Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 295, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 19, 1957 Page: 12 of 13
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Thursday, Sept. 19, 1957—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW—15
Solon Claims Support For
, Wound-Healing Substance
DAILY CROSSWORD
A
L
5 vig
ST
Discovered In Cartilage
2. Endearment 23. Indef-
Bill
EE
(is
Reporting to an audience with a
dancing girl 7. A barker's
(var.)
spiel
15. Either North 8. Regard
offering “opportunities” for
Ga.,
"inte-
Negro families to live in
at a stud-
5
6
8
3
7
2
io
13
14
IZ
U
17
16
15-
20
19
18
24
25
23
22
21
7
28
26
31
32
33
30
29
7
38
37
36
35
42
40
41
39
45
43
47
48
46
50
9-19
I-CLASSIFIEDS PAY—
'Potpurri' Replaces Home
NOW IS THE TIME TO
CHECK HEATING SETUP
1
I
f
E
I
Ho
t
ANNUAL
i
CHRISTMAS DOLL
CRISCO
LAY-AWAY EVENT
t
1•
4
E
10c
300 Can
23c
18 Oz. Glass
85c
10 Lb. Bag
25c
2-12 Oz. Bottles
92
.... lb. 58c
...lb, 45c
<
... 1b. 49c
balance . . . Come in and choose yours today.
... lb. 39c
3
z
OWNBEY
B
... 1b. 4Sc
LUMBER CO.
Lefevre & Clark
d
»
Ph. 5-2951
704 E. Henderson
1i
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i
(SN
ins
"4
"N
A
term
3. Across
4. Danger
5. Type
measure
6. Meadow
105 Batterson
Ph. 5-2751
16. Jewish
month
22. Fool
HORMEL ALL MEAT
FRANKS __
/ AMAZING NEW
WINDOW SCREEN
KEEPS ROOMS UP TO
I5°COOLER!
DECKER KORN KIST
BACON ....
1 .as
El#]
0129
IB L
■BBS
1303
lase
1
41. Bound
42. Wings
44. Measure
(Siam.)
47. Pronoun
tional differences.
Fowler said he got a big re-
sponse from trial ads he has run
in the weekly Douglas County Sen-
tinel at his home in Douglasville,
DOWN
1. Russian
peninsula
nite
article
27. River
(Afr.)
28. Fish
29. Weak-
ens
30. A gap
33. En-
gines
34. Pitcher
37. Liber-
ace’s
forte
J
CKMWUMV.
Yesterday’s Cryptoquote: I HEAR AMERICA SINGING,
THE VARIED CAROLS I HEAR—WHITMAN.
Distributed by King Features Syndicate
ACROSS
1. Sound cf
horse's foot
5. An exile
island
9. Wander
10. Fermented
drink
11. Several
13. Egyptian
NICE CHUCK
ROAST ...
11. Punctuation
mark
12. Scamps
(colloq.)
14. Church part
l'
•mb29$pee
pho waMabb to wed
WISCONSIN LONGHORN
CHEESE ______
FRESH
SPARE RIBS ...
%
27
GLADIOLA
FLOUR
DIAMOND
CATSUP
BAMA
APPLE JELLY
t C 'S
BROWN RABBIT
SYRUP
LADY BETTY SWEET
PICKLES
payments. You have until Christmas to pay the
KIM
DOG FOOD
other gas heating equipment ar-
range now to have them inspected
and adjusted by calling their heat-
ing equipment company or Lone
Star Gas company.
“In this way,” he added, “the
comfort of the entire family will
be assured during the cold weath-
er that is sure to come. And the
homemaker will have this impor-
tant service completed and out of
the way.”
OD
TS
integrated schools is
ent shall not be denld transfer
4-19
Yesterday’s Answer
ee
i
MAZ0LA
CORN OIL
FOLGERS’
COFFEE
KIMBELL’S
With Tomato Sauce
& Cheese
SPAGHETTI
STlY
Sis
LT. ROSAMOND TO BASE
Lieut. Ben A. Rosamond, para-
lyzed since July 11, after a dive
in a Fort Worth lake, has made
sufficient improvement to be tran-
sferred to the Sheppard Air Force
Base hospital in Wichita Falls. He
was treated the past two months
at Carswell Air Force Base hospi-
tal in Fort Worth.
Ben is a son of William S. Rosa-
mond, rural mail carrier, of Bur-
leson, and Mrs. Rosamond.
3
g
d
while stocks are complete!
HOSPITAL - SICK ROOM
DIABETIC AND BABY SUPPLIES
FREE DRIVE-IN PARKING
.... 3 lb. can 85c
k
2 1
79 J
Make your selection now
:: 28
,9
ied by NBC-TV this summer. On
Aug. 12, Arlene launched, in its
place, the “Arlene Francis Show,”
a half-hour morning variety pro-
gram on NBC-TV.
“The new show is a kind of pot-
purri,” said the blonde emcee.
“We try to keep it folksy, but we
hope it has a slick, shiney quality,
too. ‘Home’ had a lot of service
information for housewives. This
show stresses entertainment more.
“We used to have serious inter-
PRESCRIPTION
pharmacyr
CLEBU RNE, TEXAS ’ DlAL
down, the balance in easy to make monthly
NEW YORK (UP)—It has been which had had gelatin or talcum
conclusively proven that cartilage ' powder added were less strong,
contains a substance or substances T.-i-s -- - ni
..... 1 lb. can 88c
.....» 49c
... 12 cans 79c
i
Come in now and make your selection while
HF
HA
US
ShadeScreen magically blocks
son's beat and glare outside I
Not an ordinary screen! With
ShadeScreen. thousands of
tiny louvers slant downward
-eblock and deflect hot sun
myo away from your rooms.
Yoes see out, but others don’t
see in during daylight hours.
And ShadeScreen prevents
sun-fading... screens out in-
sects.lowers air-condition-
tag costs. Wont rust Looks
attraetiva, too. Available in
rolls 18-48’ wide, cut to
lengths you need.
after the petition has been filed.
Subsequent elections upon the
same questions cannot be called
within two years of any prior el-
ection.
Under this law those schools
which integrated during the 1956-
57 term are permitted to continue
integration unless this system of
operation is abolished by an el-
ection held in the manner mention-
ed above. Another provision under
a section of the law dealing with
Puts Any Doll Away For Christmas
Now is the time for homemakers
to have their gas heating equip-
ment inspected and adjusted for
winter use, it was pointed out to-
day by E. W. Heath, Lone Star
Gas Co. manager. He urged peo-
ple not to depend on the first cold
day to remind them to call for
such service.
“Heating service companies and
Lone Star,” he said, “receive hun-
dreds of calls for service within
a period of a few hours on the
day cold weather makes its first
appearance. This means a consid-
erable delay in filling many ind-
ividual service orders.”
He suggested that users of gas
floor furnaces, wall heaters, unit!
heaters, central heating plants and
meal
that “5,/
3’
“ “e) T-. : 11 J
SC -u 4.4
It's Lintz's annual Doll Lay-A-Way event —
emeHessssu
foMurAutai
No. 5 size 49c
S
I
$100
I DOWN
cis agreed today.
“I’ve gotten to the point now
where I don’t miss it much,” said
* Miss Francis of her entombed
NBC-TV daytime show. “But when
I was told it was going off, I
was sick.
“It’s only natural that I would
" be sad after being with a show
for three-and-a-half years. We had
a wonderful bunch on the show
- and it was so sad to think that so
many people were disappearing in
different directions. But what can
views on ‘Home’ and here the in-
terviews are gayer and lighter—
again, the stress on entertainment.
On the new show I even sing a
little. I’m not saying how well I
do it, but I like the idea of per-
forming.
“The thing is this program has
a bigger rating than ‘Home’ and
we’ve done it in what? — five
weeks? I like this new show and
one thing I feel—I’m never going
to let it descend to the cheapness
associated with some daytime TV
shows. But I loved ‘Home,’ too—
it’s a shame it had to go. I think
its trouble was that it was five or
10 years ahead of its time.”
Where to fix the blame for the
junking of a quality show like
“Home” is a puzzle, confessed
Miss Francis. “I don’t blame
NBC,” she said. “Having' a show
for three-and-a-half years is a
pretty long time in this business.
I’m grateful to NBC for letting it
special interest in the subject —
the fellows of the American Col-
lege of Surgeons — the experimen-
ters specified they didn’t know
what there is in cartilage which
brought about the result, but they
were trying to find out.
Counter-acts Hormone
An interesting point was that
whatever the substance is, it
seems to counter-act the effect of
a hormone of the adrenal glands
which slows the formation of the
fibrous materials which heal
wounds. They tried several of the
chemical compounds known to be
present in cartilage and found they
did nothing to the adrenal chemi-
cal.
So it has to be accepted “for the
present” that “the active repair
stimulating fraction of cartilage is
as yet unseparated and uncharac-
terized.” They demonstrated that
powdered cattle cartilage works on
rats. The next step is to see if it
works on other animals and then,
in people.
Technically the rat surgery was
no different than abdominal sur-
gery on human beings. There was
the same care that body chemis-
try was in balance and that nutri-
tion was proper, the same pre-op-
eration and post-operation atten-
tion.
The experimenters pointed out
that under these “normal” circum-
stances, no other substance has
been shown to produce such an ef-
fect on wound healing.
grated northern residential areas.
Fowler denies he wants merely
to reduce the Negro population of
the South, and said he has no in-
terest in pouring more migrants
into the burgeoning “Negro sec-
tions” of northern cities.
Will Choose Sites
Spontaneous migration under
economic influence already far ex-
ceeds the volume of resettling that
the proposed commission could
handle, he said. The commission
would move only several hundred
families from each southern state
participating.
Greatest care will be devoted to
choosing relocation sites “in the
best residential and suburban”
areas “to bring home to the citi-
zens the facts about the integra-
tion problem.”
“This will prick the conscience
of good Americans to such an ex-
tent that they will realize the hy-
pocracy of their position and join
with the South in saying what the
South has been living by for years.
“And that is, separate but equal
treatment of the races is really the
only system that will work.”
This, Fowler said, “is a funda-
mental approach to the broad
question of returning constitutional
government to America.”
trustee election if the petition was
i! filed within 90 days of the trustee
I election. Otherwise the election
- , must be called within 60 days
19c
15 oz. jar | B •
takers
go as long as it did.
“You can’t blame sponsors eith-
er. They have to reach the great-
est number of homes possible for
their money.
“As for the public, well, it’s sad
that we didn’t have a bigger audi-
ence than we did, but it’s sad, too,
that not everybody wants Shakes-
peare, the ballet or ‘La Boheme.’
What are you going to do? It’s
just one of those unfortunate facts
that not everybody wants the
best.”
a
M
Aafs
ABRIE
ptsHE
from one school to another be-
cause of race or color.
The bill provides that if a school
district should desegregate without
first being authorized to do so by
an election of the qualified elec-
tors residing therein, then the dis-
trict becomes ineligible for accre-
ditation and ineligible to receive
any Foundation Program Funds.
In other words, it loses State
School Support funds.
The same penalty is placed upon
a school district, already integrat-
ed, which fails to segregate its
schools after an election calling
for such action.
A fine of not less than $100 or
more than $1,000 is provided for any
person guilty of violating any of
the provisions of this Dual School
System Law.
(This column, prepared by the
State Bar of Texas, is written to
inform — not to advise. No per-
son should ever apply or interpret
any law without the aid of an at-
torney who is fully advised con-
cerning the facts involved, becau-
se a slight variance in facts may
change the application of the law.)
■
i.c - 3
!
1I
THIEVES DRAIN HOUSE
STAMFORD, Conn. (UP) —
Thieves who robbed a house un-
der construction weren’t satisfied
with taking everything but the
kitchen sink. They also took that.
) L
N7
Boiqisik
nw nIeIr1
SCHOOL SEGREGATION
With schools opening for the fall
semester, the matter of segrega-
tion is back in the headlines in
Texas and elsewhere, and some
school boards may now be ponder-
ing upon a law passed by the 55th
Texas Legislature.
By now everyone knows that the
Supreme Court of the United Stat-
es has decreed that segregation
of public school pupils by race is
unconstitutional. Since the Court’s
decision, however, the Legislature
passed House Bill 65. The consti-
tutionality of this law has not as
yet been tested.
In effect the bill provides for lo-
cal option elections to determine
whether dual school systems shall
be continued or abolished. It pro-
hibits any board of trustees or any
school authority from abolishing
its dual school system (desegre-
gating or integrating) prior to an
election on the question. A prere-
quisite to such an. election is a
petition filed by at least 20 per-
cent of the qualified electors re-
siding in the school district.
The election is to be conducted
in a manner similar to elections
for school trustees. It can be call-
ed on the same date as a school
NEW YORK (UP)—Its ratings I you do? We didn’t get a rating
were humble, but inere was no [ and so we had to go.”
- place like “Home,” Arlene Fran- “Home,” a one-hour service
show of some distinction, was bur-
esan Eb=I
(0
""7
1 • l
l . i i
l 6046
ev -1
L—-- I
FAs5L
OSERTA
which hasten the healing of
wounds, and that is news in a
world with an abundance of carti-
lage and lots of wounds in need of
faster healing.’
The proof presents a fascinating
puzzle of body chemistry. In the
embryo, the skeleton largely is
formed of that tough, elastic tissue,
cartilage. Much of it is converted
into bone but plenty remains. Yet
it has shown that bone, in the form
* of flour, doesn’t help wounds to
heal.
The phenomenon had been sus-
pected. In exhaustive experiments
• with rats. Dr. John F. Prudden,
Dr. Gentaro Nishihara and Lester
Baker of Columbia University’s
College of Physicians and Sur-
geons proved that it exists and the
effect is consistent.
Experiment On Rats
They made abdominal surgical
wounds in the rats. All wounds
* were closed by sewing in the usual
8 way. Some were left to heal un-
aided. Some were sprinkled,
before sewing, with ground-up cat-
tle cartilage. Others were sprin-
kled with bone flour, with talcum
powder, and with gelatin because
gelatin comes from boiling animal
bone and cartilage.
Seven days after the wounds
were made, the degree of healing
was measured by measuring the
tensile strength of the wounds. The
wounds w'hich had had the carti-
lage powder put into them were
much stronger than those which
had had nothing added. Those
Negro Resettlement Plans
4—
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(75.)
A s 2
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26 ' F 89
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\
•Till*
ATLANTA (UP)—State Rep. A. I to “practice what they preach.”
A. Fowler Jr. today claimed at (This, he said, is a new “educa-
tional” approach to resolving sec-
l V
least five southern states will sup-
port his plan for resettling south-
ern Negroes among northern
whites who are most critical of the
South.
The Alabama Senate endorsed
the idea with one dissenting vote
two days ago and Fowler says he
has received favorable response
among legislative and administra-
tive leaders of Georgia and three
other states.
Fowler predicts that as a result
some publicly outspoken critic of
the South’s segregation customs
may within a year or two find on
one-day notice or less that a Ne-
gro family from Georgia has be-
come his next-door neighbor.
What the Alabama Senate en-
dorsed, and what Fowler will pro-
pose to the Georgia Legislature in
January, is that a southern com-
mission quietly buy up homes for
resettling Negroes “where it will
do the most good.”
“It will stimulate a reappraisal
by good, conscience - stricken peo-
ple,” Fowler said. “There is no
question in my mind that one re-
sult will be a new appreciation for
the position of the people in the
South.”
Will Buy Homes
Whether the proposed commis-
sion will use public or private
funds is a detail to be worked out
later, Fowler said. In any case, it
will secretly buy homes in the best
neighborhoods, and resell to care-
fully selected Negro applicants.
In plain language Fowler wants
to give the South’s critics a chance
stocks are complete . . . Pay as little as $1.00
50.Poems
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE — Here’s how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L’s, X for the two O’s, etc. Single letters, apos-
trophes, the length and formation of the words are all hints.
Each day the code letters are different.
A Cryptogram Quotation
M O M V P U L J C M K V I F J U M C E I V M
DSLW IWM M A A M U D — S M V N M V D
IT’S THE LAW
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or South
17. Cup edge
18. Compass
point (abbr.)
19. Youth
20. Years
(abbr.)
21. Sunk fence
24. Music note
25.--haw
26. Province
(Can.)
29. Sure (dial.)
31. Exclama-
tion (slang)
32. Cupola
35. Help
36. Short sleep
38. Cry of
pain
39. Handle
roughly
(colloq.)
40. Stir up
43. Mix
45. Seaman
46. Two-toed
sloth
48. Close to
49. Snow,
shoes
(Nor.)
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 295, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 19, 1957, newspaper, September 19, 1957; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1532273/m1/12/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.