The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 22, 1961, Image 6
- .*■-
PAGE SIX
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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
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Cement
OILSTONE TO
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FLUSH WITH EDSE OF
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WOW CAD MADE A
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As part of this feature program, hund
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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
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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.
Junior made a protective mat for
THE WINDOW SILL BY CUTHNS
DOWN A RUBBER (OR PLASTIC)
STAIR TREAD TO FIT THE SILL... '
YOUR NEIGHBOR MAY ADVISE YOU
HOW TO BAKE A '’AKE
..* v
T 0 0 *
7
THE HARDY FAMILY
THESE FLOWERPOTS
ARE STAJN1N& THE
WINDOW SILL
I'LL FIX
THAT IN A
JIFFY MOW
I f. iffs.
.. • • ..»•«« am* •••••••••»••••
. . . WHEN IT COMES TO SOCIAL SECURITY, GET THE FACTS
FROM YOUR SOCIAL SECURITY OFFICE ^
If you want to apply for old-age, survivors, or disability Insur
ance beAetits, find out Jiow to go about jt at ypyf social security
OffTCCy