The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 94, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 22, 1964 Page: 7 of 20
twenty pages : ill. ; page 24 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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“'it 11 jiiMlViliif'OBInSf^T '^~rrr.'* • * - ••• •" *<{- ' * ' '
SIDEWALK BAZAAR
PARTICIPANTS
Askew A Buford Dru* Store
. i • *;»
A*hcroft-Wil*on Ford Solo*, Inc.
•' 4?-, '
A. B. Ardis Motor Co.
■S^dW^MAas^ . g« -• V r'HV. ** • 'f- «
Bool* Pontiac-Old*-€edilloc
Brookshire’s
Boboock Bros.
BooU’s
, c
City Nst|on«] Book
Daniel’s Specialty Shop
Duke A Ayres
Eddtns Shoe Repair
and Western Wear
Elisa’s
Gay Studio
Gram* Dm* Store
Gober St Morrell Cher., lac.
Haynsworth Jewelers
J. C. Penney Co.
KfakV
La tuner’s Shoe Store
Levine’s
Maddo* Motor Co.’
Myers Dodge
Marshall’s
Morris Super Market
Nelson Pharmacy
People* National Bank
Pi«*ly Wi*«ly
Perry Bros.
Pratt’s Federated
Quickie Foods
Sulphur Springs State Bank
Sulphur Springs Furniture Co.
Steele’s Shoe Store
Sulphur Springs Part*
Shelton Baton* Company
Southwest Sanitary Company
• Sear* Roebuck A Co.
Tuck’s Jawehry
Tapp Furniture Co.
Tyler’s TV -
Thornton’* Flowers
Western Auto Associate Store
White Auto Store
alk Bazaar to Offer
Unusual Shopping Features
^Sulphur Springs «kter-
of spring values in an un-
usual form Thursday wf*
the first Sidewalk Bazai
ever conducted here in re-
cent years at least.
Fifty-four business
firms nave joined force*
in sponsoring the event,
including some that art
not in the merchandising
field but which wanted to
help with the project.
Merchant* are devoting
an unusual degree of en-
thusiasm to the event with
a giant array of bargains
being featured in adver-
tisements in this newspa-
per issue.
Firet quality merchan-
dise will be featured in the
sale. Much of it was or-
dered especially for the
occasion.
Because of the limited
space available for side-
walk displays, most mer-
chants are planning an
“outside - inside1’ ap-
proach. Specials offered
on the sidewalk will be
supplemented with others
inside the stores.
New automobile deal-
ers will present a display
of thfeir latest models on
the downtown square.
Several dealers also are
offering special transpor-
tation service to help
shoppers solve downtown
parking problems. They
sprovide parking space on
their lots, drive shoppers
down town and take them
back whenever they are
ready to leave.
Business firms partici-
pating in the Sidewalk
Bazaar are offering three
U.S. Savings Bonds with
face values totaling $200
as prizes for the occasion.
Shoppers may register
for the contest at any par-
ticipating store. No pur-
chase is necessary. Dead-
line for registrations is 4
p.m.
WELCOME
TO SULPHUR SPRINGS
Sidewalk Bazaar
Scientists Seek
Ways to Treat
Eye Diseases
Atlanta (A—Imagine an en-
closed bathtub slowly filling
with water, After water reach**
the brim, pressure begin*
building inside the covered tub.
Thin la what the eye of •
person stricken with glnacom*
k like—a vessel with excess
fluid and s serious inability
to drain the liquid.
Scientists at Emory Univer-
sity believe they’ve found •
wty to reduce this pressure
which causes glaucoma’s char-
acteristic hardening of the eye-
balls.
Dr. Merton Waitxmann, head
the eye research center in
the department of ophthalmo-
logy, says, “We believe we’ve
found a drug that will retard
the chemical mechanisms in the
eye which produce too much
fluid.”
The drug is oubain, usually
taken internally for treatment
of heart disease. rDr. Waitz-
man administerd oubain into
the eyes of rabbits and later
measurements showed the eyes
were softer.
Dr. Waitzman says that 5 to
10 per cent of
population past 40 either suf-
fers from glaucoma or has la-
tent traces of the disease.
Waitzmann says use of his
discovery is pending follow-up
work onl secondary harmful ef-
fects. Oubain injections will
not eliminate glaucoma but will
improve the arsenal of surgical
and drug treatments, he says.
Often patients become unre-
sponsive to specific treatments.
Dr. Waitzman says he is the
first to report suceess after
local oubain administration.
Another scientist at Emory,
Dr. John F. R. Kuck Jr.
is investigating the chemical
changes in the lens of the eye
that leads to cataracts. The
breakdown of lens structure is
due to an accumulation of ab-
normal sugar in the lens.
Treatment of cataracts is
limited to surgery and the wear-
ing of **thiek tens afterwards.
Dr. KucV has already found
that changes in the diet can
affect the lens composition in
eyes of old animals. He is seek-
ing a drug treatment for cat-
aracts. The problem is most
serious in elderly persons.
Hunting accidents in the
South have caused another eye-
problem of operating on hunt-
ers who have lead shot in their
eyes.
Diabetic retinopathy, another
eye disease which often strikes
fering also is under study at
Emory.
Waitzman believes the pres-
ence or absence of an unknown
substance circulating in the
blood causes retinopathy. He
says that the eye disease will
often appear before bodily
diabetes occurs. He is trying to
find the chemical or drug that
can treat changes in the blood
vessels that feed the retina.
First p r i z e is a bond I features, the Sidewalk
with a face value of $100. | Bazaar is expected to at-
Second and third prizes! tract a banner crowd of
are $50 bond*. shoppers to take advant-
The contest will be con- age of the exceptional
ducted downtown at 4 :30 values offered and to
p.m. j take part in the fun of
With all its unusual outdoor barpaip hunting.
QUEEN LENDS NAME
London (J!—Queen Elizabeth,
the Queen Mother, is serving in
the honorary position of patron
of the Keep Britain Tidy froup,
England’s counterpart of Keep
America Beautiful, the U. S.
antilitter organizations. Her
majestiy’s name occupies a
prominent place on the agency’s
literature.
Sidewalk Specials
Costume Jewelry
PRICE
1
2
10% DISCOUNTS
On All Men’s Van Heusen
SPRING SHIRTS
& Women’s Ready-to-Wear
Come in and Register for FREE
Prizes!
nation’s diabetics
20-25 years suf-
WE CORDIALLY INVITE YOU TO
, STOP BY AND REGISTER FOR
FREE PRIZES
TO BE GIVEN AWAY ON THE SQUARE
mM - A
I
FREE PARKING
£
■
You can park your car on our lot while you are at-
tending the Sidewalk Bazaar and we will furnish
you a FREE ride to town and pick you up for the
return trip.
We realize parking apace down town will be scarce
during this event and we are glad to offer this serv-
ice to anyone who deairo* it. Also, if your car need*
tome service, it can be taken care of while you are
f‘ STOP IN AND SEE US!
... vs# . >.»
Boys’
Tennis Shoes
Boy*’
Wash and Wear and Dres*
PANTS
4^
% mf
* S’’
———dsaas
rappan
COPPERTONE
GAS RANGE
FIRST TIME EVER
AT THESE
LOW, LOW PRICES
A cooking c.nter to
briftltM your heart...
ss* your kitchen ...s
*■ rang* test lots you
bo the cook you Vo *J-
Men’s
Straw Hats
otor Co
nwK
ALSO TABLE OF WEARING APPAREL
AT VERY SPECIAL PRICES
ihctSftej
SIDEWALK
BAZAAR
BARGAINS
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Frailey, F. W. & Woosley, Joe. The Daily News-Telegram (Sulphur Springs, Tex.), Vol. 86, No. 94, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 22, 1964, newspaper, April 22, 1964; Sulphur Springs, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth824940/m1/7/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Hopkins County Genealogical Society.