The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1952 Page: 11 of 12
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Your
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KAY COLYER
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INVENTORY TIME
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! strange men. Don’t you think
Not only foolish, but
7,
piness
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Concrete Block Co.
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I the children, but my ex-hus-
bahd is permitted to keep them
most of the summer. They are
Tyler Businessmen
Warned Against Fake
Magazine Salesman
Ludlam-Pegues
Carlton Hotel Bldg.
INSURANCE AGENCY
Phone 580
TARTER
Service Station
Phons 317 '
Min-ola
--o----
All kind of office supplies at
the Monitor office.
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Tcxcrete — Ilay-dite
BUILDING
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lurid stories of girls who ride
with strange men.
BLOCKS
Steel Window and Door
Casements —' Masonry -n-
Paint
ft
B S,
It’s a good time to take L|
inventory of your insur-
ance. Let us tell you
about the /Etna Plandex
which shows you at a
glance, your whole insur-
ance program.
atm cuuun^rm
— """"‘Hl
fallen in love with a man who
has never been married. He
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ANOSURETY CO. i
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Dear Miss Colyer:
I am a divorcee with two I
children. I have the custody of '
1.
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51
Police Tuesday warned Tyler
residents against buying cer-
’ tain magazines because the
, salesperson claims he is at-
' tempting to establish $500 credit
1 with the veteran’s administra-
tion toward a GI loan.
Certain salesmen in the Tyler
j area had been misrepresenting
their situation in that respect
and had sold their magazines
■ under false pretenses.
There is no such relationshin
Its only importance is your
attitude toward it. If you feel
self-conscious when you go out thihks* their father's'hbuld keep j
with him, then stop dating him. them at least half the time and i 1
for the first six months of our i
marriage. We are very happy j I
with each other, he has tram- i
formed my life, but I do not 1
know how to solve this problem I
about the children. Please ad- j |
vise me. ANXIOUS , |
I hope you will not let blind ; |
blind you to this insight into &
your fiance’s character. Anyone I
in their right mind can readily U
sec that he is selfish, jealous- I B
hearted, unreasonable, and I I*
dominating, and in all proba- j
bilily, your marriage to him 5
would be one misunderstanding B
right after another. Unless a
See COLYER page 4
''I
.4
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not really want to get married.
’ Sometimes I am inclined to
: agree with them. Will you ex-
: press your opinion? MARIE
1 My opinion is of very little
. value since I have so little in-
I formation, but I will say this, j
the surest sign of love a man i
I can manifest is his eagerness 1
' to marry and provide a home I
for the girl he loves. A man ■
who is so heavily in debt be- 1
fore marriage sounds as if he I
might be a poor matrimonial i
risk.
^Pe told that lack of zest i
■g is one of the causes of
F ills, both physical and
ii. There can’t be much
islasm in living if a person
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fLVANIA
»R OIL
t Lubricates
K\ vBBB«
breathing mechanisms—all provided with
LbSaIa ***■*& maISa 1L* O *nAUia>« mA (
ern Poliomyelitis Respiratory Center in Houston, Texas. Nine-year-
Joseph H. Nelson (center), young Borger, Texas, physician, is in the
large iron lung equipped with plastic oxygen dome. Steve Spearman,
20, of Hot Springs, Ark., breathes with aid of a chest respirator. This
about how year’s March of Dimes is being conducted during all of January.
many of them proclaimed a 1
faith in God? j Dear Miss Colyer:
I am sixteen and go with a
boy of eighteen who is nearly | most of the summer. They are
two inches shorter than I am. seven and ten years old. I have
This is embarrassing to me, but! Frt11— 4- —!ii- - ------ —
he doesn’t seem to mind at all. I
Do you think_ this difference is j want:; to marry me, but he is
j jealous of the children. He says
he won't mind our keeping
them part of the time, but he
before long arc victims
gloom and despair.
Others refuse to let circum-
stances get them down, and
they are the wise ones. They
have learned the ait of de-
taching themselves from un-
pleasant situations and can go
.merrily along their way. They
ithave learned how to save them-
Ijglves useless worry, sleepless
■fats, fears and forebodings.
■MJthing of wrinkles, grey
dull at^happv leek.
1 % • I
I
| detween the veteran’s admini-
stration and a publishing firm,
officers said.
• j
$1. <1
Dear Miss Colyer:
I am a young woman of
twenty-five and have been go-
ing with a man a few years
older for about two years. He
has asked me to marry him, but
says the date will have to be
indefinite because he has so
many debts to pay before taking
, , . “ i on the responsibility of mak-
i ?Ve x a ca m’ heart~-°- . riage. My parents do not ap-
| lieuit talk together and try to , prove of hjm; tiiey say he rtoes
; discover just where both of you ' ■
, arc falling down on your job. 1
I Trjr diligently to save your mar- :
I riage for the sake of your'
! child and yourselves.
at^sB»ca
Dear Miss Colyer:
My husband and I have been
married five years but we are
not suited to each other. Con-
sequently he goes out alone j lmportant, JEANNE
two or three nights a week — • •
r while I stay home with our1
( little three year old daughter. 1
Do you think this is fair? I;
1 am just as unhaepy as he is i ,,, . . .
i i i i , T x \ I you can overcome this feel-
1 so why should i have to stav | 4t,„ nMr1 ,
... . . ing, and it really is foolish, con-
I home while he steps out?, tihue , wfth
Another man has asked me for | ,lke hlm we|, ;
i a date, and I am thinking of j
HOME01'1 "ith llim' STAY-AT' I Dear Miss Colyer:
1 .4. girl friend in high school
It is just such people as you I accepts rides to school with
and your husband who are -““«•••=>- x*xx.x*. Dwx, t --------
' wrecking the family of America. 1 that is foolish? I.F.
; Evidently, neither of you have j N°t only foolish, but very,
I any conception of the sacred- ' vcry dangerous. Ask your girl
ness of marriage or any idea of f’’iend if she never reads the
| loyalty. Instead of facing your
■ marriage problems and at-
I tempting to solve them, you
| are embarking on other adven-
tures to find happiness. Well,
you won't find happiness that
, way, and even your pleasures
i will bo short-lived. For hap-
piness does not come with
wrong living; it has to be earn-
ed, and that seems to be what1
you boi a are forgetting. I sug- '
i gest that you and your hus- '
is dimcult for the avo- is weighted down with the cares
Page person to be stronger than of th? world, and as long as he
the circumstances that are de- allows himself to sink with!
pressing him. Many people are these cares, he can be of little
unable to overcome this depres-“help in correcting them.
The cynic is almo. t always
unable to overcome this depres-*help in correcting them,
sion and find themselves be- j 'y; \ ....
coming cynical, despondent, ami !-n imrovert as well as short-
bitter towards life. They give I si?hied. Ho views his life in
in^to feelings of futility arid ; terms ef the immediate present.
i ... .... Q. intellectual may be a cynic,
but true intelligence and cyni- j
cism are contradictory. Check I
back over the cynics you have ;
known or read ;
of
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Here are three different
March of Dimes funds—which assist polio patients at the Southwest-
vi ii ruiiunijGiiua ncapiidivry vcincr in nuuaiunt icaco.
old Charlotte Sword (left), of Houston, is on the rocking bed. Dr.
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YGEIH MONEY GOES THAT COUNTS
IT’S S3!
I
x4nd with all its new power, it delivers
more miles per gallon.
But that is not all.
For those who wish it, there is a brand-
new version of power steering that
works like a helping hand—gives you the
Come in—look this triumphant trio over
— and you’ll know why every Buick
dealer from coast to coast is going
around with a smile on his face.
It has the greatest trunk space since
spare tires moved off the front fenders.
It has the most superb ride in Buick
history.
It has the finest carburetor that Buick
research has ever devised.
same sure feel of control you have
always known in straightaway driving
— takes less than one-fifth the effort
needed to turn the ordinary wheel
standing at curbside.
Sure, we’re putting our best foot for-
ward when we talk about Roadmaster.
But you’ll find a host of notable features
in Supers and Specials too—plenty to
make them, as always, the standout buys
in their fields—for ride, for comfort, for
style, for room, and for power.
Thafs the jtibilant news that comes from
Flint to every Buick dealer—and here
we pass the thrilling story on to you. It
sure is true for ’52 that better automo-
biles are being built—and Buick is build-
ing them. Read the good word and you ll
agree.
TET’s pare this down to plain statements
I i of fact and let them speak for
themselves:
The dynamic darling pictured here is
the 1952 Roadmaster.
It has the mightiest engine in Buick
history.
It has the biggest brakes of any postwar
Buick.
It is the quietest car that Buick ever
built.
It has the richest fabrics and smartest
tailoring that ever graced a Buick’s
interior.
OR HOW YOU GET PAID —
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NO MATTER WHEN YOU GET PAID
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1IS ■ - SV
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PRESCRIPTION DURING OUR
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ON ANY
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OF MINEOLA
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For your peace of mind, bank some ol
vein’ earnings here with its every payday
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SPECIALIZING IN PRESCRIPTIONS
exacting'ly compounded to your
Doctor’s directions.
DRUG SUNDRIES TOILETRIES
COSMETICS SHAVING NEEDS
CONFECTIONS DRINKS
CIGARS, CIGARETTES etc.
H. D. (Doug) LIPSCOMB, Owner
Registered Pharmacist
GRAND OPENING
FRI. & SAT, JAN. 25 & 26
Doug’s Prescription Store
116 S. Johnson St. Phone 61
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♦
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MEMBER F.D.I.C.
MINEOLA
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Ray Watts Motor Company
403 EAST BROAD ST REET
11
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MINEOLA MONITOR
PAGE 3
Xy
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Carraway, R. H., Jr. The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 45, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 24, 1952, newspaper, January 24, 1952; Mineola, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1493025/m1/11/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.