Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 9, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1960 Page: 10 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Breckenridge Daily American and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Breckenridge Public Library.
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4-B Bieckenr dqe Ainer ican—SUNDAY. SEPT 11, l%C
Let Children Set Mad Says
Doctor, It May Dc Them Good
By DOROTHY V. WHIPPLE M.D.
AP N-"wsfejtures
The bt-11 (fours through the
street
Laura k.ol> u;j from her bloc-its
'lee cream'" vhe expect-,
anth ^hr Jumps ami run to the
doc.
"No," sayg molhpr, "It's alniu*t
fUppei tun, j,.j m is ul-
leraocm "
The tear^ well up in Lauras
eyey ,
"I want ice cream now."
"No rtearie ntit to<1a\ "
"I.aura Mamp. her toot
'"You're bit You're a bad mom-
nn I hate you *
"I know it make- «.on feel mad
at mnrarav I knou you would like
the kr (ream and it mskf, jot,
ant i v when 1 must saj ik< "
l-ite is full of fnetratiun for
little folk. .N'o ene < un urovv up an-1
ha\e every bin^le wi-.h granted
Pan cf growing up is learning hov.
.
QUALITY
h. w. i;am kk ihst. co.
BRECKCNPlDOr T1" X A S
tc copo with frustration.
Frustration brings aneer. bittrr-
ne' s resentment This is natural
ami normal It is normal. It is
normal for a little child to be angry
uben he cannot have wh3t !«•
wants right now. But so often ue
teach a little felloe to deny his
anger, especially ani er towards
parents.
Parents have to stand as author-
ity Parents not onl> give love utid
comfort to a child, but they must
also rienv him or sometime?, en-
force w hai the ■ told d®#sn't want
This is part of the job of parent-
hood .
Hut when a rhild shows his «or-
mal rese tment against authoritv
often the parent is shocked and
scolds the • htfd Before lone the
child learns its safer to hold in the
;.nti-r W ben he does express it'
he is made to feel guilty arid bad
lor doing so and this ui turn builds
up more anger When anger is
biddra inside it accumulate*, it
trow, bigger and bigger and mas
•spill over into auger ag-inst all
le-traint, anger against all peo-
ple
It's healthier for the child to be
helped to express anger and bit-
terness l.et him know >ou under-
stand how he feels, that vou don t
( lame him for feeling bitter that
he cannot have ice cream If he
sets his anger expressed, without
being made to feel guilty about it.
it s over and done with and doesn't
build up inside to add fuel to the
next frustration —anger episode.
A child who is able to express
his normal anger is free to love.
Stored up anger poisons love—ex-
pressed anger leave* love free to
1,.- felt and expressed too
Understanding of feeling, but
control of actions—this is a far
healthier plan than denial of a
natural normal emotion. Under-
standing and control will give
I jura the security she-needs to
build up her own self control and
not interfere with her ability to
love i
DIAL
HI 9-4413
TO LIST
CLASSIFIEDS
!l/
\V ,
.c/,' >>
u
GIIE9N ASSOCIATION
HAS PLACED 44 MILIUM
FIFTY YEMS OU
BIBLES IB BOOK
(By ASSOCIATED PRESSi
For more than r>0 years the gid-
tcn association has gone about it's
business uf spreading Christianity
on a man-to-man basis wherever
1 travelers met.
One of the assocition's primary
j activities has been the distribu-
j lion uf bibles. There are more
I than 12 tMJO gideons in 800 canips
I around the nation. The organiza-
: tion of America, was founded at
I Janes wile, Wisconsin, on July I,
1899. Founders were three travel-
ling men, John Nicholson of Jan-
1£-52 •-(.?; .r-' a-k i
JL'ST THE RIGHT EXPOSURE—Judy Oldford teams up
two Oriental parasols against Ihe Florida sun.
New Powder Puff With Twelve
Layers Always Keeps It Clean
By VIVIAN BROWN
i#i Be-„uly Editor
Ru'rh Misi l.ei Susselman decided
to make a powder puff ju t as you
would a ,'ake — in layers. Her 12-
laver |*iff is a dream-eome-true.
whicv.t t,x>k her more than three
yej.rs to develop. Says she:
"it wasn't easy, but once I got
'ihe idea 1 sluik with it. I worked
solved included getting a thin eno-
ugh layer of cotton so that pow-
der wouldn't seep through the cot-
ton. Another was getting a heavy
enough layer of cotton so that the
powder would adhere to the cotton.
These were delicate points to be
worked out before we could pro-
ceed." she explains.
The puffet is desiggned to last
with chemists, and we hail to de- one if one layer is used every three
velop machinery to do a large eno- days.
ui!h production to make such a "I was always unhappy when
small item pay oft. But we did it. going out to dinner in the evening
Now tht- puff is on its way to Swe- to discover a dirty puff in my pur-
den Hawaii. Canada Cuba, Soirth se, and to worry about the incon-
Africa, a4id on cosmetics counters venience bothered me," says Mrs.
all over America." Susselman. 'I decided one day to
The puff is about one-quarter do something about it, and that's
skin theory, so we don't have to hov the idea was born."
sell them o nlhe idea " Her teen-age children are very
This sanitary new powder puff understanding and considerate,
is for use in compacts. Each soft
layer of cotton adheres 'o another
layer. It is gently pulled awav.
"Some of the problem-, to be
|
NOTICE OF BIOS
To he received by the < itv of BreckenridKe, a Municipal
Corporation of Stephen-- ( ounty, Iexas.
Seah.l I i<! will K- received at the office of City Secre-
tary at • "itv Hall until 1?;0« P.M. Tuesday, October 11,
I960, for the following equipment:
ONE 1 '«oil model truck chassis: fi cylinder; 150 H.P.
minimum; minimum of 19.0111) lb. («.\.W.; equipped
v% it It a 16 or 20 yard packer type body. (Optional
bids to be given).
Specifications are <.n file at the office of City Secretary,
I lty Hall. P.reckenri«if?e, Texas.
The fit*, resents the right to waive any or all formali-
ties an<l reject any « t all !>i<!s <<r to accept any propos-
al deenie I iri the l 'st interest of the City.
Special consideration "ill he given those packer manu-
factnre-s who bid trucks to he purchased from a
Breckenr'dfre truck dealer.
Dsted
9-7-60
CITY OF BRECKENRIDGE
(signed) James H. Swaim
City Manager
■ i - -Miffr
NOTICE
Ti e law provides that when the population of a
Countv crops below 10,000, the separate office of
Asses "or and Collector of Taxes is no longer authorized,
and the sheriff must take over the duties of this office.
Tax-paving voters, however, may keep these offices
lenarat • bv voting at a special election to add an Assess-
or-ColIector of Taxes to the list of authorized county
officials.
The County Commissioner's Court has called such
an election for Tuesday, September 20, 1960. Printed
on the ballot will l>e:
-FOR ADDING AN ASSESSOR COLLECTOR OF
TAXES TO THE LIST OF AUTHORIZED
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
"AGAINST ADDING AN ASSESSOR-COLLECT-
OR OF TAXES TO THE LIST OF AUTHORIZED
COUNTY OFFICIALS.
0
All regular voting placet will be open from 8 a.m.
until 7 p.m.
Harold Warford
County Judge
&
CHURCH IN GROTTO—Picturesque church in Idar-Ofcer-
itein, Germany, is built flush against the walls o£ a hollow in a
clifT overlooking the town. It was built in the Middle Ages by
a nobleman seeking to a tune ior murdering his brother. ^ -
Newly Redecorated!
DOOM'S CAFE
808 E. Walker
SPECIAL
PLATE LUNCH
5*
9INING B00I
for
Private Luncheons and Parties
Steaks and Mexican Foods
—OPEN 24 HOURS—
ternational headquarters is at Chi-
cago.
Ten years later the gideons
launched th* program of leaving
a black-bound bible. King James
Version, in hotel rooms. Since the
first bible was left In a room of
the Superior Hotel in Iron Moun-
tain Montana, in November, 1908,
44 million have been given out.
Nearly one million dollars an-
nually is spent on this program
which has become the association's
trade-mark. It does, however, en-
gage in other, less expansive evan-
esville Samuel Hill of Beloit. and gelical activities.
William Knights of Wild Rose. In- Distribution at the scriptures is
Texans In Washington
By TFX FASLEY i who now lives at Lawyers Inn on
iff! Special Service 1 the S. M. U. campus.
A member of the House from
WASHINGTON ifr — A compara- 1913 to 1«47, Judge Sumners visit-
tive lull has settled on Capitol Hill j et) old haunts around Washington
with the end of the August Con- anc) made a motor tour of the ver-
aressional session that lured re- aant northern Virginia rolling hill
coi J breaking numbers of tourist, j country where he spent many a
Cal\ in Kimbrough, genial Texan
from Sherman and a member of j
the Capitol guide force, said the
I jit few weeks were the businest in j
his years ot conducting sightseers |
through the historic old building.
weekend while a member ot Can-
gress.
For the first time in a quarter
century he revisited the beautiful
plantatiou-like home of Loudoun
County where he spent his first
There's no doubt but that the;j Christinas after coming to Con-
chance to see the next President of
Ihe United States attracted count-
less thousands." he said.
"The sad part of it is that a
great many of these people stood
for hours in line in vain just lur
a chance to get into the Senate
chamber. And. many more who
gress. As a lonely freshman legis-
lator unable to return to Texas lor
the holidays, he took a train to
Leesburg Va., where he was met
by the t-e? Macdonalds, former
Texans who were friends of the
Sumners family. There was a foot
of snow 011 the ground when their
got in found that neither Sen. Ken- horse-drawn sleigh carried him
nedy nor Vice President Nixon was j tloni the Leesburg depot the five
011 hand." 1 miles to the Macdonald farm.
In ihe last weeks of the session I Revisiting the stiH weU kept old
someone came up with a practical mansion on a hot August Sunday,
idea that enabled thousands more Sumners was pleasantly surprised
to get into the chamber. This plan to find that its present owners
limited visitors to 'JO minutes in once lived in Texas. He got the
the gallery, and guides were able to ( warmest of welcomes from retired
herd in groups of 50 or more at a Army Maj: Gen. G. L. Ederle and
and her husband is a lawyer, who
takes care of patent problems, ac-
count houks anil other legal ad-
\ ice.
time. This put an end to visitors
remaining in gallery seats for
hours on end.
Although most of the Texas con
gressmen will spend the rest of
the year in their home districts,
all will keep their Washington offi-
ces open, staffed by at least one or
two secretaries. Incidentally, one
of those who will stay here to help
things running in Speaker Sam
Ravburn's office is Mrs. l^orraine
Mumford Kimbrough, formerly of i
Wort Worth. She is the wife of the |
Capitol guide.
Around the Capitol:
Among the thousands of lawyers j
here for the American Bar Associ-
ation's convention was former Hep. 1
Hatton W. Sumners, 8.V of Dallas,
his wife, the former Lorane Mayer
of San Angelo.
not limited to hostelries. but includ-
es school children, nurses, prison-1
ers, servicemen throughout the U.
S. and in 53 foreign nations. In •
addition, cabinet members, con-
gressmen, supreme court justices
and governors, receive the light
bhie bible with the owner's name ;
stamped In gold.
Membership in a. protestant
church is a main requisite for me-
mbership in the gidec.n association.
Another is that a prospective mem-1
her bold a supervisor;/ or admini-
strative position in business.
Donations and chili ch offerings
help finance gideon; activities in
addition to the $15 annual member-
ship fee. An unpaid four-man in-
ternational cabinet, «lected by the
membership at annual conventions,
coordinates operations at the Chica
fc headquarters.
According to the Chicago office's
top oficial. H. V. iSeinglake, very
lew of the bibles ;ire stolen from <
hotel rooms. When it does happen. |
he reports, the incident frequently
is followed by coni.cience-stricken
letters an** an occaisional donation.
Heringlake also reports that co-
operation is nearly 100 per cent on
the part of hotel and motel mana-
gers. „ L ,
Measuring the siiccess of the ho-
tel bibles project is difficult. The
best yardstick is «he gratifying
flow of letters each week from
folks who say their Bves were chan-
ged and the* hotel-room blues
were dispersed through the scrip-
tural meditation provided by the
gideon bibles.
Gideon, incidentally, was a bibli-
cal figure an Israelite hero who
with a small band of followers de-
feated the Midianites. Gideon was
Israel's ruler for 40 years.
Heringlake prefers to describe
Gideon as a man "willing to do
exactly what God wanted him to
do."
o
A grove of American oak trees
near Yotsuya-mitsuke, Japan, trace
their origin to acorns picked up
from the lawn of Mt. Vernon. Geor-
ge Washington's home in Virginia
YOlK NEIGHBOR MAY'APVISB
■HOW TO BAiCE A CAKE
"Now thaT I've had the thrill of j
creating something tftut has been [
accepted. I cant 'wait to do some-
thing else. 1 have all sorts of other
ideas dam in g a round in my head."
says blonde, blue-uved \li"s. Sus-
selman. uho used to be a fashion
coordinator.
Just Received —
NEW SHIPMENT ef WHITE PINE
Wcdl Paper
Special
50c
Double Rail
We have—
Drain and
Sewer Tile
CLAY BUILDING MATERIAL CO.
20H n. Rose Ave,
Phone hi 9-30fi6
m tr eons to social secuutt, __ .
raaa toui social uemrt omcs
ffrw artnt ta ior mrdnrx «
TYPING'S
REALLY
m
WITH THE
NEW
SMITH CORONA
Galaxie
ten
of
ent
s—
ah,
let
er-
ely
•ut-
?re
ak-
in
es-
try
ing
©coosasGooes a
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Sales
112 E. Dyer Phone HI 9-2257
he
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SO
THEY ARE MOVING FAST!
We Have Received Our Last Shipment of 1960 Model CHEV-
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COME EARLY - DON'T MISS
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LOW G.MA.C. FINANCE PLAN
McDowell Chevrolet Co. Inc.
201 W.Williams
Phone HI 9-4455
'WHEN YOU'RE PLfi ASKD, WE'RE HAPPY"
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 9, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 11, 1960, newspaper, September 11, 1960; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth135989/m1/10/: accessed April 25, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.