Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 211, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1980 Page: 3 of 24
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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THE NEWS-TELEGRAM. Sulphur Springs. T«o». Friday, Sapt. 5,1980—3.
hospitals
Supermarket Shopper
Admissions
Charles Heathcoat, Leisure
Lodge Nursing Home.
Mrs. E.L. Lawson, 175
Spence.
Mrs. Jerry Fite, Route 3.
Gerald Gaines, Cumby.
Oddie McQueen, Route 3.
Mrs. Marvin Ishmael,
Sulphur Springs.
Kathy Horn, 622 Whitworth.
Master Erick Sims, 900
Freeman.
Mrs. Rosie Wyninegar, 212
Brewer.
Mrs. William Chandler, 801
Pampa.
Larren Edwards, 410 South
Locust.
Dismissals
Ennis Shaw, 718 Calvert.
Jennifer Landers, 917
Church.
Mrs. Joe Don Pogue, Route 3.
Mrs. Darla Reed and baby
girl, 512 Vonda.
Leslie Wilson, 607 Whitworth.
Mrs. Steven Smith, Cumby.
Mrs. Laura Mcllory, Point.
Kelley Hopper, Route 4.
Mrs. Delma Swatsell, 947
College.
Mrs. James Jones and baby
boy, Paris.
Mrs. Billy Finklea and baby
boy, Yantis.
Mrs. Carl Wims, Paris.
Rev. Julian Reynolds, Pitt-
sburg.
Refunder uses coupons to help
off-set cost of vacation food
End a marriage with
a divorce ceremony
DEAR DR BLAKER -
After reading your column on
the desirability of some cere-
mony to end a marriage, my
ex-husband and I have decid-
ed to try the idea.
But we can’t find any exam-
ples of divorce ceremonies.
What have other people done'?
three burning. Each took one
of the burning candles, and
together they lighted the cen-
ter one.
This time each lighted one
of the outer candles from, the
center one, which had been
burning throughout the cere-
mony. Then they blew out the
choices
,J
Karen Blaker Ph.D.
DEAR READER - An
ordained minister with the
Disciples of Christ and her ex-
husband reported on the cere-
mony ending their 13-year
marriage in a recent issue of
the professional newsletter
Marriage and Divorce Today.
They wrote the ceremony
themselves and invited eight
friends, some, of whom did not
want to attend out of fear that
it would be too painful
During the first part of the
ceremony, each showed seven
symbols of his or her life and
talked about their meanings.
They confessed their responsi-
bilities for their marital prob-
lems and asked one another's
forgiveness.
Next they reversed the can-
dle ceremony from their
wedding. The original cere-
mony had begun with the two
outer candles in a row of
center candle.
They ended the service by
taking communion together.
Although the weeks leading
up to the ceremony were diffi-
cult and the day itself was
excruciating, both reported
feeling relieved and at peace
when it was all over. The
event gave them an opportu-
nity to remember their
marriage's beautiful begin-
ning and to mourn its passing.
DEAR DR. BLAKER -
You have often written on the
importance of discipline for
children I have a precocious
child, however, and I'm not
sure if your advice applies to
him, too.
Don't these special children
need more freedom than nor-
mal children so their creativi-
ty will not be stifled?
DEAR READER - First
ask yourself if you are overes-
timating your child’s preco-
ciousness as an excuse for
avoiding the firm but loving
discipline that is such a diffi-
cult part of parenting.
Even if this is not case and
your child is truly gifted, my
advice remains the same.
Children — all children —
need limits.
Several years ago 1 worked
at a nursery school for bright
children. We took down the
fences around the play yard so
they wouldn’t feel so
constricted.
Instead of playing in a freer
way, however, they congre-
gated in the center of the
yard, afraid to express their
enthusiasm and creativity
without the safety of bounda-
ries.
This experience illustrated
to me the importance of set-
ting limits for all children,
even the gifted.
Take control of the family
television set with Dr.
Blaker's hotline "Taming the
TV Beast.” Send 50 cents plus
a stamped, self-addressed
envelope to Dr. Blaker in care
of this newspaper, P.O. Box
475, Radio City Station, New
York, NY 10019.
Write to Dr. Blaker 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 )
By MARTIN SLOANE
DEAR SUPERMARKET
SHOPPER - We recently took
a family vacation to the South
Dakota Badlands and Mount
Rushmore. Since gasoline,
motels and restaurants are so
expensive, it was obvious that
we would have to economize.
We decided to take along food
from home and pick up needed
items from grocery stores
along the way.
I have been couponing and
refunding for several years,
and my family is used to this at
home. But when I took out my
collection of cash-off coupons
and free-product certificates at
a strange store 500 miles from
home, both of my kids headed
for the car with that “Aw,
Mom” look on their faces.
It didn’t bother me a bit to
pay for our breakfast with a 25-
cent coupon for a box of Trix
and a certificate for a free half-
gallon of milk from General
Mills.
My couponing and refunding
allowed us to enjoy the trip and
make it home with our budget
only slightly bent. — I.C. from
Plattsburg, Mo.
DEAR I.C. - I wish all those
people who moaned and
groaned about being trapped at
home this summer by the high
price of gasoline had your good
sense.
I have received many letters
from coupon clippers like you
who managed to squeeze a
vacation out of their super-
market savings — and then
managed to squeeze additional
savings out of their vacations.
DEAR SUPERMARKET
SHOPPER - I sent in the
required proofs uf purchase for
the Ragu Spaghetti Meal
Refund. In return, I received
one coupon for a free package
of spaghetti and another for a
free jar of spaghetti sauce.
In reading the terms of the
coupons, I was pleasantly
surprised to find that both could
also be used as cash-offs on
larger sizes. The spaghetti-
sauce coupon was worth 85
cents, and the spaghetti was
worth 50 cents.
Last week a local market
offered double value on
coupons, so I decided to use my
Ragu coupons to save a total of
$2.70 on the larger sizes. (The
doubled amount did not exceed
the shelf prices of the items.)
When I got to the checkout
counter, the cashier refused to
double the value of the coupons
since the word “free” was
stamped around their borders.
I tried to explain that I was
not getting the free smaller
sizes but was using the cash-off
option. She still refused, and
the manager backed her up.
Did I interpret the coupon
v incorrectly? — Patricia L.
from California.
DEAR PATRICIA - When a
store offers to double the value
of a cash-off coupon, it has the
right to set the rules for its half
of the offer. The store can
decide that coupons for free
products will not be doubled. In
fact, most stores that offer
double-value coupons impose
this restriction.
But the coupons you received
Help for impotence
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - My
husband is a diabetic and he
has lost his sex drive and he’s
impotent. Recently he saw a
medical television show that
said there’s an operation
available to help many diabet-
ics with their sex life. I would
like to get some more infor-
mation on this. Could you
explain the operation? Also
which doctor would you have
to see about this operation? I
think on the TV program the
doctor inserted an object in
the penis and it had a bulb
attached to it that pumped up
the penis.
inserted into the shaft of the
penis. These are connected to
a fluid reservoir placed
behind the pubic bone. There
is also a little pump as part of
envelope for it. Send your
request to me, in care of this
newspaper, P.O. Box 1551,
Radio City Station, New York,
NY 10019. ~
Phealth
Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
COMMODITY
SEMINAR
When you learn to work with and control the risk of trading
Commodities the rewards can be great. Invest a small amount
of your time to attend our workshop and hopefully you wtfl
walk away a better trader.
7:30 p.m. September 9th
Ramada Inn
Sulphur Springs, Texas
Reservations Required
Call Davis Mosmeyer
800-492-2892
ContiCommodity
Subsidiary of Continental Grain Company
DEAR READER - That’s
becoming a very common-
place operation. It’s impor-
tant to know what causes
impotence before deciding
what to do about treating it.
Impotence is rather common
and it’s a symptom, not a
diagnosis.
It’s true that diabetes can
affect the nerve endings that
control the blood flow to the
penis. This can cause the dia-
betic to become impotent
even though he may have
completely normal sex drive
otherwise.
The problem is that there
are many people who are dia-
betic and also many who are
impotent. The fact that a per-
son is diabetic doesn’t neces-
sarily mean that diabetes is
the cause. A person can have
impotence from some other
problem, including psycholog-
ical factors, and still be a
diabetic,
If your husband is evaluat-
ed adequately and it is found
that his impotence is a com-
plication of his diabetes, he
can be treated as you suggest-
ed. There are basically two
such operations available.
In the method that you
apparently are describing,
two hollow cylinders are
the apparatus. This device has
a switch inside the scrotum to
activate the pump. By pushing
the switch, fluid is pumped
from the reservoir into the
cylinders causing the penis to
erect just the same as if blood
had poured into the penis to
induce erection.
By manipulating the control
mechanism within the scro-
tum, the fluid can be pumped
back out of the penis and into
the reservoir behind the pubic
bone. The entire system is
self-contained and there’s
nothing you see on the outside.
Another method is simply
to insert flexible silicone rods
into the penis. These usually
do not produce the same
degree of erection and, of
course, the penis is always in
that same semi-erect state
since you don’t have the
option of taking the silicone
rods out at will.
The person to see about
such procedures is the urolo-
gist. He should be up to date
on this important common
problem. Not all urologists do
these new operations but a
large number across the coun-
try do.
To give you a better under-
standing of the numerous
causes for impotence, I’m
sending you The Health Letter
number 3-12, Impotence.
Other readers who want this
issue can send 75 cents with a
long, stamped, self-addressed
®J]rp Meur0-®cIegram
ClorheKey*
F W Froiley
Job Woo*ley
G#n« $h*lton
Johni# Hordgrov*
Guy Felton
Editor ond Publisher
President
E xetutive Editor
ft News Editor
Advertising Monoger
Printing Superintendent
Established»" lift
The News Telegram (USW No 144-SM) published deity except Saturday by Tha Echo
Publishing Company el *1 Chursh Street Sulphur Springs Ti 7S4«J Telephone (114)
MS-1443
Subscription lotos, ly carrier *1.4S per month or *19 SO per year ly moil in Hophies
County * 14.SO far sis months *17 00 one year: by mail elsewhere M4 00 for sii months
*J1 00 one y oar foil cash in advance )
Second Clou Restofe gad at Soiftmi Sgnsp Ti ?S41?
Postmaster: Send address changes to The News-Telegram,
P.O. Box 598, Sulphur Springs, Tx. 75482.
First Baptist Church
Invites You To Hear...
Pastor Jack Robbins
Preach A Series Of Messages On
These Issues.
We Must Face!
(Issues include Atheism, the Bible, Humanism, the Spiritual War-
fare, Communism, God and Government, Abortion, Pornography,
Alcohol, Drugs, Homosexuality, and Others.)
SUNDAY EVENINGS
7:00 P.AA.
Sun., September 7—"The Number One I ssue Of Our Time'
Look and Listen...Every Sunday
Television—Channel 2
Radio-KSST 1230
Morning Worship Service. ..10:45A.M.
Men's Bible Study—9:45 A.M.
Morning Worship Service—-10:45 A.M.
Evening Worship Service—7:00 P.M.
from Ragu were not just free-
product coupons. The terms of
the coupons were more im-
portant than the word "free”
stamped around their borders.
The manager should have
taken the time to read the fine
print on the coupons and
doubled their value.
Write to THE SUPER-
MARKET SHOPPER in care of
The News-Telegram. Volume
of mail prohibits personal
replies, but questions and
comments of general interest
will be published in future
columns.
Refund of the Day
Write to the following ad-
dress to receive the form
required by this refund worth
$1 to $4 in coupons: Adom-Toni
$4 Coupon Offer, P.O. Box 4113,
Maple Plain, Minn. 55348. Send
for this form by Oct. 15, 1980.
Clip N' File Refunds
(Week of Sept. 7)
Beverages
(Files)
□ip out this file and keep it
with similar cash-off coupons
— beverage refund offers with
beverage coupons, for
example. Start collecting the
needed proofs of purchase
while looking for the required
refund forms at the super-
market, in newspapers and
magazines, and when trading
with friends. Offers may not be
available in all areas of the
country. Allow 10 weeks to
receive each refund.
KOOL-AID $1 Cash Refund
Offer. Receive a $1 refund.
Send the required refund form
plus 20 envelopes of Kool-Aid
Unsweetened Soft Drink Mix or
seven 2-quart envelopes of
Kool-Aid Sugar-Sweetened Soft
Drink Mix or two 10-quart
canister labels or one 15-quart
canister label. Expires Dec. 31,
1980.
UPTON-SWEET ‘N’ LOW $1
Coupon Offer. Receive a 50-cent
Lipton coupon and a 50-cent
Sweet ’n’ Low coupon. Send the
required refund Erfrm, one label
from Lipton Instant Tea plus
gold seals from two boxes of
Sweet n’ Low, any size. Ex-
pires Dec. 31,1980.
NESCAFE World Mug Offer.
Receive a free mug. Send the
required refund form plus inner
seals from Nescafe Regular or
Decaffeinated adding up to 12
ounces. Expires Dec. 31, 1980.
SWISS MISS COCOA Refund.
Receive a $1 refund. Send the
required refund form plus
Universal Product Codes from
two cartons or canisters of
Swiss Miss Hot Cocoa Mix.
Expires Dec. 31, 1980.
TASTER’S CHOICE. Receive
a 2-ounce jar of Taster’s Choice
or a $1.50-off coupon. Send the
required refund form plus inngr
riAnl* famm Inixi A f
seals from jars of Tasters
Choice totaling 16 ounces.
Expires Oct. 31, 1980.
WAGNER Free Oranges
Refund. Receive a refund of up
to $1 on the purchase of
oranges. Send the required
refund form, net-weight
statements from three 54-ounce
bottles or four 32-ounce bottles
of Wagner Breakfast Drinks,
any flavor, regular or diet, plus
a register tape with the price of
six oranged circled. Expires
Oct. 31, 1980.
Copyright, 1980
United Feature Syndicate, Inc.
out & about
The descendants of the late
Jeff and Luda Jackson Folmar
will have their annual family
get together with a basket
lunch, Sunday, Sept. 7 at the Ag
Building in City Park. Friends
and relatives are invited.
The Baird Reunion will be
held at the Ag Building in City
Park on Sunday, Sept. 14 at 11
a.m. These are the descendants
of Will and Molly Baird.
Nelia Reeves recently
returned from a visit with her
niece, Clarice Neymon and her
husband who live in Reno, Nev.
Mrs. Reeves toured parts of
California and was at the
Harvey Hotel at Lake Tahoe,
two days after the explosion.
She reports the damage looked
as bad as the pictures. She left
Nevada in 59 degree tem-
perature and stepped off ,the
plane at DFW into the over
temperature of 98.
You'll Find....
A Great Place For Young Adults
COME AND SEE! 1113 SHANNON RD.
From Alan Abell
•Skirts
•Pants
•Blazers
•Jackets
•Blouses
In Rust, Teal and Black
From Fay's Closet
ePants
•Blazers
•Skirts
•Blouses
In Plaids and Solids
—LAY A WAY YOUR—
885-5777
[ CHOICE NOWl
SASS0N
[ We Have
SUEDE
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LEATHER
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BLAZERS
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 211, Ed. 1 Friday, September 5, 1980, newspaper, September 5, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824499/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.