Indianapolis Times, Volume 46, Number 48, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 July 1934 — Page 10
PAGE 10
SCIENCE TO AID STRATOSPHERE PILOTS IN FEAT Delicate Instruments Will Record Mysteries of Upper Air. ‘Copvrigh’ 1934. bv St;enr Arrirfl RAPID CITY. S. D. Juiv 6 Ascension into the upper air still holds the attraction of romance and mystery in the unknown. When the new stratosphere balloon of the National Geographic Society and the United States army air corps climbs slowly fifteen miles up to the vestibule of space here shortly, it wil carry beneath it nearly a ton of sensitive scientific instruments. As small wheels revolve and prevision cameras automatically click tell-tale records of scales and meters into photoaraphicimmortality. the shallow etching; now on the surface of stratosphere knowledge will be deepened, perhaps, into a rough picture from which additional facts and assumptions about the air above our heads may be drawn. The bag itself, three acres of rub-ber-impregnated cloth, bearing Captain A. W. Stevens and Major W. E. Kepner, will contain nearly half as much gas as the dirigible Macon, and will be five times as large as the one used for the Settle-Fordney flight in 1933. At the altitude of the small amphitheater in the Black Hills of South Dakota from which the flight is to start, the hydrogen which the baloon is to contain will only distend it to one-tenth of the full size it will asume in the more rarefied atmosphere fifteen miles or so above the earth. Air Valve a Feature Hanging to the balloon and 300 feet below its top will be the comparatively small gondola housing all the apparatus for observing phenomena of the upper air and for controlling as far as possible the motion of the balloon itself. In this gondola are many small windows, sealed into the w’alls to prevent leakage of air. Through the bottom is an aperture through which an aerial camera, built especially for the purpose, will take exposures straight down every minute and a half. At the expected ceiling of the flight each picture will show an area of 150 square miles. Nine such pictures would include the entire state of Rhode Island. Many new devices, hitherto unknown in stratosphere ascensions, will be employed in the coming flight. Among these is a pressure relief valve. The older method of pulling a rope has been eliminated by an invention of Captain Stevens which permits the hydrogen contentwof the bag to be released at will by an air-valve in the gondola. "F.lectrie Brain" at Work An "electric brain ’’ will operate j the large aerial camera and also set j off three smaller cameras inside, which photograph readings of two barometers, the face of a watch, a j compass and a thermometer. An- j other camera will take pictures of ! thermometers which record electrically the temperature of the outside air. Shields protect thermometers from radiation, and tiny elec-
CONSTIPATION LEADS TO FORTY AILMENTS DECLARES AUTHORITY
Sick Headaches. Painful Bloated Feeling: in Lower Stomach and Rheumatic Affliction Arise From Closed Intestinal Tract. Science Introduces New Medicine That W orks W ith the Food We Eat, Called Indo-Yin; Costs Only Few C ents Daily. Anew mixture of Medical Ingredients has been found which has a natural action upon the bowels and stomach. It is not a cure-all. not a •patent’ medicine, but a scientific formula that works with the sufferers own food, known as Indo-
iVin. now being introduced to crowds 'daily here in InIdianapolis by The jlndo-Vin Man in person at Hook's iDrug Store. Illinois and Washington S’s. Several prominent residents were among the first to purchase this medicine and actual reports ip r o v e it has helped 87 per rent 'of those who have taken it.
I JT' i'Y I#s* w
G. H. Mosbr
Yesterday a well-known medical authority stated that forty of mankind s serious ailments were directly traceable to constipation and that city drinking water often helps lead to this common affliction. Many people who have taken Indo-Vin say it is the first medicine that really relieved constipation and produced natural bowel action. What Indo-Yin Is It is the world's newest medicine, containing a combination of ingredients found in no other known formula. These ingredients mix with the food in one's stomach, thus throwing off the poisons that foster stomach troubles and permitting the liver and bowels to function properly. It will cleanse your bowels gradually—not drastic or severe < I as they were never cleansed before and tone them into better daily action. It will bring out awful gases and impurities (frequently from the first dose* which may have been inside,
REBEKAHS TO INSTALL
* Mi
Miss Caroline Wittenbring New r\oble grand of Mozart Rebekah lodge. Independent Order of Odd Fellows, will be Miss Caroline Wittenbring. who will be inducted into office Friday night, July 13. at the lodge hall. Prospect and South East streets. Mrs. Pearl McDonald will be Installed as vice-grand. trie fans circulate air under the shields to obviate inaccurate readings. Other recording instruments measure the brightness of sunlight and skylight. Twelve hours are to be consumed during the flight, four to ascend, four in the stratosphere and four to come down. In case ice formation makes the balloon's descent too rapid after all ballast has been dropped, or if anything goes wrong with the bag itself, a huge parachute built three years ago at Wright field and since used to drop whole airplanes to the ground, will lover the gondola gently to earth. It will be lashed to the outside of the gas-filled bag and kept ready for emergencies. Another safety device is an air cushion fitted to the bottom of the gondola, to lessen the jar of landing. In the event of further trouble, both Captain Stevens and Major Kepner have their own parachutes. Two portholes have been especially designed in the metal shell of the sphere to permit of a hasty exit. Soviet Cotton Crop Poor S’J I uitrri m ** MOSCOW, July 6—The cotton rrop in the central Asian section of the Soviet union probably will fail below expectations because of a latp season, poor cultivation and planting and insects, it w r as officially announced today.
Ml swciaU THE PEOPLES DENTISTS 36'<i W. WASHINGTON ST.
H INNER-SPRING MATTRESS Any S'*®—Q jj WHITE FURNITURE CO. 213-249 H. MASH. ST.
STOMACH
Common Constipation. Frequently the Cause of Skin Eruptions. Bad Breath. Sleeplessness and Loss of Vitality.
you for a long time, contaminating your blood and inner-organs, spreading this poison over your system in general and causing you many days of misery with headaches, dizzy spells, skin eruptions, exhausted feelings, bad breath, broken sleep and rheumatic affliction.’ Indo-Vin w-ill clear your stomach and intestines of old gas. sourness, fermentation and other impure matter' which often forms a coatinc on the linings, frequently being the real cause of stomach ’’trouble." Cleansing out these quantities of impure substances permits freer flow of the digestive juices, makes the digestive organs sweet and clean and gives complete relief from indigestion. gas. bloating, palpitation from gas. sour stomach, shortness of breath, lump in stomach and dyspepsia. This is no mere tablet, pill or salts, and not a powder, syrup or capsule and it does not contain alcohol or a single habit-forming drug, but it is a scientific LIQUID mixture from 21 Medicinal Plants, all blended into one remarkable compound. It contains more ingredients than perhaps three ordinary medicines put together. and has astounded community after community. While it is being introduced in Indianapolis every suffering person can take it at the small cost of only a few cents a day. So if bowel trouble. or stomach distress, is bringing you misery it would certainly be a mistake not to try it. The Indo-Vin Man is now at Hook’s Drug Store. Illinois and Washington Sts., daily meeting the public and introducing and explaining this great new formula of natures finest medicinal ingredients. —Advertisement.
CITY MAN DIES IN AUTO CRASH William Cox, 50, B. & 0. Employe, 65th Victim in County. William Cox. 50, of 4253 East Twenty-first street, was injured fatally yesterday afternoon at Thir-i tv-fourth street and Emerson avenue when an automobile he was 1 driving figured in collision with a
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THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
! car driven by Miss Catherine Cor-
don, 40, of 5116 East Michigan street. Mr. Cox, for many years an employe of the Baltimore & Ohio railroad, was driving
(65
east on Thirty-fourth street when the collision occurred. Miss Cordon was going north on Emerson avenue. Miss Edna Owen. 24. of 2120 North Wallace street, who was riding with Mr. Cox, also was injured. Both were thrown from the car. Mrs. Mary Cordon. 72, of the East Michigan street address, a passenger in the other car, suffered slight head bruises. Funeral services for Mr. Cox will be held at 9 tomorrow in the St.
Francis de Sales church, of which he was a member. Burial will follow in St. Joseph's cemetery. Surviving Mr. Cox, whose death was the sixty-fifth traffic fatality in Marion county this year, are his widow. Mrs. Mathilda Cox; two daughters. Miss Mary Cox and Miss Margaret Cox, and six sons, Fred, William, Raymond. Marion. Maurice and Robert Cox. All are residents of Indianapolis. Youngstown Suffers 550.000 Fire YOUNGSTOWN, 0., July 6.—A spectacular fire which tied up downtown traffic and for a time threatened an entire city block, destroyed the Oles market here last night with damage estimated at $50,000.
DARROW BOARD QUITS Recovery Review Group Gets Final Notice of Dismissal. By United Fret * WASHINGTON. July 6. The Darrow recovery review board, already virtually disbanded, received its formal notice of dismissal from President Roosevelt today.
AT KIRK’S • Leonard Refrigerator • Boss-Zenith Washing Machine • 2 Years to Pay |f | D |f Fnrnitnre IV I l\ Companr
If— —ELIMINATE THE GUESS WORK 1 ( I^—HAVE AN ACCURATE EYE TEST——I M WEAR GLASSES ________________ THAT ARE REALLY B lIKHIMIM. m g|sj jgffigP Trrnii \ I"" V ‘ U See our ,i l /Rfjffl/j'/t 113 W - Wash ’ 1
TRY A WANT AD IN THE TIMES. THEY WILL BRING RESULTS.
.JULY 6, 1934
