The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 108, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1955 Page: 3 of 16
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\9. 1955
SEPTEMBER 29, 1955
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Mrs. W W Finley
Wins Hotpoint
Stove In Contest
Mrs. W. W. Finley, Rusk, has
won a pushbutton range in Hot-
point's $2,000,000 Golden Anni-
versary national contest
J. E. Wallace, local Flotpoint
dealer, said official contest judg-
es in Chicago selected Mrs. Fin-
ley's name yesterday as having
the best dealer prize entry from
this immediate area.
Wallace Hardware sponsored
the Rusk contest as part of the
appliance company's national An-
niversary celebration. Other first,
second and third prizes now being
awarded to families in the United
States and Hawaii include four
completely furnished electric hom-
Th* Ru$k Cherokeean. Rusk. Texms
Alto Theatre
Alto, Texas
FRIDAY - SATURDAY
SEPT. 30 - OCT. 1
GUN THAT WON THE WEST
STARRING
DENNIS MORGAN
PAULA RAYMOND
SAT. MIDNIGHT
SUNDAY - MONDAY
OCT. 1-2-3
YOU'RE NEVER TOO YOUNG
STARRING
DIANA LYNN
NINA FOCH
Tues.-Wed.-Thurs.
OCT. 4-5-6
DRUM BEAT
STARRING
ALAN LADD
AUDREY DALTON
es, 90 pushbutton kitchen-laun-
dries and almost 5,000 major ap-
pliances.
Wallace said the Hotpoint con-
test, largest of its kind ever spon-
sored by a major appliance com-
pany, was specially designed to
dramatize 50 years of progress in
pushbutton electric living. He
pointed out that Hotpoint got its
name from the first electric iron
"with the hot point" and said that
the company later pioneered the
world's first electric range and
fully automatic dishwasher. He
predicted that with increased pub-
•lic demand for electric home ap-
pliances and the xepected avail-
ability of atomic power, new hom-
es 25 to 50 years from now will be
operated completely with electric-
ity.
Atoy News
By Sybil Morris
Whew! I believe "old man sum-
mer" is here again; It's sorta
warm down Atoy way today.
Those visiting in the home ofi
Mr. arid Mrs. T. C. Wofford over
the weekend were: Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Wofford and b o y s of
Dallas, Mr. John Wofford of Aus-
tin. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Norton
and children of Waco, and Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Slater are on vacation
from Houston.
Those visiting in the Ennis Mor-
ris home over the weekend were:
Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Norton a n d
children of Waco. Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Wofford, Rev. and Mrs.
Ray Pippin and Mickey Jane of
Gallatin, Mr. Willie Morris of Mt.
Enterprise.
Mrs. Ennis Morris attended an
orphan's home rally at Nat Bap-
tist Church, Nacogdoches County,
Saturday, Sept. 24th. She reported,
a very nice crowd and something
over $600.00 worth of canned food
and money taken in for the Or-
phan's Home at Waxahachie.
Mr. Wylie Sales was injured in
THURSDAY & FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29 & 30
IY WRITTEN IN THI DEATH CEIL
AT SAN QUENTIN!
■ " ^ WILLIAM CAMPBELL- BOBERT CAMPBELL
PLUS
Technicolor Cartoon: "MAD CAP MAGOO'
Sport Reel: "AQUA QUEENS"
Specialty: "SPORT TRIX"
AFTER THE GAME, MIDNIGHT SHOW
FRIDAY 11:15 P.M., SEPT. 30
Y
THUMUA MCTUM
SATURDAY — ONE DAY ONLY — OCTOBER 1
FEATURE NO. 1: FEATURE NO. 2
of.S
GLiNIS
an automobile accident Saturday
night. Wylie was coming from
Alto on the Atoy FM road and
when he came to the intersection
of the road at FM road 343 the
brakes failed and he crashed into
the brush on the fence row of Mr.
T. C. Wofford's field. Wylie's hip
was cracked, his head was hurt
and arm cut. Although he isn't in
the hospital, he was hurt pretty
bad.
We are proud t«) report our good
friend, Mr. Arthur Sales, is able
to be out of the hospital. He stay-
ed in the Memorial Hospital at
Rusk almost a week. Mr. and Mrs.'
Sales are everyone's friends.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Murray of
Rusk visited Mr. and Mrs. W. A.
Murray Sunday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Laymon Fritz of
Dallas visited his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. D. A. Fritz.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rice and son
of Dallas visited in the W. W.
Helm home over the weekend.
Speaking of Mr. and Mrs. Helm, I
see they are riding around in a
new Ford truck. Guess they are
lucky. Several people in A t o v
have new cars.
Rev. and Mrs. Roy Pippin of
Gallatin visited in the R. F. Ber-
! ryhill home Saturday night.
I Mrs. Ruth Richard of Rusk vis-
1 ¡ted Mr. and Mrs. David Richard
i Sunday.
Love Helps Solve
Emotional Upsets
i Among Children
¡
"Love, to be taken regularly in
large doses." Those were the
words on the prescription blank
the doctor handed to Jimmy's mo-
ther. Jimmy had been suffering
from frequent stomach upsets.
Children have stomach disor-
ders caused by emotional upsets,
just as adults do. Many of these
illnesses, doctors believe, begin
because the children do not get
enough love and are surrounded
by an atmosphere of irritability,
impatience, and anger.
Many cases of infantile colic
are also thought to be largely emo-
tional in origin. Colic frequently
develops in babies whose mothers
are cross and impatient. A baby's
greatest need is for the sense of
security that affectionate mother-
ing gives him. When a baby be-
comes "colicky," he may be ex-
pressing his feeling of insecurity.
More affectionate and patient mo-
thering is often the remedy.
In older children, "Bottled up"
emotions may also show themselv-
es in real physical illnesses. Per-
haps the child may complain only
of "knots in my stomach" or
"cramps." But peptic ulcer and ul-
cerative colitis are not uncommon.
Children who develop these Ion-
ditions may be very well-behaved
youngsters who are unable to ex-
press their angry feelings. Their
troubles are often traced to the*
fact that their need for security
and love was not met in infancy.
Jimmy's trouble started the
spring he became a pitcher for
MAT H EWS-MILL
the Tigers, his Little League team.
He was a good pitcher. But he be-
gan to be afraid to play for fear
of losing. He felt that his parents
were proud of him and loved him
only when he won. So the stomach
upsets arrived with every game.
The doctor was able to recog-
nize the emotional basis of Jim-
my's trouble. He was able to show
the parents that their good little
boy who was so eager to please
j was not a happy child. They learn-
ed to be more patient with h i s
boyish failures, and to show him
that their love did not depend on
his behavior. Jimmy's stomach
trouble was cured by love.
This column is sponsored, in the
interest of better health, by The
Cherokee County Tuberculosis As-
sociation.
Mr. and Mrs. Arch Powers of
Texarkana, Mr. and Mrs. Tommy
Hixson and baby Roxann, of Co-
lumbia, Georgia, and Mrs. J. L.
Purvis of Jacksonville, were week-
end guests of Mr. and Mrs. B. J.
Moreau,
You Stop!
We'll Swap!
LEE MOTOR CO
Ph. 8 At The "Y" Rusk
«MATHEWS-MILLER
Color Cartoon: "RUNAWAY MOUSE"
Serial Chapter 5: "BAT MAN"
SATURDAY PREVUE 11:15 P.M_-SUN. & MON.
am
DeshMARrnV
jetty UWff
Wk
TECHNICOLOR | VlMb. LVNN • NlNA. ?OCH
* Technicolor Cartoon * "DOGGONE CATS"
TUESDAY A WEDNESDAY — OCTOBER 4 A 5
THE SUPREME EXCITEMENT
OF OUR TIMtl
BATTLE of the CENTURY
ROCKY MARCIANO
ARCHIE MOORE
Official Championship Pic-
ture, Round by Round, Blow
By Blow, thi Thrilling Blow*
of the Second and Ninth
Round in Slow Motion, Bet-
tor Than A Ringside Seat.
JACKSONVILLE, TEXAS
Opens 6:45, Starts 7:30
Sun.-Mon., Oct. 2-3
Vou've Read About It! You've
Heard It! Now See It!!!
rhe Warm Wonderful Story of-
4 Man 0>/fe<£?£
PeteK
RICHARD TODD KAN PfTTFS
PLUS ACTION FEATURE
lÁñmKWS;
hidden jungle
Fues.-Wed., First Run Oct. 4-5
remara
IAHE
X KEBFK
.vBWSSELLE
RMRUCI
TOWERS
Itechkicolor
This Will Get You Out. of
Dog House! And on the
Same Program
mr |. *«*cu*y*m
CMinr1
Thurs. Bucknite, Oct. 6
E&fit
2ND BUCKNITE HIT
A "m£MOM/SÍ
TWO GUNS and
a BADGE
Fri.-Sat., 2 Big Hits, Oct. 7-8
ClKtwiS(OPf
WHITE'
Feather
r -coy*---—
ft OMIT
WAGNER
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MOST
And On The Same Program
Always A Kiddie Cartoon!
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Whitehead, E. H. The Rusk Cherokeean. (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 108, No. 14, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 29, 1955, newspaper, September 29, 1955; Rusk, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth150097/m1/3/: accessed May 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Singletary Memorial Library.