Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 303, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 29, 1957 Page: 3 of 16
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Sunday, Sept. 29, 1957—CLEBURNE, TEXAS TIMES-REVIEW— 3
Fort Worth In
31
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Move to Keep
CHARLES R. MEALS, D.D.S.
Record Straight
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FABULOUS
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PERFUME
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chamber took
wh'hpfM
told
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$3.50 up — plus iax f
Ph. 5-2426
102 S. Main
To Lie, Or Not To Lie
at
You will get so much more for your money —
When you bring your Dry Cleaning to us.
BABY OF THE WEEK
Any 2 garments for the price of 1!
-
P
Earl Fudge Cleaners
n
C
%
Your 2 For 1 Cleaner
108 N. Anglin
5-6402
-9
C-
CONSOLE
[is
NECCHI
The most
7
here!
desired
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Fashion Look
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machine
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America!
8
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88882328228338-323
Berets
14995
4
and oh so-easy-to-wash.
Cotton Knit
§
Sweater
$149«5
3
$2.98
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9
YOUR PRICE
R
• Blonde
$2.98
3
4
Wedge
USED MACHINES
510.95
X
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$12.50
9
4
$4.98
$12.50
SMART SHOPPE & BEAUTY SALON
f
Phone 5-2332
15 N. Main
214 South Main
4
Night Ph. 5-7208
Day Ph. 5-8101
(
INTHIN$OLES
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Economy Cuts
Begin to Make
Selved Telf
• Mahogany
• Walnut
“Photographs of
Distinction”
tion of whether scientific lie-detec-
tion is really reliable in detecting
Fort Worth
from there.
Taggart
Reg. Price 1
of Necchi . .
Reg. Price
of Console. .
USE OUR
LAY-AWAY
Full Length
Pants
I TERMS
$1.57 WK.
S.
P.
NECCF-ELIVA
105 E. Henderson
Cleburne, Texas
FREE
CONSOLE
in your
choice-
Fred
W.
R. '
I—SINGER PORTABLE,
SEWS CUT NOISY .
AND SAVE AT LEAST $80
ON THE PURCHASE OF THIS
Ivy League, striped cotton
twill, washable, wrinkle-shed
fabric. Size 10 to 18.
Brings a whisper of to-
morrow—from the past—
fer TODAY.
Smart, sophisticated and
rich with lilting freshness.
cost by any one interested. Infor-
mation concerning the use of fish
toxicants for selective pond treat-
ment will be sent to pond owners
on special request.
five. The investigator then asked
if the number was one or two or
three or four or five. But the sub-
ject had been told he had to say,
no, to all these questions, and so
he had to tell one lie.
But it's Yours
for the Price of
the Machine
ALONE
20-28 as “Good Citizenship Week”
in Texas.
1—WHITE ELECTRIC CABINET,
IT SEWS. ...............................
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“Come on gang, let’s
live it up”
6000
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You get a beautiful
FREE
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Beware of nails and glass.
Also damp feet can cause
colds. Keep your shoes in
repair.
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ANNOUNCES
The Removal of His Office to
725 West Henderson Street
OFFICE HOURS
8:30 A.M. to 12:00 Noon
1:30 P.M. to 6:00 P.M.
Monday through Saturday
Ph. 5-8002
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and
$4.98
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And Well Allow
You $20 or More
On Your Old
Machine in Trade!
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tained in Bulletin No. 24, issued by
the Commission in Austin. This
booklet, on “Utilizing Farm Ponds
for Fish,” may be had without
4 404*s* YOURS!
Featured in our cosmetic dept.
Cleburne Drug
/
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1 8
Early American
Prints
Cotton two piece dress. Early
American patch work prints be-
comes a wonderful drip-dry an-
tique designs of eagles, silhou-
ettes, stripes and polka dots.
Swings beautifully into the mod-
ern lines. Sizes 7 to 13.
$5.95
y2ccmR
( *cp3do" i
I, >Geedtdedy )
u "foiee“emmi
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*12995
over Pedigo Shoe Shop
16 N. Caddo
Mary Gorman
Price Daniel.
Blazer striped cotton knit
sweaters. Boat necks, turtle
necks, V necks. Bright Fall
colors. S-M-L.
I blazoned the words ‘Fort Worth’
|!for all to see.” Taggart wrote.
| Then he invited .her to come to
| Fort Worth for the Nov. 8, 1958
from the level of July.
Attention On Fall
“Throughout the summer
2001
Fl.
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Friday by Gov.
They are Homa
29g
Marquette TCU -return match and
added this:
“We assure vou that you’ll re-
turn to Milwaukee asking your-
self, ‘Where in the world is Dal-
las’?”
on
,)
Walking Shoes
Black smooth leather. Soft and easy
on the foot.Size 5 to 9.
Daniel has designated Oct. 6-12
as “Fire Prevention Week” and
7
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FORT WORTH (UP)— The Fort Odessa.
Worth Chamber of Commerce
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Never before have we seen such
a brilliant season for hats. Vel-
vets at a peak, wide oval brims,
glittering pillbox, feathered pro-
file shell, fur felts, satins.
Black, white. Pairs ruby, beige,
brown, ice blue, pink.
$3.98 to $5.98
888M8
r
year, decreases were shown in
miscellaneous freight car load-
ings, off 4 per cent; crude pe-
troleum production, down 10 per
cent; crude oil runs to stills, off
1 per cent, and non-residential
construction, down 4 per cent.
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Hill, Fort
McGaha,
L. Flynn,
Glosserman,
2
NEW YORK (UP)—On the ques- allowed others to take advantage
and permitted themselves to be
“Employ the Physically Handi.
Price capped Week” in addition to Oct.
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ures when fishing becomes bad in
farm ponds. This can be achieved
either in drainage, selective pond
treatment or by fertilization.
Additional information is con-
"""
Kandi Renna Stephens, one
year old daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Dan Stephens, 907 Phil-
upS_:.:_:...............
A portrait of your child today
is a treasure tomorrow.
DAVIS STUDIO
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Lms
Now's the time to gef these won-
derfully fetching hi-fashion cotton
flannelettes! They are soft, warm,
, / ,-ea
(25.//0
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r “You will note on the seal of
egg Texas Christian University is em-
Appointed to School Panel
AUSTIN, (UP) — Five persons
were appointed to the Texas
Commission on Higher Education
Rev. and Mrs. Thomas Craft are conducting a revival cur-
rently at the United Pentecostal Church, 605 Trinity Avenue.
Rev. Craft is doing the preaching and Mrs. Craft is leading
the singing. Rev. Donald Berry is pastor of the church.
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Less old 7000
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Dancig Classes
• Tap • Ballet
• Acrobatic • Baton
' FISHING ^REPORT-W
Worth; Charles
Wichita Falls;
Harlingen; M.
Lockhart; and
AUSTIN, Sept. 28 (UP)— Econ-
omy cuts ordered in Washington
are “beginning to make them-
selves felt” in Texas, the Uni-
versity of Texas Bureau of Busi-
ness Research reported Saturday.
Consumer spending has con-
tinued strong “in spite of pre-
dictions the present rate of
spending could not be sustained.”
However, expenditures by busi-
ness concerns and the federal
government “show definite signs
of weakening,” John A. Stockton,
director of the bureau, said.
The overall trend of business
activity in Texas during August
was “apparently upward,” and
showed only “(slight change”
2
1gng286
tention was fixed on the prospects
that business activity would re-
sume its upward movement in
the fall, but with the end of sum-
mer there is little evidence in
the record of Texas business to
support the conclusion that any
substantial rise in activity will
occur between the first of Sep-
tember and the end of the year.”
Stockton said.
He noted that the “building
outlook does not look especially
promising,” but cautioned “this
is not uniform for all kinds of
construction.”
Stockton suggested continued
state and local spending may off-
set to a degree the “depressing
effects” of reduced federal spend-
ing.
“The rapid rise in spending for
roads, schools, hospitals and all
kinds of public buildings has a
stimulating effect on business ac-
tivity,” he said.
“The steadily expanding ex-
penditures of state and local gov-
ernmental units are much more
stable stimulators ri business
than the somewhat erratic be-
havious of. federal spending,”
Stockton continued.
August retail sales in Texas
rose 2 per cent from July and
were 12 per cent ahead of the
same month last year.
“Some of this increase was un-
doubtedly due to the rise in the
price level, since sonsumer prices
rose 4 per cent during the past
year. However, even after making
volume of business shows an in-
crease,” the report said.
As compared with August last
' “50
' p/g-s
co-chairman of the publicity com-
mittee for Marquette’s 1957
Homecoming Council, that he was
shipping her, along with a Lone
Star flag, some “literature about
Fort Worth and Texas Christian
University.”
Totel 70Q95
Reg. Price -V7
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Sbh ---oneueememneza
Designates 'Weeks'
AUSTIN (UP)- Gov.
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emeren
About ten days ogo the state
fish hatchery trucks from Eagle
Mountain came to town to distrib-
ute fish to Johnson County folks
who had asked for them. A record
number was given out to a rec-
ord number of individuals. Many
new tanks built during the drouth
and many old lakes and ponds that
had refilled were stocked.
The game and fish commission
has some intresting facts about
the care and growth of these fin-
gerlings which we will pass on to
you.
For instance a fry bass planted
in an unstocked pond during Sept.,
1957 under proper conditions, may
reach 9 inches in length by March,
1958. By the time it is a year old
it will weigh 1% pounds.
Not all the planted fish will do
this, but such growth is possible
where conditions are right.
There has been a great deal of
farm pond study on the part of
the Commission biologists. Thou-
sands of small impoundments have
been created by pulling dams
across small dry stream beds
within the state during the last sev-
eral years.
Invariably the Game and Fish
Commission is called upon to stock
these ponds through its hatchery
program. Some 13 million fry have
been produced by the Texas hat-
cheries for this year. Most of them
have been bass.
Another favorite fish for re-
stocking is the <channel cat. Finger-
ling cats will grow at the rate
of one inch per month, again under
favorable conditions.
“The history of the average farm
pond is good growth from the ini-
tial stocking, with a decreased
growth rate of subsequent spawns.
When sunfish are stocked in a
pond they usually will dominate
the population composition of
fishes present by the third year,
presenting a stunted aspect and
cause fishing to become poor.”
Hatchery restocking will not help
such conditions because the sur-
vival of the restocked fish will be
practically nil. They either will be
eaten by other fish, or they will
starve.
No matter how many fish are
restocked by a hatchery they can
only begin to approximate the
number that will be produced by
natural spawn. A pair of good
brood bass will produce some 24,-
000 baby bass, many more than
might be stocked from a hatchery
in any given pond.
Catfish, however, do not spawn
so well unless special conditions
have been provided. For that rea-
son the Commission advises the
restocking of catfish ponds after
several years. This depends, how-
ever, upon a survey of the pond
fish population.
We recommend remedial meas-
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exploited. When opposed or frus-
trated, they were inclined to give
up and withdraw.
On the other hand, the low-re-
actor expressed their hostilities
quite openly, by getting mad and
telling people off. They wanted
personal independence and
shunned leaning on any man. To-
wards people and events, they
were critical and skeptical and it
took a lot to impress them. They
tended to be rebellious and not to
conform.
The “galvanic skin response”
comes from the measureable
amounts of electricity which the
body generates under nervous
stress. The lie detector measures
this and also measures pulse and
breathing rates and blood pres-
sure. In body function all are
hooked up nervously. Theoretical-
ly if all show a high responsive-
ness when a person is being ques-
tioned about a dangerous or pain-
ful subject, that person isn’t tell-
ing the truth.
Heat Not On
Block’s subjects were male ap-
plicants for enrollment in medical
school. They thought . they were
hooked up to, all parts of the im-
posing lie-detecting apparatus, but
actually they were connected only
to the measurers of galvanic skin
response. The heat really wasn’t
put on them — they weren’t ques-
tioned about anything person ah
Indeed, they were instrueted as
to when and how to lie. For in-
stance, they were told to keep in
mind any number from one and |
liars, an elaborate scientific ex-
periment with people indicated
that much depends on what kind
of person is being tested.
However, Dr. Jack Block of the
University of California, Berkeley
campus, who supervised the ex-
periment, avoided relating his ex-
perimental results with the prac-
tical business of detecting lies. He
ha d assembled psychological
“data,” he said; application was
something else.
This data showed that out of 70
nersons tested, some were highly
“reactive” to the key measure-
ment of the lie detector—the “gal-
vanic skin response”—and some
hardly reacted at all. He and his
associates tested the 20 highest
and the 20 lowest reactors for per-
sonality traits.
The 20 highest—whose high-re-
acting might brand them as liars
whether they were or not — were
worriers. Their anxieties and ten-
sions found relief inwardly and
they were given to minor symp-
tons of bodily illnesses w h i c h
didn’t exist in fact.
Are Submissive
They were dependent personali-
ties—they were inclined to be dom-
inated and to be submissive. They
Suede Cloth
Gloves
Hand stitched. White,
black, beige, brown.
$1.59 to $1.98
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Bags
Suede fabrics, plastic
leather, velvets. Many
smart sytles. Black,
brown, red, tweeds, grey.
$1.98 to $2.98
Plus Tax
1 s 9
Velvets and satin.
All colors.
$2.98
, 539
Su
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pg
Flats
Smooth leather suede leather flats.
Black or brown. Pointed toes, small
bows, plain styles,many others. Siz-
es 4 to 9, M—N—S.
Phones 5-7544 $2.98 to $4.98
would like for Marquette Univer-
sity’s publicity co-chairmen to
know that Texas Christian Uni-
versity is located in Fort Worth
—not Dallas.
A letter addressed to the Dallas
Chamber of Commerce said that
since TCU was playing Marquette
at Milwaukee Oct. 26, would
somebodv please send a Texas
flag to fly from Milwaukee’s City
Hall tower.
The Dallas Chamber dutifully
forwarded the letter to the Fort
Worth chamber. M. W. Taggart,
director of public relations for the
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Dainty feminine detailing and beautiful S Ee
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colors go hand-in-hand with comfortable #5“
styling to make these robes marvelous %8 3
buys. “28
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Hats To Top Your
New Fall
o- V.// • 5 NORTH MAIN
W9 4 • CLEBURNE TIX.
Teen-Age Ballroom
Classes Start
Thurs., Oct. 3 - 7:00 p.m.
Enroll Now
5-8455 or 5-2944
12,0
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 303, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 29, 1957, newspaper, September 29, 1957; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567645/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.