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- .*■- PAGE SIX OUR INSURANCE CLAIM SERVICE Always "Measures Up”! Compare our claim service with that of any available to you. Ours always meas ures up to your needs! Ser vice as near as your phone! Give us a call! Purcells "Your Private Bankers" 1418 Main St. Newberry CAROLINA METAL WORKS Sheet Metal - Heating - Air Conditioning COLLEGE ST. EXTN. TEL. 115 A. G. McCAUGHRIN, President A Treasurer. % Bruce-Terminix! "World 9 m largost tormlf control organization $5000 GUARANTEE Against Fotoro Tmrmltn Damago Represented rationally by over 18C0 lumber deden for frso Inspoctlon caH Newberry Lumber Co., Inc. Authorized Representative Fot TERMINIX SERVICE 913 CLINE ST. TELEPHONE 56 THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA By C. A. DEAN, M.D. ME DITORIAL: Approximately 15 per cent of all children wet the bed. Since bed-wetting is one of the commonest problems of child hood. I would like to consider its cause, types and care. This discussion on enuresis (bed wetting) is restricted to the habitu al type, not the occasional—case such as a newborn baby, where the trouble disappears spontane ously in a short time. A true enuretic never has nor mal urinary control. Occasionally parents state that their child didn’t begin wetting the bed until he was 5 or 6, but careful ques tioning will reveal that the child was picked up each night and placed on the toilet or that he awakened himself and went to the bathroom. When the parents stop picking up the child or when he stops awakening himself and the bed be comes wet is not really the begin ning of the problem. Bed-wetting is a condition with which the child is born, and is probably inherited. There is no reason to believe it is a result of an emotional conflict. It is true, however, that after the habit is established the child will become emotionally disturbed. This emotional reaction is greatly influenced by the parents attitude. The more they scold and punish the worse the condition becomes. “(Q) “Where can ene get a book on how to relax in childbirth/' Mrs. B.A.F. (A) There are several good books on this subject. I suggest you contact your doctor or obste trician for references. He may have pamphlets on this subject. VY LLOYD 0EA RX A HANPV UTCMCN KNIfB SHARPENER Cement OILSTONE TO WOCP BLOCK MOUNTED FLUSH WITH EDSE OF KNIFE DRAWER .NOTCH WOOD BLOCK BY LLOYD BIRMINGHAM WOW CAD MADE A RECIPE BOOK HOLDER- 0 I ICC [ v STOCK BACK PIECE , 0 PLEXIGLASS 7'kS' SOTTOW PIECE 5"X9" $7,000.00 May Be YOURS WATCH YOUR $1.00 BILLS FOR ANY $1 BILL YOU RECEIVE ... fro mthe sponsors ... may be a winner! Listen to Announcements every hour on . . . As part of this feature program, hund reds of $1 bills have been put into circu lation . . . and numbers taken from these S 1 bills are being announced daily on WKDK! There’s a different number ev ery hour . . . and every one is worth a big cash prize. So keep your eyes pealed for WKDK Lucky Bucks . . . keep list ening for the serial numbers of Lucky Bucks on WKLK. WKDK 1240 ON YOUR DIAL Cr.OSSWORD PUZZLE PUZZLE No. 633 ACKOSS 1 'Moccasin 4 Tantalizer 10 To support -14 River iSp.) 15 Adorned in excess 16 Estimate 17 Animal 1.9 Ox of the Celebes 20 Heraldry: grafted .21 Hearing organs 23 A forefather 25 Stanza of six lines (pi.) 28 Portico 29 Weight (abbr.) 30 Cookies 32 Wisest 36 Japanese statesman 38 Wearied 40 At no time 41 Falls behind 43 Baseball teams 45 Hindu deity 46 Cultivates 48 Drinks to excess 50 Hawaiian wreath 51 Slumbers 53 Roundup 55 Symbol for radon 56 Consumes 58 Sinews 60 Absent- minded AMERICANA 64 River of Europe 65 Against 66 Brazilian coin 68 One eighth of a real 71 Charge upon property 72 Whole 74 Clock in shane of ship 75 Warbled 76 Canonized person (pi.) 77 Obtain DOWN 1 Paid athlete 2 River island 3 Shelter for sheep (pi.) 4 Rapid flow 5 Teutonic deity 6 Collection of facts 7 River of Peru 8 Short jackets 9 Acts in response 10 Portends 11 Rave 12 Man’s name 13 An equal 18 Consumes 22 Discolor 24 Of the dawn 25 Long-legged bird (pi.) 26 SetUe lands inalienably uoon a n.-i -n.i 27 Germinate 31 Spanish title 33 Wicked 34 River of England 35 Teaches 37 Eye flir tatiously 39 Station 42 Showering rain and snow 44 Jewish home festival 47 To box 49 Upper house of Congress (pi.) 52 Looks at fixedly 54 East Indian /ine 57 Color Vene tian red 59 Old Japanese gold coin 60 Pigeon pea (pi.) 61 Genus of doiphinlike cetaceans 62 British gun 63 S. American monkey 67 Transgression 69 Letter of al^aabet 70 Frequently (poet.) 73 Football posi tion (abbr.) aaric] a ninn XI« a:: Cadillac, Michigan Cities To See A brochure prepared by the local Chamber of Commerce reports the fact that folks live high in Cadillac, Michigan—high above the surrounding country, that is. Cadillac is the highest city in Mich igan’s Lower Peninsula, and with this height acquires something else the C of C likes to tell folks about—crystal, pine-scented air. A high elevation, the closeness of two large lakes, and probably the pine trees surrounding Cadillac, combine to give Cadillac an air that is “plain exhilarating.” Just about everyone in Cadil lac is a fisherman, a hunter, or a skier. Cadillac is the ski-center of the Midwest, with so many nearby facilities a person could ski all day and never go down the same run twice. Being centrally located, Cadil lac is the shopping center for six counties, and some 60,000 peo ple live in this area. Cadillac boasts diversified in dustry. Some 21 manufacturers produce rubber products, alumi num and fibre glass boats, iron castings, concrete building prod ucts, furniture, canvas products, air conditioners and precision machinery.. For the Fisherman, the area offers 1,123 miles of trout streams and 94‘lakes, all within a 30-mile radius of Cadillac. There are an nually organized bear hunts while individual hunters pursue such game as deer, duck, rabbit, par tridge and bobcat. Canoeists en joy float trips on the Manistee River, with convenient put-in and take-out points. Nearby are Old Indian Trails and Indian camping grounds and small saw mills which operate in the shadow of a “ghost town,” once a thriving locality during lumbering days. What you can do ' to fight... ONSTANTLY OBfY ALL LAWS EPORTJO PROPER YOU HAVE ABOUT NSST ON GOOD GOVEERK&JT AT ALL CtV& ■*4 f r* AKE YOUR INFLUENCE ADEQUATE PAY*^ FOR LAW ENFOR< or ^AWFAcirriESi ■ 1 "OFFICERS '' DUCATE YOUR CHILDREfrrb RESPECT LAW, AND ORDER ‘~ “ tlN \J. Edgar Hoover; Dfrcctct, Federal Bureaa of InTotigitioo United Stitts Department of Juitfe* LAWS PROTECT YOU... -HELP ENFORCE THEM THURSDAY, JUNE 22, 1961 fOR AND ABOUT TEENAGERS By C D. Smith Boy Friend Wants Things His Way THE WEEK’S LETTER: “I am a girl of sixteen and like a boy, nineteen, who also likes me. I have three problems. • My first: Whenever we walk down the street together he says “hi” to every girl that goes by and looks back at them. What can I do to stop him from doing this? He also thinks he’s so cute he just has to snap his fingers and. the girls come running. In my opinion and the opinion of my friends he 'sn’t especially cute. Second: he thinks 1 should do everything he says and if I don’t he says he’ll go up to this town where he can get a steady job and stay and I’ll never see him again. How can I stop him from doing this? My third problem: he loves to make up big stories and gets me all upset by them. One is where he said he was giving me up to marry another girl cause he was tired of waiting for me to reach nineteen so we could get married. What can I do? I love him very much. OUR ANSWER: Get wise, young lady, get wise. In the first in stance, fight fire with fire, so to speak. Say “hi” to all the boys who pass and let him “hi” all the girls he wants to. In the second instance: Court- ship, like marriage, should be a 50-50 proposition. Nobody can b* the “boss” all the way. In court ship one usually puts the best foot forward. The individual, boy or girl, who “gives in” or “give* up” for the sake of peace and harmony Is just buying future trouble. If someone is “bossy"' and demanding during courtship, ^ that individual win become even more so after marriage. In the third instance: If you know they are “big stories” why worry about them? Why get up set? Keep a level head and try to show him how foolish it is to make them up. And we add: Courtship is the time for couples to learn the “give” and “take” that is essen tial to the success of any mar riage. We don’t say that a mar riage won’t last if one partner is “boss” all the way; but we don’t believe that it will be the happy partnership that is so ideal. If y<Mi have a teenage profem yo0 want to discuss, or an observation U make, address your letter to FOB AND ABOUT TEENAGERS, NATION AL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER SERV ICE, FRANKFORT, KY. f0 „ Know We like Them By C. D. Smitfo •* v.* v.vXvC*A , .v* ## *vi*,v *« reaBSaW THE WEEK’S LETTER: “I am a girl of sixteen and like a boy who is also sixteen. We go to the same school I don’t know if he likes me or not. My girlfriend says he does, but I don’t know. He acts like he does sometimes, and then sometimes he doesn’t pay any at tention to me. He tells the kids he likes another girl. But he tells me different. He doesn’t know I like him because I don’t want him to think he was a big shot because two girls like him . . . What should I do? How should I act tt he regUy does like me? And, how will I know he doesf” OUR ANSWER: You already know it He has already told you so and, apparently, he has told your friends as well. On the other hand, you have not returned the compliment because you think he likes another girL Let’s face it, we can’t expect anyone to know that we like them unless we tell them so. Of course, we show people every day that we like them without actually saying: so. We do it by being friendly, bjr speaking when we pass in a school hallway or on the street, or may be by sitting down together for a. coke in the drug store. As a rule, we never have to tell people whether or not we like them. We show it in our actions toward them. However,^ we like some indivi duals more than we like othera. They have no sure way of know ing this if we do not tell them. We make a mistake when we refuse to let someone know we like them until we are certain that they like us too. If we do not let them know' that we like them, they assume that we don’t, at least that we like them no more than a mere speak ing acquaintance. Odr advice is to ^forget about- the “other girl” and let the boy i know that you do like him. If y*a have a Ucaage problem yam want to Sloe mb, or aa observation tw make, address year letter- to FOR AND ABOUT TEENAGERS, NATION AL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER SERV ICE, FRANKFORT, KY. FOR AND ABOUT TEENAGERS When Boyfriends Like Someone Else By C D. SmM» THE WEEK’S LETTER: “I have a teenage problem. In our class at school there is this real cute boy. Both myself and this other girl like him. I had my brother ask if he likes me and he said, “Yes.” My brother asked him if he liked me better than the other girl and he said, “Yes.” But he still winks and smiles and talks to the other girl as well as me. I would like to know if I should drop him and let the other girl have him or if I should keep BY UOYD BIMWIIRIUII IJ ^ll trying to get him. I would like to have your advice.” OUR ADVICE: Relax and en joy your teen years and quit wor rying about whether or not this boy likes another girl too. What would you do? Wrap him up in a bundle and not allow him to even speak to other girls? He said that he liked you “the most” —but he did not say that he did not like the other girl too. Quite often, a teenier will “ruin” his or her chances with someone they like by being too \ demanding, by . expecting too much, or by an obvious display of jealousy. In the instance abover. it might happen that the boy would say to himself, “Well, if she's already jealous of me talk’' ing to someone else, and us not even going steady, what would sha be like if we had been going steady for a long time? Would it be safe- for me to even speak to someone- else.” It is the nature of human be ings to "expand” as they grow; to make qpw friends, to lean* more and more about the world iix which they live. With this ii* | mind, we would ask our letter writ er this question: What kind of a world would this be if some high- authority said ‘I will allow you to have but one friend. You can not have more than that.’? How difficult life would be if, at a very early age in life, we had to choose this one indivi lual and shut out all others Rrounc us. If y*« have a teenage pr< Mem yom want to atseasm er an ebee rvatlen tm make, a44rees year letter te FOR- AND ABOUT TEENAGERS, NATION AL WEEKLY NEWSPAPER SERV ICE. FRANKFORT, KT. 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