Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 144, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 17, 1980 Page: 3 of 10
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THE NEWS-TELEGRAM, Sulphur Spring*, Taxos, Tuesday, June 17,19|g_3
At Wit's End
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Mrs. Kyle Lee Hackney
Carle Lee Sickles and Kyle Lee Hackney of Fort Worth pledged
their wedding vpws on June 7 at 7:30 p.m. in a formal ceremony at
the Overton Park United Methodist Church. The Rev. Raymond
Higgins officiated the double-ring nuptials.
$feur0'3fcl*gram
Clark. K.ys Editor and Publisher
f,W Froil.y Pr.».d.n!
Jo. Woosl.y E.muliv. Editor
Cm Shelton News Ediior
Johni.Hord»r«ve Adv.rliung Monoger
Guy E.lton Printing Superintendent *
Itt.kliihed In IIP
The Hews T.I.grem (USPS Ho I44 S4*) publish^ daily .Itept Saturday by The Echo
PuMieltkig CMipany M 401 Churth StrMt Sulphur Springi. T». PS40J telephone (J14)
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Postmaster: Send address changes to The News-Telegram,
a P.O. Boi 598, Sulphur SpringSg.Tx. 75482.
* 0®---e
Coffee
SODA P
ICED
MILK
malts
hot ci
ice c
hospitals
By Erma Bombeck ‘*4
This is probably going to blow my image, but I’m a
real recipe freak. I read cookbooks like other women
read erotic novels, English mysteries, or humor.
Because I’m a student of cookbooks, I have developed
some insights over the years ... especially with a
section that has become a staple called
“CELEBRITY RECIPES.”
I don’t mean to put them down. I’ve contributed to
.1 them myself. Some of you may have even tried my
V recipe, “Erma’s Annual Hot Meal;” (“Sedated
chicken breasts drowning in a sea of canned
mushroom soup and broccoli. Serves three if guests
love broccoli, 26 if they hate broccoli.”)
But mostly, I’m suspicious of them. Like Angie
Dickinson’s Date and Nut Bread. The picture above it
shows Angie with her long, blonde hair falling over
her shoulders, wearing a see-through net'dress that
hugs her bones. I’m sorry, but I somehow get the
feeling if someone offered Angie a measuring cup,
she’d laugh and say, “I haven’t worn that size since I
was seven.”
Barbara Walters’ Cabbage Rolls seem out of
character somehow ... nor did I figure Menachem
Begin sitting around in Isreal on afternoon an-
nouncing, “We got any cinnamon? My mouth’s just
watering for some of my apple pancakes.” (Fidel
Castro’s Bite the Bullet Chicken, maybe.)
Some of the celebrity recipes are predictable. First
ladies, I’ve discovered, rarely send in recipes for
anything under budget. There’s Bess Truman’s
Coconut Balls; Mamie Eisenhower’s Million-Dollar
Fudge, and Rosalynn Carter’s Peanut Brittle.
Every time I see one of Jacqueline Kennedy
Onassis’ recipes, I know it’s going to require
Bechamel sauce and it’s just as well you don’t make it
because you wouldn’t be able to pronounce it if
someone asked you what you served.
Same thing with Princess Grace who always shows
off and gives her recipes in metric. (How soon they
forget Philadelphia.)
Some of the most unlikely men contribute some of
the most unlikely recipes you’ve ever heard of. Would
you try Joel Grey’s Pepper Duck? Bob Hope’s Lemon
Pie? Or Ronald Reagan’s Truckadero Beef Stew?
(The latter contains 16 ingredients, which is the kind
of thoroughness you’d expect from a man who
declared his candidacy last December.)
.On Mother’s Day, however, my faith in celebrity
recipes was restored. My husband and the kids
decided to get dinner for me. He rummaged through
my cookbooks and two hours later set before me the
most beautiful roast I had ever seen from the grill. It
was called Charcoaled Roast a la Bert Lance.
I’ll never doubt Bert again.
Copyright 1980, Field Enterprises, Inc.
Sickles-Hackney
Pledge Vows
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Secret meetings
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Grace the "Bus Stop" owner and Carl, the bus driver have a little something going during the
performance of "Bus Stop." Grace, played by Juanita Dixon and Carl.piayed by John Gore are one
of several humorous intrigues that will take place in the Regional Civic Center beginning Friday,
June 20 at 8:15 p.m. Advance tickets for the Friday and Saturday night dinner theaters that begin at
7 p.m. are available at the Civic Center box office, Jim Masters Western Store and from any
member of the Community Players.
Admissions
Mrs. Beluah Redding,
Pickton.
Barton Ward, Pickton.
Mrs. Cordelia Walker, 405
Atkins.
Master Chuck Chrisman, 1225
Main.
Wayne Moore, 714 Calvert.
Emory Wright, 113 E.
Spence.
Mrs. Coma I^ewright, 515
Church.
Mrs. Thelma Murray,
Woodhaven Nursing Home.
Jack Fairchild, 1112 Georgia.
Donna Wilkinson. Rt. 2.
Travis Glenn, Rt. 2.
Jan Goodson, 453'Van Sickle.
Mrs. Debra Roberts, 107
Jarbo.
Mrs. Zeffie Reppond,
Hopkins County Nursing Home.
Mrs. Weldon Wright, Rt. 3.
Master Robert Johnson, Jr.,
722 Calvert.
Dismissals
Mrs. Billy Pearce, 512 Sprite.
Robert Walker, Mount
Vernon.
Amy Shelton, 824 Longino.
Mrs. Bennie Dunlap, Mount
Vernon.
Mrs. Bonnie McMullan, 333
Jefferson.
Mrs. Dell Wesson, 530 Con-
nally.
Mrs. Billy Couch Jr. and
baby boy, Rt. 1,
out &
about
#4
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Campbell
have returned from a Father's
Day visit with their daughter,
Mrs. H.C. McGrede Jr., Dr.
McGrede and family in
Longview at their home on lake
Cherokee.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Ray
Cawthron of Charleston. SC
have returned home after
visiting for a week with ha
parents, Mr and Mrs
Raymond Cawthron.
Mrs. O.E. Dark of Gerome,
Idaho and her daughter Cheryl
Dark of Twin Falls, Idaho, Mrs.
Helen Bailey and Mrs.
Charlene Dean of Twin Falls
have been visiting Mr. and Mrs.
Marvin Stubbs and Mrs. W.O.
Dowdy and other relatives in
Sulphur Springs.
Gail Johnson and Jan Blake
attended a conference on grant
writing sponsored by the Texas
Commission on the Arts at the
Tyler Art Museum yesterday.
They attended the meeting in
the hopes of discovering more
ways to help being en-
tertainment into Hopkins
County.
Jimmy Rowland was m Fort
Worth Sunday for Father's Day
with his relatives.
Wendy Jane French was
honored with a swimming
party at her home in Ridgeway
to celeberate her first birthday
Sunday. Attending were Mike.
Sarah, Lee Ann, Carla and Erin
Briley, Phyllis, Ray and Josejph
Flemens, and Edith Gemraons.
all of Sulphur Springs, and
Shelley Walton of Augusta, Ga.
Refeshments of chocolate
birthday cake and cold drinks
were served.
Team effort for asthma
Mrs. O.E. Dark of Gerome,
Idaho and her daughter Cheryl
Dark of Twin Falls, Idaho, Mrs.
Helen Bailey and Mrs. Charlene
Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Radican
and Amy of Del Rio visited hts
mother, Mrs. Ophelia Radican.
his sister, Mrs. Bobby Smith
and family, and her parents.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Willis d
Gifton, formerly of Sulpha-
Springs, here during the
weekend. They attended the
Dean of Twin Falls have been wedding of Tony Willis and
visiting Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Cathy Lee in
Stubbs and Mrs. W.O. Dowdy
and other relatives in Sulphur
Springs.
Saturday night.
McKinney
ealth
Lawrence E. Lamb.M.D,
DEAR DR. LAMB - Our 8-
year-old son has asthma. It is
worse in the summer and fall.
He doesn't seem to have it in
winter. Since this is the base-
ball season he wants to play
ball with the other kids. I have
been concerned about this
because 1 know he has had
asthma attacks caused by
exercising or playing too
hard. Is it dangerous for him
to play ball?
Will he have asthma all his
life? I’ve heard that many
children outgrow their asthma
but I know some adult asth-
matics who have had asthma
all their lives.
It’s hard to keep kids from
playing and doing too much.
Is there anything he can take
that would help him lead a
normal life without having
those attacks?
DEAR READER - It’s
ir pa
medic
avoid being overprotective.
The child with asthma is a
good example. No one wants
the child to have attacks, but
it still isn’t good for the child
to grow up thinking he can't
do this or he can’t do that
because of a medical prob-
lem. At school this often
becomes a problem for the
child, the parent and the
teacher who supervises athlet-
ic activity
No one rule applies to all
cases but if the child is nor-
mal otherwise and has mild
asthma, there usually are a
number of sports he can do
hard for parents of children
with medical problems to
Baseball or softball is a good
example Apparently, the
asthmatic would have to vig-
orously exert two or three
minutes before the exercise
causes an attack. Softball
allows the participant to do
his thing and then rest before
he does it again. The exercise
that is most apt to cause an
attack is one that must be
sustained, like long distance
running.
Your boy may have asthma
on an allergic basis. If so,
your doctor may be able to
use allergy testing to identify
the offending agents. Avoiding
these agents is the best pre-
ventive treatment if that is
possible.
I am sending you The
Health Letter number 8-6,
Asthma, to give you more
detailed information. Other
readers who .want this issue
can send 75 cents with a long,
stamped, self-addressed enve-
lope for it. Send your request
to me, in care of this newspa-
per, P.O. Box 1551, Radio City
Station, New York, NY 10019.
As I mentioned in The
Health Letter I am sending
you, about half of the children
with asthma will no longer
have it by the time they are
adults. If an infant has both
asthma and eczema in early
life, he is much more likely to
have asthma as an adult. Usu-
ally only 5 to 10 percent of
children who have asthma
will have j'-vere astfltna as an
adult.
Not all asthma is on an
allergic basis. Some people
have intrinsic asthma They
have negative allergic skin
tests and have negative blood
tests that are usually positive
in allergic asthma. The intrin
sic form usually starts in
adult life.
In the last few years
Cromolyn,., inhaled in a
powder, has been used to pre-
vent asthma attacks It will
not abort an attack that has'
already started but if used
regularly it can help prevent
Gail Johnson and Jan Blake
those attended a conference on grant
attacks, including
in1>arenJsyTrchddren with "ritin* Sp°nSOreJ, Tf“s
asthma who are worried Comm,ss,on on the Arts at the
about how much the child can T-Vler Art Museum yesterday,
do will be wise to have a They attended the meeting in
mutual understanding with the hopes of discovering more
the teacher, the doctor and ways to help being en-
the child. It’s a team effort..., Uytgdmjient into *. Hopkins
Mrs. Ophelia Radican. Mr
and Mrs. Bobby Smith, Mike,
Melinda and Bradley, attend
the wedding Saturday night ic
McKinney uniting Tony Wilks
and Cathy Lee.
(Newspaper enterprise 'assn?
County.
Two ethnic groups make up
the population of Belgium the
Dutch-speaking Flemmings in
the north and the French
Spdakirlj; Walloon.*, in the
South
Collect A Set
Of Beautiful
"Wheat fi? Iron"
(Nostalgia Glasses
S3
Our Daily Bread
A'
Scripture Reading for Today: Proverbs 7:6-23
WHAT IF YOU COULD?
... they practice it, because it is in the,power
of their hand. Micah 2 1
■JkN article in National Wildlife magazine tells about an
unusual experiment with young pigeons conducted
by J. Grohmann about 50 years ago. He raised one
group in narrow tubes which prevented them from moving
, .their wings as they developed, At the same time he al-
lowed some others to grow up under normal conditions.
. When the two groups were mature, the experimenter took
the birds out into the open and tossed them into the air.
Surprisingly, those that had grown up in the tubes flew
away as readily as the ones that had been unrestrained in
the nest. '
Man’s sinful nature also develops without the chance to
express itself. Pride, lust, unfaithfulness, and dishonesty
"’r"gFbw-on~schedu!'e deeprifTouTlwaTr5"Tlfese baits lie just
below the surface. And given the right mix of money, pri-
vacy, or relationships, they will suddenly spread their
wings. All they need is the chance. Our text in Micah 2
reminds us of this. The prophet tells of men who woke up
in the morning to fulfill their evil dreams because it was
"in the power of their hand" to do so. The opposite is
also implied. Others did not practice certain evils, but it
was only because they didn't have the opportunity.
Now let's make this personal. Why do we look "good"
to others? Are we too tied by laws and witnesses to do
otherwise? Are we afraid of getting caught? Or are we
motivated to righteous living by our fellowship with
Christ? The difference may not be obvious to our fellow-
men, but it is to God. He knows what we would do—if
we could! —M.R.D. II
Teach me, Lord, my true condition;
Bring me childlike to Thy knee;
Stripped of every low ambition,
Willing to be led by Thee.- 4 —Anon.
THOT: The best of men are capable of the worst of deeds.
"in
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Keys, Clarke. Sulphur Springs News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 102, No. 144, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 17, 1980, newspaper, June 17, 1980; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824721/m1/3/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.