The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 13, 1949 Page: 3 of 8
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By Lawrence Gould
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Can “morel support” do more harm than good?
if Peter, Pain ewes you with
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LOOKING AT RELIGION
By DON MOORE
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I THE ORIGINAL BAUME ANALft&IQUe
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HEALTH NOTES
SUBSCRIBE TO
YOUR
HOME TOWN PAPER
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‘Moral Support*
Con Do Harm
The age of medical specialists
hadn't set in. Doctors were general
practice boys who did everything
for $2, win, lose or draw. But $2
could be an extravagance in those
days if the patient was still con-
scious, and the folks depended a
lot on herbs, potions, oils and patent
medicines. As a child we got rubbed
with so many things before the doc-
tor was called that we were lini-
ment-logged when he got there.
Her four children peddled It
from door to door first, and it
didn't bring home the bacon (
A number of migraine patients
have been treated with ergotamine
tartrate (gynergan) with excellent
results.
If a patient has a violent paroxys-
mal attack of vertigo—one that is
disabling—it is probably due to dis-
ease of the hearing nerve and not
to a brain tumor or other,discases
of the brain.
■ conditions omuGious l»ptty have
I become worse since, rue great
1 Amsterdam conference adjourned
1
^Experience has shown that it
costs less to treat a patient at home
(when he is able to return home).
This is an important factor when
hospital beds are scarce.
!
Wee$ of Back-Tai Owar
Puzzles U.S. Collector
ST. LOUIS, MO.—Interna) reve-
nue collector James P. Finnegan
was trying to figure out an answer
to a man who wrote:
“My wife just died. I broke my
leg yesterday. I lost a job last
week that I had held for 23 years.
I have two sons in the army, but
they ean't help. My home has been
foreclosed and my furniture taken
by a mortgage holder. And you
want me to pay you 331 in taxes."
Right in pi poa —right ta papers! That's why mere
and more mon are smoking choice, crimp east Pitace
Albert —America's largest-soiling smoking tobacco.
Of!
i
4
’AND BA.« RIGHT TOR
'MAKING SMOKES, TOO! H'S
A CINCH TO ROLL BORA-
MI LD, EXTRA-TASTY
CIGARETTES WITH EASY-
TO-SHAPE, CRIMP CUT
PRINCE ALBERTI*
'OWriAN FAW
IS IN OPERATION IN SIAM
TO COMBINE RELIGIOUS
TEACHING AND MODERN
MEM ING METHODS.
■M
MIRROR
Of Your
MIND
!■ Phillips j
■Ml
J
/
*YE$SIR! PRINCE ALBERT
IS RIGHT FOR MY
PIPE! PA. SMOKES
COOL AND M1LD_
AND HAS A GRAND,
RICH TASTE, TOO I •
ODE FOR SEPTEMBER
Srpltrobrr ii htrt oorw—
I'll Ukt e bowl of oyi/rr How;
Agoio I’ll oik onJ oik, "How Jo
Tbo crockori olwoyt >erm to fowf"
7tetya'H/73ty/6&-'em/
Ci japan i that speaks far KmNI
Hear Rice Krisptes snap! crackle!
pop! to milk I Dee-Ucious
energy food. America’s favertte
ready-to-eat rice cereal.
■
Mother Sill's Seasickness
Pills, Swamproot, Frog-in-Your-
Throat and Glover’s Hair Re-
storer were in every drug store,
too. It was the era when they
were pioneer advertisers. Back
when the “Bear” in the “Bear
In Mind” alogan made an old-
time cereal famous, when the
Winchester calendars were a
must in thousands of homes
and when the folks went for
stick licorice. Old Battleax cut
plug, snake oil, hay rum, Sweet
Caporal cigarettes, snuff and
flaxseed poultices. It was the
period when mom gave the kids
pumpkin seeds for “worms,"
tied an old sock around their
neeks for sore throat and put
an “onion bag" on their chests
for eroup.
Does psychoanalysis eure
“nervous symptoms"?
Answer: That is not its major
object, writes Dr. Izette De Forest
in the Journal of Clinical Psycho-
pathology. Mental treatment seeks
primarily to free the patient from
the false defense he built up as a
child, and help him develop his
innate capacities for dealing with
Margaret Truman says she is
so sick of the Missouri Walts
it will be okay with her If she
never hears it again. How do
you stand on “Some Enchanted
Evening,” my girl?
.*
I
IT
$3
Wanting to boss and run things
and yet feeling the need to be loved
and appreciated means that the
person ia always under conflict
between these two emotions.
_ nwt|EF f rubinBen^n>oa» 1**®"'
roe ^noreof ^.^XoLthoa
five otb« gfltps.
*** ** v bAtw—*
N<ni£E.‘
THfFF wm
BE NO
CHURCH
service.
THtf
I KEEPING HEALTHY
Group Treatment of Mental Cases
By Dr. James W. Barton
Yale University, and James R.
Dickerson, New Canaan, Conn.,
two outstanding psychiatrists, state
that the group method of treatment
has been so successful in veterans'
hospitals and in private practice,
that it is now in general use every-
where. The group provides the pa-
tient with emotional satisfactions
that he was denied in childhood
and has not found in his daily life,
outside his family. Through group
discussions he comes to realize
that he is not so different from
others.
Where the patient is treated pri-
vately. he leans upon the psychi-
trist for help and guidance, in
group treatment he depends on the
other members of the group who
in turn, look to him for help. They
all .help and are helped, which
raises their morale.
This group treatment has shown
its value not only as a time saver
and relatively inexpensive method
of treatment, but has, in itself,
values not found in individual
treatment. The patient is regarded
as a social being and in the group
laarns to adapt himself to others.
Is it essy to influence s child’s
feelings?
Answer: Almost dangerously
easy—both for him and for you. A
child’s attitude toward almost any
thing or person depends on the
feelings he associates with it (or
him), and the earlier these asso-
ciations are formed, the more last-
ing the attitude will be. The tone
in which your child hears you
speak a person's name may influ-
ence him to love or to fear that
person ever after. But you'll sel-
dom influence a child to like some-
thing by saying that it is "good for
him”—he likes things that he as-
sociates with “fun" or pleasure.
sl'.
7
I. — The Veter.
an» administration wahta curbs
oa the enrollment of veterans
in “fly-by-night" proprietary
. schools 'nW -to bo mushrooming
in unemployed areas.
If this isn't done "taxpayers
are going to be bled white,"
says H. V. Stirling, the mao
who rune the vast GI bill educa-
tion program. I
. Stirling says 1.400 new pro-
prietary schools teaching every-
thing from business administra-
tion to paper hanging have
sprung up in the last year, eo»
eentrating in areas where vet-
eran* can’t get jobs. *
If something isn't done about
IL ho says, 1,000,000 veterans
will be enrolled in these schools
by next January. f
Stirling has no quarrel with
long • established proprietary
schools or many of the newer
ones. *
But bo says the cost of send-
ing one veteran through a one-
year course at a ■ fly-by-night
school teaching house painting,
for example, might cost $1,010
In tuition and “consumable sup-
plies" for which VA would pay.
A Japanese industrialist has been
arrested for picking pockets. He
explained that collections had
been slow and that he had to meet
a payroll. A lot of American busi-
nessmen, knowing how it is, think
he may just be a'Sittle ahead of his
time. *
I
AH THERE, LYDIA! - - -
ft book by Jean Burton on Lydia
Pinkham brings back memor-
ies of a day when the prim face of
that lady stared from billboard,
magazine and newspaper. That was
away back when Old Mr. Munyon,
Father Duffy. Bigelow & Healy’s
Klckapoo Indian Sagwa, Cascarets,
Alcott's Kidney Plasters, Payne’s
Celery Compound and Sloane's Lin-
iment were spt to be in every medi-
cine chest.
It has been a perfect summer for
oysters, the oystermen report. It
seems that they thrive in a season
when there are few storms and
little rough water. Still, we are
firm believers in environment, and
we think a summer like this has
cost the oysters considerable char-
acter. We prefer an oyster with a
rugged upbringing and with a sug-
gestion of defiance in its nature.
These 1949 bivalves may be such
sissies it will seem cruel to squirt
lemon on ’em.
TT IS ESTIMATED that there are
A needed today about five or 10
times as many psychiatrists as
are now available. Naturally it
takes a psychiatrist a long time,
many single hour sessions, with a
man or woman who has developed
odd behavior, to dig up the neces-
sary Information to help him.
When men and women are under
stress as during war they cannot
live their ordinary everyday lives,
and so develop odd behavior, so
different from that of their normal
selves. It was natural, therefore,
that during World War II there was
sn extra demand for the services
of psychiatrists.
These psychiatrists got the logi-
cal idea that, as so many cases of
odd behsvior had similar symp-
toms, it would save time to treat
patients In groups. It wss learned
at the very beginning that not only
was time saved by group treat-
ment, but also that the members
of the group were greatly encour-
aged to find that so many others
had the same odd ideas and be-
haved as oddly as themselves.
In the “New England Medical
Journal," Drs. William B. Terhune,
J
MN-
•;<?
Answer: Yes, to someone who is
childishly dependent on it. The
man whose self-confidence in
business depends on his wife’s
continually “bucking him up” may
not only be unable to take credit
for his own successes, but uncon-
sciously place the blame on her
for his failures and feel she has
cheated him by not making her
assurances come true. On the
whole, the oftener a man goes to
his wife—or to anybody else—for
“moral support" of this kind, the
greater the likelihood that instead
of giving him strength, it encour-
ages his weakness.
“ —. - Sweden soon—the
citizens mill not have
TO BELONG TO A
CHUffCHf
Lydia Pinkham was for the
womenfolks. Bat we remember
it in the advertisements and on
the labels. It seemed the only
medicine nobody rubbed or
dosed ns with. We often won-
dered about Lydia. There were
songs about her. One ran:
Feeling low and wanna
gtddia?
Lady, take a slug of Lydia!
• • •
Lydia Pinkham, the new book re-
calls. was a Lynn, Mass., gal,
beautiful and with a perfect figure
in the hour-glass' mode. She was
one of the pioneers in the equal-
rights-and-votes-for-women c a m-
paign. She was a student of medi-
cine and for years gave her com-
pound free. It was not until her
husband went broke that she de-
cided to sell it.
Le
The choice, namrallr niH tobacco srheted foe bm ta
Prince Albert is specially treated to iasaes against to^ns
bite for extra smoking comfort. And dw aaw Hamidoe
Top locks ta rrlw(i cut Prince
Albert s freshness and flavor Im
greater smoking for.
until one son put a $60 ad on
the first page of a Boston
paper. From that time Lydia
Pinkham’s Remedy became
one of the greatest newspaper
advertisers In history. And
what a believer in advertising
Lydia was!
■ I ■
Jean Burton gives the recipe for
the compound, telling how the var-
ious herbs and powders were "per-
colated in fine spirits," giving an
18 per cent alcoholic content to the
“remedy." A few shots of the com-
pound and afiy woman felt better.
• • •
They were all familiar up around
New England in our boyhood. We
can still in fancy catch the aroma
ot Kickapoo Indian Sagwa, Florida
Water, Witch Hazel (still going
strong from a base at Essex,
Conn.). Porto Rico Bay Rum, Bur-
goment, Payne's Celery Com-
pound and Sloane's Liniment, “good
for man or bedst."
Out of $3,800,000 gross for years
she poured $3,000,000 back ir.tc
advertising.
Accowing to the
Baby Snake In Glove
Decides Pennant Raco
SALEM, N. H.-Many things
have decided a baseball pennant,
but St. Michael's baseball team
has what may be the most unique
claim for pennant-winning causes
ever heard in baseball circles. For.
St. Michael's won the Lawrence
suburban league pennant because
of a snake. Here's the story.
The Salem A. C. was leading.
4-2, in the seventh inning when
Bruce Magoon was told by the
Salem coach to go in and play
shortstop.
Magoon picked a glove from
underneath the bench and trotted
on the field. The first St. Michael
batter singled. Then came a walk.
The next batter hit sharply to short.
Magoon bobbled the ball and all
bands were safe. The shortstop felt
something in his gloved hand which
he thought was a sponge. He pulled
off the glove. Out popped a foot-
long black snake.
Magoon protested but the umpire
found nothing in the rules to change
the situation. St Michael's won,
6-4. _______________________
Kansas Sheriff Offen
'Laziest* Title Entry
LAWRENCE, KAN.—Sheriff Will
Jones has a candidate for the
“laziest man" tide.
Deputies investigated reports
that a motorist was blinking his
lights to attract attention on a high-
way near here.
They found the motorist parked
at the side of the road with a flat
tire. The “laziest" driver ex-
plained:
He wasn't enthusiastic about the
hike to a nearby service station
tor help, so he blinked his lights
hoping to get a passing motorist to
stop.
“I wanted someone to call a
garage for me," he said.
life situations. And while symptoms
may be useful as clues, they fre-
quently clear up In the courae of
treatment without ever having
been attacked directly. I have
known a patient to recover from a
serious skin ailment which the
analyst himself thought due
physical conditions.
* f 4^
S-,
Requirements Recounted
For Happy Marriages
CHICAGO.—Are there sny spe-
cial requirements for a successful
marriage? Mrs. Emily B. Mudd,
director of the Philadelphia mar-
riage council says "yes."
She lists them as follows:
1. The ability to obtain and hold
a job that provides enough income
to support a home and children.
2. Knowledge ot h6w to maintain
a comfortable home and repair
usual household equipment
3. Knowledge of cooking,
anced diets.
4. Ability to budget income and
knowledge of what is necessary for
financial protection and security.
3. Knowledge of health.
8. Knowledge ot sexual needs and
behavior. '
7. Some knowledge of child care
and what planning for a baby in-
volves.
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISEMENT
TEXAS LAND OWNERS
WMh •• ere m< ac<«U at tka Tnaa ZaaC
Baarg. «a 4a ban Mawraas ntwaaa via-
Illas aar atttea wha waat taraia <lai*nva4
ar aalnpam4* aa4 art aaablt la Hat
lheai. Let at wll ywn.
MORRIS A SON
tIM H. Mala FA-44TS
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The New Ulm Enterprise (New Ulm, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 2, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 13, 1949, newspaper, October 13, 1949; New Ulm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1216306/m1/3/: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Nesbitt Memorial Library.