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Brownwood Bulletin from Brownwood, Texas • Page 1

Location:
Brownwood, Texas
Issue Date:
Page:
1
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Friday, June 27, 1958 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN Set the Table Answer to Previous Puzzle M4 E. LEE Published cverlng txcni Saturday, and Sunday momlng At Brort.wood. us class Oct. 15 1900. at Brownwood.

Texas. unJer the Any rc'flpctlon upon the character or reputation of any person, firm er corporation, which may appear in the columns of The Brownwood Bulletin will RUdly corrertei upon Its being brought to the aUontlon of the publisher. SUBSCRIPTION HATES Brownwood and countlrs by maC: S8.9S yf by carrier, 33c per we-k. Jl.SO pe: month, S17.50 j-etvr. TELEPHONE NTJM3F.FS Circulation and Business 22749 Display Advertising 2338 Classified Advertising E.virr.vlDl Dep'-.

Society Sports Editorial Department 3443 M43 Written for NEA Service By EDWIN P. JORDAN, M.B. Child's Diet Needs Special Attention During Summer What sounds like an extremely sound and sensible article on the feeding of infants and children in hot weather appeared recently in'the Journal of the American Medical Association. The authors pointed out that the need for protein in food seems to be unchanged, or possibly slightly increased, in hot weather. Also, that the vitamin requirements of children are probably not changed by living in a tropical climate or by hot summers.

The only major points to consider are those related to the loss of water and salt through excessive sweating. One interesting point of which I was not aware is contained in Get TITCH for Athletes Foot at Palace Drug. $1.00. Money back guarantee. BIG NEW SHOW TODAY SATURDAY RING SABU WltUAM MARSHALL AN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE FEATURE NO.

2 a paragraph in this report which reads: "During recent summers a 'new syndrome' has appeared. It is characterized by the pale. flabby, tired child who hasi gained excessive weight during the warm weather because he has stayed indoors in an air, conditioned house watching tele- i vision most of his waking hours and has indulged in frequent be- twecn-meal snacks that have- spoiled his appetite for well- balanced meals." The authors of this report suggest that infants should be as- i surecl of adequate fluids by regularly offering them a few ounces of water between feedings. In i artifically fed infants it may be; i desirable also to reduce the concentration of calories in the food 1 mixture to approximately 13 i calories per ounce of fluid during hot weather. They also emphasized that in-! dividualizecl management of chil- clren during the summer is the best assurance of maintaining 1 good nutrition.

If infants and' children taking diets show signs of intolerance I to ordinary heat they should be i investigated for illness rather than simply having their diets changed. Seven practical guides arc suggested: 1) the habit of vigorous outdoor activity should be continued or developed. Children do not mind hot weather unless they are conditioned by their elders to dislike it. 2) Cool, but not cold, drinks! are best. For the most part, water should not be unduly limited.

31 foods and high caloric drinks may have to be controlled. 41 A short "cooling off" and quiet periods before meals may increase the child's appetite. 51 Limiting of high-caloric foods, such as peanut butter and ice cream, may be necessary. For some children, the use of skimmed milk may be available! to promote a better appetite for other foods. i 61 The large and better balanced meal may best be served in the evening when the temperature is lower.

7) All of the usual measures and guides for developing good eating habits should be continued, irrespective of the weather. ACROSS 1 Baked Vinginla 4 slaw 8 Roast leg of 12 Exist 13 Eye part 14 Iroquoian Indian 15 Legal matters 16 Holding back 18 Rulers 20 South American mountains 21 Possessive pronoun 22 Discord goddess 24 Wild hog 26 Genuine 27 Morning moisture 30 State 32 Cylindrical 34 Rarely 35 Newspaper executive 36 Goddess of the dawn 37 Containers 39 Corn 40 Singing voice 41 Cyst 42 Think 45 Wind storn 49 Come in 51 Label 52 Solar disk 53 Pertaining to the ear 54 Make a mistake 55 English court 56 Writing table 57 Observe DOWN 1 Damage 2 Region 3 Eating places 4 Prepares bacon 5 Above 6 Tenant 7 Consume food 8 Inclines 9 Dry 10 Pronoun 11 Wagers 17 Complained 19 Weary 23 Prices 24 Foundation 25 Bread spread 26 Send in payment 27 Explodes 28 English school 29 Lived 31 Drinking glass 33 Mature, as fruit 38 Make memoranda 40 Concerning 41 Destroy 42 Gem 43 Boy's nickname 44 Arrow poison 46 Elevator inventor 47 Venture 48 Monster 50 Used to catch fish ll IS 21 il) Tl 1) 51 ii i a TB 11 If i U) i i 37 5ti )i a is i ft 11 ti 11 1 Jj ft 7 51 10 i 1J i 18 2 7 TV 'Gatsby' Was Fraud, Not Fitzgerald's "Great Gatsby By WILLIAM EWALI) United Press International NEW YORK "The Great Gatsby" was over on "Playhouse 90" Thursday night, 1 thought: I may never write this review: I don't know what to say. The reason, I think, was that the CBS-TV drama was a mud- dler. It was somebody's "Great Gatsby," but it was not "The Great Gatsby" that I knew. The TV Gatsby was not bad in its own way it nad a swift, logical plot, the sets hail the sumptuous smell of Long Island in the 1920's, and Hooert Ryan and Jeanne Crain who played Gatsby and Daisy both turned in jobs that suited the script.

The only thing is, I'm not sure the script was "The Great Gatsby." Oh sure, the plot was pretty true and so were the relationships of the major But somehow, it all had very little to do with Scott Fitgzerald's story. I don't want to plead any case craft and could write rings around almost any American writer, but he wrote for the most part about what happened Wednesday night when a bottle of the remedy ex- plodevl on camera. The rep was not only funny, he got himself a free five-minute commercial. Saturday highlights: "Bob Crosby Show" (NBC-TVi. Gary Crosby drops by to groan out a song i or two with his uncle.

"Midwestern Hayridc" (ABC- TV). Premiere of a hoc-down out of Dayton, Ohio. Sunday highlights: "Ed Sullivan Show" (CBS-TV). The Dancers. a visiting Russian troupe that knows all the steps, takes over the full hour.

Monday daytime: Today is game day. CBS-TV premieres two morning quizzes, "For Love or Money," and "Play Your Hunch." NBC-TV unveils "Lucky Partners" and "Haggis Haggis." And if you're still game, there's the premiere of two NBC-TV soap- eras, "Today Is Ours" and "From These Roots." Bob Paige will take a two-week breather from NBC-TV's "The Big Payoff" starling July 7 Johnny Dcsmoml and Bob liaymes fill In. The Steve Aliens will spend their summer in Europe, arriving in London July 15, then moving to Paris, Monte Carlo, i Capri. They'll take Steve's Iwo older boys, Steve Jr. and Brian.

DAMAGES AWARDED FORT WORTH U.S. district court jury rulc-J Thursday that. American Cynnamid Co. must pay $34,431 to Mrs. Angola Sparto, whose farm was ruined by water from the Trinity River after it.

had been treated with sodium sulphates at Fort. Worth. Members of the Sparto family said they irrigated the 45 -acre truck farm with river water. Just Arrived 8-column Electric ADDING MACHINES Moiseycv 1 Adds fl? 1 £. Subtracts: IU7.

Plus Tax I IMC TYPEWRITER CO. UULLmj 00 Andcrson FINEST IN BROWNWOOD HARPER'S DELICIOUS Pit Bar B-Q HARPER'S FOOD STORE 817 Mclwood The Channel Swim: CBS-TV's TIZZY By Kate Osann a bunch of bubbleheatls and just "U.S. Steel Hour" is preparing an dribbled his talent away. hour drama based on the life of "The rich are very different Sigmund Freud for next from you and me," he is supposed A. T.

T. has decided to stick to have said to Ernest Homing- its eight special shows on NBC- way once. And Hemingway who TV next dates have been recorded the remark in a short picked yet. story also recorded this reply: CBS-TV's "Your Hit Parade" "Yes, they have more money." las mac i a cas change even be- In "The Great Gatsby," FU.z- ore jt oc on the air next gerald, who was fascinated by the ogi Grant, previously named as silly set, drew a picture of a pow-; now out Dorothy Collins, er figure, Jay Gatsby, who has: say sources close to the show, is always struck me as romantically now about 90 per ccnt coaxecl in improbable a curious Combination of Lord Byron and Al Capone. Gatsby was in love with The Chris Schenkels he's the CBS-TV named their new arrival Ted, after Ted Daisy, a member of the aristocra-; Husing.

Tony Marvin, Arthur Gotl- what passes for it on Long Island and Gatsby's love destroyed him. But, of course, Fitzgerald had a twister. Daisy was a bubble- head and so was her whole set, while the raw and inelegant Gatsby was "better than the whole lot of them." Thursday night "Playhouse flil" shed out all of the Fitzgerald irony and turned Gatsby into a love story. Gatsby was a kind of sensitive guy and Daisy was a frey's CBS-TV spieler, is branching do the announcing at the Flushing Meadow aqua circus in New York this summer. slightly flighty girl who was real- up witn brick.

BRICK CHEESE, ACCIDENT RACINE, Wis. (UPD The "Wisconsin Agriculturist revealed today that American brick cheese was strictly an accident. The publication repoi'to 1 that a Wisconsin cheesemaker somehow made a mistake in 18TG and comely made of good stuff and who suffered terribly when Gatsby died. As a result, the TV version was a distortion, slicked-over and I pointless. And Gatsby as Ryan was forced to play him, was non! sensical almost all dreamer, hardly any of him, fraud.

And that's why. why go on. 1 I did write this review after all. "Oh. my.

Der 1 i schmcll iss lost," was his only comment, according to the publication. THE Kll GYRATORS SONGS: As Long I Have You Don I Ask Ml Why Httt Ktidirl Womin King Creole Doll O'leins Young Duams -drill more! New Orleans entertainer fights to the top against gangs and hoodlums! trMONIlVtCCHI-SIIWARI "Roger is very unsure about everything!" Starring STERL1N6 HAYDEN ALLIED ARTISTS PICTURE NEWS CARTOON TWO TEXAN'S KILLED i KINDER, La. A car- i truck collision killed Junior Her- I man, 29. of Rockport, and Fred Wilson, 44, of Robstown, Thursday on U.S. 1'JO east of Kinder.

The truck driver, Joi seph A. Skelly, said his vehicle I had stalled in the middle of the highway when the Texas car rammed it. Get Mad at Husband? Set Haystack Afire FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPM Mrs. Myrtle Kirbie told police Thursday she got so mad thinking about her former husband that she set his haystack on fire.

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPD Ulysses S. Grant was in the Ma- rine Corps today. Grant is a 19-year-old full- blooded Apache Indian, whose great-great grandfather scouted for General Grant during the early days of the general's career. Spring Is the time to do the housecleaning on the farm so the barn can be used os a summer Short Shots: NBC-TV's nighttime "Tic Tac Dough" has had, a wonderfully engaging contestant Pat Sullivan of White; Plains, N.Y.

for the past month and I recommend her highly if you're in the vicinity of the show next Thursday night. She looks i like a motherly Kay Kendall but talks like a Brooklyn comic. I watched ABC-TV's "Zorro" Thursday night and about all I can say is that it was there and I was there, but not much happened in-between. CBS-TV's "Climax" was a real chiller for about a half-hour Thursday night, but its last half failed to measure up, or even tie up its loose ends. A representative of Jack Paar's headache remedy sponsor (Buffer- in i showed up on Paar's NBC-TV show Thursday night to assure Paar that all was forgiven for RESCUER DROWNS PETROLIA.

Tex. Cleveland, 35, of Plalnview, i was drowned Thursday ad- er rescuing his son from a lake near Petrolia, 18 miles northwest of Fort Worth. now Ends Today COME ON OUT TO-NITE DRIVE-I Saturday LOVEJOY CHICAGO large billboard today heralded a whisky "known by the company it keeps." The billboard was atop a Skid Row flophouse. Fl'RNITTJRE HOTPOINT APPLIANCES New and Used Harry Cochran 1305-7 MAIN AVENUE CTAKHINQ FRANK JAMEB ABBY BEST DALTON MERLIN An ALlieO MUSIS Piclun CAMp BOWIE TODAY AND SATURDAY rivp-lrt I IVC III MRS DAVIS mm GEORGE PLUS All the crackling All the rousing of America's brawlin' growmg-up days! MIH iWcUi l) KXWI uu DACM t) JEWn HOWE! TRAVELER" will Plus Two Cqrtoons Refrigerated Air Conditioned First Showing In Brownwood TODAY SAT. DOUBLE FEATURE WINCHESTER '73 Starring: JAMES STEWART SHELLEY WINTERS FEATURE NO.

2 Cris Cross Starring STEPHEN McNALLY RICHARD LONG Box Office Opens 7:15 P.M. First Show Begins at Dusk LAST TIMES TODAY SHE WAS YOUNO- A STRANGER TO LOVE AND AFRAID) COLOR CARTOONS PLUS 2 CARTOONS SATURDAY ONLY HOOK Maud IMtl UKIUO MTISTl FLUS "IN THE MONEY" "In The Money" wil Ishow once at 10:02. Meed and Directed WILLIAM CASTLE ScrmpUj bj ROBB WHITE ARTISTS pictur, PLUS Plus Two Cortoons Starling Sunday An ALUI-U AHtlSI'S Hctuu.

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About Brownwood Bulletin Archive

Pages Available:
108,695
Years Available:
1894-1977