Leisure
Learning classes on job in-
terviewing and resume writing
at East Texas State University.
Dr. Don Pope, coordinator of
career planning in ETSU’s
Center for Student Develop-
ment Services, will discuss
resumes and handout examples
in the Effective Resume
Writing class on July 22
(Tuesday). He will discuss
several job interviewing
techniques and provide printed
materials in the Successful Job
Interviewing class on July 29
(Tuesday).
Both classes will be from 2 to
4 p.m. in the Caddo Room of the
Sam Rayburn Memorial
Student Center. The fee is 50
cents per person.
Pope discusses the job
market on his regular radio
program, “Career Potpourri,”
at 11:30 a.m., 12:55 p.m. and
10:30 p.m. on Wednesdays on
KETR-FM, ETSU’s public
radio station. He also writes the
“Career Potpourri" column
which appears regularly in the
Commerce Journal.
N?ut0'3fcl?rpram
Clarke Keys
F W Frailey
Joe Woozley
Gene Shalton
Johme Hordgrove
Guy Felton
Editor and Publisher
President
Executive Editor
News Editor
Advertising Manoger
Printing Superintendent
Established in lit*
The Newt-Telegrem (USPS No 144-540) published daily except Saturdoy by The Echo
Publishing Company at 401 Church Street Sulphur Springs Tx 75412 Telephone (214)
SIS 1*43
Subscription Rotes: By carrier *2 45 per month or *29 SO per year By mail in Hopkins
County *14.SO lor six months *27.00 one year: by moil elsewhere ’14 00 tor six months
*31.00 on# year (all cash in advance )
Second Clots potlsft pud it Sulphur Springs. Ti 75417
Postmaster: Send address changes to The News-Telegram,
P.O. Box 598, Sulphur Springs, Tx. 75482.
summer
CLEARANCE
Entire Summer Stock
y2 Price
•Dresses • Seperates • Shoes
No Lay-A-Ways, Please
Collegiate Shoppe
and Shoes
204 Main
,-”V.. xLU.
;s;«aai
Admissions
Donald Moore, 501 Pampa.
Mrs. Jessie Carrell, 214
Beasly.
Mrs. Susie Williams, 732
Calvert.
Mrs. Amy Thomas, Shannon
Drtwi » .....- .
Larry Morris, Brashear.
Mrs. DeLana Morris, Saltillo.
Mrs. Lueile Stewart, Route 4.
Jerry Ferrell, Route 4.
Mrs. Myrtle Waller, 513
Peach.
Mrs. Lesslie Wilson, Route 3.
Renea Hodnett, Commerce.
Mrs. Clark Salmon, Leisure
Lodge Nursing Home.
Mrs. Debra Crook, 1225 Main.
Robert Threatt, 422 Oak
Avenue.
Elvis Price, 128 Four Street.
Steven Craig Childress,
Brashear.
Dismissals
Mrs. Vesta McCreary, Route
3.
Mrs. Albert Isaacs and baby
girl, Mount Pleasant.
Mrs. Jerry Mitchell, 602
Pampa.
Kelly Kurz, Route 4.
Mrs. Lanny Tidwell and baby
, girl, Como.
Mrs. Beluah Redding,
Pickton.
Cecil Rowe, Sulphur Springs.
Kenneth Brown, Sulphur
Springs.
Mrs. Mickey Ballard, 104
Colorado.
Mrs. James Boyd, 713
Calvert.
Mrs. Yancy Hinman and
baby girl, 501 Brtnker.
Dennis Diaz, Dike.
Mrs. Henry Cowser, 304
Radio Road.
out & about
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Bell
from Tampa, Fla. are visiting
their daughter and her
husband, Trudy and George
Back. They also plan to spend
as much time as possible with
their grandchildren, Jason and
Jaime.
THE NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Springs, Taxes, Wednesday, July 14,1910—3.
Is Mother right?
DEAR DR BLAKER - My
marriage is not going very
well.
My mother says it’s because
1 don’t work hard enough to
please my husband Perhaps
she is right
My husband is a very dedi-
cated professional, and I have
a demanding career of my
own.
We are both tired when we
come home at night. I often
resent having to make dinner
and clean the house while he
relaxes.
As a result, I don’t feel like
sex And that’s the problem
DEAR READER - Your
mother seems to agree with
President Carter’s
“Being a wife is a full-time
job,” said Lillian Carter to a
conference on the employ-
ment of women. “What hus-
band wants to come home to a
wife who is all exhausted and
worn out?
“1 don’t think a woman who
has a demanding career can
properly take care of her
husband. So, 1 just don’t think
they should work .”
My views on this matter are
quite different.
Both you and your husband
are adults with the right to
careers. Both of you also have
the obligation to take care of
each other in ways that you
agree upon.
If you share these basic
beliefs, you can work out the
details along the way One
excellent guide is Caroline
Bird’s book “The Two Pay-
check Marriage."
DEAR DR. BLAKER - I
always thought the worst part
of ending a relationship with a
man would be the loneliness
when he was no longer
around.
But the people I have really
missed since I broke up with
my boyfriend last month are
his best friend and his mother
I can’t decide what to do. I
would feel strange continuing
the relationships right under
his nose, but I can’t just drop
them after seeing these peo-
ple almost every day for three
years. What should I do?
If your former boyfriend is
completely alienated by the
break-up, however, it would
be uncomfortable for every-
one if you tried to stay close
to his mother and his friend.
So, you must ask yourself
this question: Under the
circumstances, would his
mother and his best friend be
placed in awkward positions
if you tried to remain close?
Help your family reduce its
dependence on television with
S '?■»
Dr. Blaker's newsletter “Tam-
ing the TV Beast.” Send 50
cents plus a stamped, self-
addressed envelope to Dr.
Blaker in care of this newspa-
per, P.O. Box 475, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
Write to Dr. BlakW at the
above address. Volume of
mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions of gen-
eral interest will be discussed
in future columns.
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
. CHOICES
lX ;j| Karen Blaker Ph.D.
£hi$tflrrivedQ
For Fall
Calvin Klein
Corduroys
In
Pewter, Plum, Grape
Sand and Navy
Pam Green of Round Rock,
Texas arrived Sunday for a two
week visit with her grand-
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Johnny
Green and great aunt, Mrs.
Milton Gill. She will also be
visiting her aunt and uncle, Mr.
and Benny Johnson and cousin,
Joanna Johnson.
DEAR READER - It is
only fair to take your ex-
boyfriend’s feelings into
consideration.
** If you have ended the
romantic attachment but plan
to remain friends, there
should be no difficulty in your
also remaining friends with
his mother and his best friend.
The relationships will proba-
bly be a little less intense,
though.
Kenar Sweaters
Cotton And Silk Blends
Attention:
Club Officers
The News-Telegram would like to include your organization in a directory of
local clubs, which we will publish in August of this year.
We need up-to-date information on your club to provide the most complete
and helpful guide for our readers.
To make sure that your organization gets its place on our list of clubs,
please fill out the information form below and mail it to Club Directory,
News-Telegram, P.O. Box 598, Sulphur Springs, Tex. 75482, Aug. 1,1980.
PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT
Clip and Mail to:
Club Dlractory
News-Telegram
P.O. Drawer 598
Sulphur Springs, Tex 75482
Official Club Name_
Remember to mail
in your club's information
form BEFORE Aug. 1, 1980
Current President’s Name.
iv
Address.
Membership Director’s Name.
Address_
Brief statement of your club’s purpose, including the type of club
(social, service, professional, etc.)
Regular Meeting Time & Place:.
Your Name.
Phone:
n
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 168, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 16, 1980, newspaper, July 16, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824017/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 21, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.