The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 8, Ed. 1 Monday, January 10, 1955 Page: 3 of 8
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Dallas Bleeder Expires [un®ral.RiIe?.He,d S.^»“ha!S.
Cam AC RfliiAl# \fr« Rrwn Mnrv !\mi.t.h * ^tatp
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Despite All Transfusions
MONDAY, JANUARY 10, 1955
THE ORANGE LEADER
RAGE THREE
S
DALLAS (API—Hubert Harris
“T* died suddenly early today to end
» week-long fight to keep blow!
, flowing through his veins -white
.doctorj; tried , to findL a way tc
keep ii there.
’ More than 160 pints of blood
had been purnped in - a steady
stream into the manufacturer, 47,
bleeding “everywhere” from a
mysterious ailment.
An autopsy as pert armed to
find the exact, cause of dhath that
came at 6:45 aim.
“It-could have oeen caused by
a heart ailment.” said Dr. Johp
Lmmert. “His heart had been un-
der a great strain. Or it could
have been from a massive hemor-
' ihage.” ' *
Harris began losing blood
through the* intestinal tract last
Monday. Two operations failed to
/ find the cause of the bleeding.
. Doctors said Harris had received
more blood transfusions consecu-
tively than any other known per-
son. , ,
Harris literally lay in a pool of
blood throughout his ordeal.
Emnit'il said most of the bleed-
ing was through the intestinal
tract. But he said Harris bled
■ through the skin, wherever he
was given a hypo, everywhere."
The exact number of pints of
Food Without Soil
Is New Prospect
By ALTON L. BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
BERKELEY; Calif. (AP)—Air
can be turned into fertilizer by
magical little algae, raising the
prospect of, growing food crops
without soil, a scientist reported
today.
Algae are one-celled plants
which grow in water, One blue-
green type of algae now is found
fo have great ability to take nitro-
gen out of the air and make it
available for growing crops.
This is the main thing that fer-
tilizers do — supply nitrogen for
growing crops.
The first success in growing rice
plants using nitrogen grabbed
from the air by the algae was de-
scribed to the American Asan. for
the Advancement of Science by
Dr. Daniel 1. Amon. department
of plant nutrition, University of
California.
The finding offers a cheap, ef-
fective war of fertilizing various
food crops. It could be of immense
aignifieance, especially in the hun-
gry Orient.
Dr. Amon added the blue-green
algae, named Anabaena cylindrica,
to rice plants, and found the rice
grew without needing nitrogen
from the soil. They got it all from
the air through the algae.
It’s long been known that cer-
tain algae can take or “fix” ni-
trogen from the air and secrete
it for the use of rice plants, or
add It to the loll when the algae
died.
But this process was thought to
be too slow to be of any real sig-
, nificance.
Dr. Amon found that under
proper conditions these algae can
take nitrogen from the air at rates
almost 200 times faster than had
been believed. The algae grow
faster than credited.
The algae get their eneig.v from
the sun. and don't need materials
from the soil in order to produce
nitrogen. They thus could be of
great importance in future agri-
culture.
1 luncheon in her honor at the club f
house, 440 6th St. in Port Arthur ___
tuesua.-, with a program- begin-; ’ . # i into the nature of wounds, and
Mrs Ro-e Mnrv Smith - state at 9 3(1 a m Mrs- Sm,lh wiU Q _ £. a J dressings by scientists of a pharm-
Veterans of Forem- Wars Auxili- a.tldres/? of the Port Ar- l/TCSSinO iCnGClSd aeeutical fifth here, Johnson A
Funeral held ,o- TO St 2'Tn'id'ev Br ALTOV LI BLAKESLEE hTOi>tjesB
which processed the hundreds of j hospital. ’ ; S of W.J?’ Mr- Sml^ vt’lU be honored at. dressings hat stick and of the fjrm will ^ w c Abbey Port Ar.
donofsj said it was an He was a retired {armer and Clarence- Faulk of Beaumont Wednesday in the home huU ^en, removed from a wound- w . thu
estimated 168 through la?t night. was a native ef Crowley, La., but ’’mS, Patinn smm o of “«• A G Eundine. 1545 Col-, or I ■■
hm ,or ,hepa''19 Vi
' sssa£*r;-**•*ss. tr^rr^s-r:uka 1 Iz&jzss&rt5:
mmWJ J m c,o,iS: « Si'S&vsas!2TJMTaTtiliSrs
J'l i i s-^M^a!iw'^SVR iSt| fixe giandchildren. • ception. ^my blood vessels. A , material is put on top of- rt. ; inclement weather and is due .to-
Emmert said they found ‘dif- j John s Methodist Church, Bu.iaL Pallbearers were Donald^,Gene. This dressing is so new it hasn't . ——:—--- j mbrrbw, Port Director J. T. Ar-
Mix p'etzel sticks “with salted ’ vet been given a name Buta it:_BoiRfig potatoes? You'JTheed’ a j ledge Said. It will load a cargo
peanuts when the teen-age crowd should be available soon for use teaspoou. of salt if you use a tfuart! of 6.000 sacks of rice destined for
wants a snack. ‘ ' " *
Painlessly RGflIOVed !t came from months of research
Dressing Perfected
By ALTON L BLAKESLEE
AP Science Reporter
NEW BRUNSWICK. N.J., Jan-
Motiricevillt Lions Slote 8
Ladies Night Dinner Today
SfAURICEVILLE (SpJ)—Mem-
bers of the Mauriceville Lions
Xlub will be host for a ladies night
dinner today at 7 Vn. ^tn - the
school cafeteria. Dinner will t>e
served by members ef the Mau-
“I think maybe it was around
160,” he said. - |c w^ . Williams. p«T3r of the
Surgedns performed a five-hour (Nor-h Qxangy> Baptist Church and
exploratory operation last night. I Rev. Bob Waters, nastnr, of , St
fused type bleeding ffom multiple was in Jett Cemetery,
areas prohibiting a surgical I Survivors are one daughter, MiJ
method of correcting” the bleedng.' John D. Self of Silsbee; two sorS
at home, in hospitals, and by the* of water.
Cuba.
Condemned Man
Claims 'No Guilt'
HUNTSVILLE (AP) — Donald
Brown, 24, convicted of pumping
three ballets into a loan collector's
head and burning the body, faces
death in the electric chair early
Wednesday, asserting “I’m not
guilty."
The redhaired former Dallas
streetcar operator said yesterday
he feels the Pardons Boa id will
commute his sentence and recom-
mend a new trial
Somebody shot Edwin Camp-
bell, 25, in the head at Dallas Dec.
31, 1953 three timds, tossed the
body into Campbell’s car, soaked
the car with gasoline and set fire
to it. The car burned a half block
from Brown’s apartment,
Campbell was a collector for a
loan company. Trial testimony
showed he called on Brown earlier
the day of the murder to collect
a past-due car payment.
Brown was , arrested in Fort
Worth where he had taken his
wife and two small daughters and
assumed another name.
Child Hurt Slightly
In Automobile Mishap
Alice Marie Hodges, 12. of 1319
4th St., was treated in the emer-
gency room of City Hospital yes-
terday for minor injuries she re-
ceived in an automobile accident
at 3rd and Park street. She was
taken to the hospital by a Claybar
ambulance.
The accident occurred when
Carl Evans Elliott Jr., of Houston,
traveling south on 2nd street in a
1951 Chevrolet, failed to grant
right-of-way to Alice Teal driving
a 1951 Mercury west on Park
street. Damages to both automo-
biles was estimated at $225.
OPRC SLATES MOVIE
The Public Parks and Recrea-
tion Commission Wednesday at 7
p.m. at the Youth* Center will
show the movie, “Kidnaped,” with
Roddy McDowell. There Is no
charge,
WE HAVE IT!
Old toil not* that rnol sir rsmlnc
thrsnfh the crack In roar window
•r amend the 4«ort* Keep cut the
cold and prevent sniffles. We hare
Weather Btrlpptnf, and (laiera (ap-
plies.
ORANGE JAJPPLY CO.
■ ■ ”*• *•**“
e restoreth uour soul
* rv.
■%
V
• J
i
•»<:’1
/
/ -jj
A
jj
Jf
h.
lkr«’* Dove Juekon and Bill
Miller. Good friends for a
Rood mony years now. They
ha*dly ever "talk” religion —
they juot always find time
to get to Services each week.
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W*»
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7
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llk
m
And there’s Susan Brown.
She’s brought Mary Lou up all
alone—her daddy was killed
in the war. Swan’s a slight
little thing, but a pillar of
vtrength. And if you ask her,
she’s not at all ashamed to
admit—she leans all right
—on the strength of God.
mm
7
V V i
Wov-
■Pijf
11
Janet and Bill were married
right in this church.
They come back every week —
as they promised they would.
“Just selfishness on our part,"
Bill says. “After all, our
life together got off to a
happy start here ,.. and we
want to keep it Ithat way!"
Worship together this week
¥
And the Wolf family here—will you just
look at those boys! They’re feeling
very grown-up and proud as punch,
going to a Service with Mom and Dad.
We are well blessed. The doors of our churche#
and synagogues are wide open ... waiting for
i.i* to enter. Set aside a time each week... a time
your soul can call its own ... a time apart
from the “busyness” of living. You’ll find ijvore
joy in each day, if you give some time each
week to worship.
And will you look at the way
Pete Taylor has grown so
straight and tall. Being in
the Service has helped him
----- grow up inside, too.
As Pete puts it, “A guy’*
never sq big, that he want*
to go it alone."
If you’ve ever been a stranger In any
town you've known lonelincsa. And you know
how comforting it t* to come upon a
church m synagogue ... where the door*
are always wide open to everyone.
CONTRIBUTED TO THE RELIGION IN AMERICAN LIFE PROGRAM BY
The Orange Leader
T~
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 8, Ed. 1 Monday, January 10, 1955, newspaper, January 10, 1955; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth557977/m1/3/: accessed April 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.