Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 December 1940 — Page 14
DIRT DAMAGES GASOLINE SHIPS
Care Should Be Taken to|
Keep It From Tank And Air Intake.
By DAVID MARSHALL
~. Many model plane pilots who have | ;
gasoline-powered ships = often are
puzzled when their motors lose]
power and fail to “rev” up. Before blaming the manufacturer for putting “lemons” on the market, perhaps they should check to see if they always were careful fo keep dirt from getting into the cylinder of the little engine. :
. Jim - Walker, designer of the American Junior Aircraft Ce.’s Fireball (a small gas job which is maneuvered by wires as it circles its operator) has had a lot of experience. with model motors. He spent three years perfecting the Fireball, which uses a Class B en- + gine, and in that time he has worn out enough power plants to know all about them.
Small Particle Harmful
Jim says that the smallest granual of sand inside the cylinder can score the piston and make the en-
gine lose compression. He believes that one of the greatest improvements which motor manufacturers could make, and one which probably will be made soon, is the addition of an air cleaner and a fuel cleaner as standard equipment on: all model motors. Most dirt finds its way into a motor through the air intake when the flier uses a dirty finger to choke it. Some fliers even use scraps of balsa’ fo cover the air intake and choke the motor. Buf Mr. Walker - is always more careful. . He wipes his hands on a towel before going to work on his engines.
Fuel Needs Straining
Another source through which dirt enters the motor is the gas tank. All the fuel mixture should be strained through chamois and all funnels and containers it passes through need cleaning with gasoline. Before putting any fuel into the motor’s tank, Mr. Walker always drenches the top of it and the cap, to wash away any grit. The wide-open exhaust manifolds of most engines fake im a lot of dirt in event of a crash or hard landing on soft ground. When this happens, take care that the .propeller and confqentiy the piston is not moved until you can clean off the bulk of the’outside dirt and dip the engine, just as it is, in gasoline.
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12 Months Dressing 12 Dolls
Mrs. R. F. Hanger. . . . It is better to give than to receive.
GIFTS TO CHEER
I¥'s All Greek To Italians, Too
By Science Service WASHINGTON, Dec. 12— Greeks battling Italians in Albania are driving toward places with names hard for American tongues to master at first glance. For practice in discussing progress of the Greek war, try these: Argyrokastron, now occupied by Greeks: Are-ye-roe’-kas-tron. : Tirana, Albanian capital: Teh-rah’-nah, ‘Valonia, Albania BeRpOrt, important air base to Italy: Va-low’'-nah. Durazzo, chief seaport: Doo-raht’-so. Albania: Al-bay’-nee-ah. Tepelini, in line of southern Greek advance: Teh-peh-lay’-nee. Elbasani, on the road to Tirana: El-bah-sah’-nee. Berat, Italian air base: Bay-rat.’ Khimara, southern port: Khee-
mah’-rah, with aspirate Kh like German ch,
DRY LEADER OPENS LIQUOR WAR ANEW
WESTERVILLE, O., Dec. 12 (U. P)—Dr. Howard H. Russell, cofounder of the Anti-Saloon League, celebrated his 85th birthday recent-
ly: by launching a new temperance
campaign. Dr. Russell, despite his age, an-
, (nounced he would spend five years
among national and state temperance leagues in a drive to raise $1,500,000 for temperance education. He emerged from retirement to direct what he termed “a real reorganization movement.” Dr. Russell helped found the
Hook’s, Haag’s and drugstores everywhere. ritalin sta Sata nthe iho Init id ait
5 E. Wash. St. and 3 s. Meridian’ St.
Anti-Saloon League in May, 1893. Se hg Ee andy HO
PRICE -SMASHING
Sale!
Regularly
2 and *2-%
Reduced To
| 3 DRESSES
+
For Street! J Dress Up! Business!
We believe you will find this the most outstanding dress sale in the city—come early tomorrow! All types, all colors, and all materials you like best . . . . and best of all it’s ‘your greatest
‘chance
to save!
ing ahh TH
ARES rene resi rachel
{ 3 1 hg
: City Hospital and in return she re-
FORMER AN
Follows Another Witness Who Says Christ Visited: Cult Artist. :
LOS ANGELES, Dec. 12 (U.-P.). —Carl Pierce, former associate of the late Guy Ballard, founder of I Am, was called today to testify in the mail fradd trial of Mrs. Ballard and nine other leaders of the
| sect.
RILEY PATIENTS
Mrs. R. F. Hanger Follows _ Custom for at Least Eight Years.
By TIM TIPPETT
Most of us complete our Christmas shopping in those last few hurried days but not so with Mrs. R. F. Hanger, 3628 Forest Manor.
She spends 12 months preparing her gifts. Each spare moment during each day of the year will find Mrs.
dolls—soon to be in the arms of children at Riley Hospital. One doll a month is her record and “sometimes I'm ahead and sometimes a little behind schedule,” she said. Mrs, Hanger, who makes all her own clothes, eight or 10 years ago began making doll dresses as a hobby and “because it’s more difficult to make small things.” e *
All Uniform Size
The dolls which she purchases are all uniform except that some are blonds and some brunets. This year they are ’teen aged. Their supposed ages run from 13 to 19 years old. The playclothes that they wore at the time of purchase are neatly folded and wrapped in tiny Christmas packages which are ribhoned to their wrists. Then comes the fruit of Mrs. Hanger’s labor. They are dressed in crocheted gowns which are stitched perfectly to the smallest detail, The dresses, like the dolls, are uniform except for the color. “The time I spend making the dresses would be wasted otherwise,” modest Mrs. Hanger said. Her husband, who" tries to hide how proud he is of his wife’s sewing, denies ‘having. anything to do
ever, she said that he has a lot to do with it. Mrs. Hanger thinks every year that maybe she won’t bother with the dolls next year. But’ next year she’ll be making 12 more children happy and we think we know: why.
Children Grateful Last year she gave six dolls to ceived this letter: \
“Pear Mrs. Hanger: “We received your pretty dolls.
We like their pretty clothes in @if-|
ferent colors. We have named them Jean, Joan, Eunice, Shirley, Mary and Alice, They will live in our school room. We will play. with them and write stories about them. Thank yoti very much’ for giving them to us. We love them very much. “Yours very truly, - “The Boys and Girls of City Hospital.” Another letter includes this senfence, written by a little girl” at Riley Hospital: I. got the one in the blue dress. I named her Kathleen. I love her very much.”
Fails in Attenipt . To End Own Life
LOGANSPORT, Ind, Dec. 12° (U. P.)—An unidentified man who started to commit suicide should be nursing a cold today, Yesterday he leaped from a 14foot embankment into the Wabash River with a large stone tied to his neck with a rope. 2 : But either the water was too cold or too shallow, because a witness sa whim trudge back out of | the knee-deep water, untie the stone .and walk off. He had disappeared when police parTived,
Here's Easy Time Tested Gt at ro To Get Relief
Hanger crocheting dresses for 12}
with the presents she makes. How- |
Government attorneys said they had called Pierce to testify that Ballard was a man of less than moderate means until he founded the sect, which the Government alleges mulcted its 1,000,000 followers throughout the United States of
$3,000,000 in contributions and sale of books, pamphlets, charms and other paraphernalia represented to teach and contain spiritual power. Ballard, although claiming that he was ‘the reincarnation of St. Germaine, early French, theologist, and that'he had learned the secret of immortality, died in 1839. Mrs. Ballard, her son; Donald, also a defendant, and others carried on. A former business manager of the oFganization, Max Gysi, testified late yesterday that Ballard told him Jesus Christ: appeared in person to pose for a portrait by artist Charles Sindelar, one of the defendants. “Jesus came to the Royal Teton Mountains and posed for the -portrait for 21 days—at 2 o’clock each morning, ” Gysi said Ballard’ told him. Gysi said I Am sold thousands of copies of the. portrait at “a large
WAR RUINS TRADE
LEADER CALLED |
| surrender,” exclaimed Byron Gold-
‘| march, Italy entered the war and people]
"FOR WINE MERCHANT
. COLUMBUS, o, Dee, un . P). —“T can’t fight the whole of Europe
smith, several ‘thousand’ miles away
First came the Spanish civil war, Columbus citizens took sides and Spanish wines were boycotted. The public boycott was’ extended to Rhine wines when Hitler began to
shunned 'Goldsmith’s Italian wines, Italy blockaded Greece and stopped exports of Grecian wines.
from military hostilities: as. he closed | § |up his Columbus wine store.
{and very little P “Ito Goldsmith's ‘store. : i, “victim” of “unsettled interna-
tional conditi
Is Your fiver Asleep?
Do You Drag ‘Out of Bed and Drag
Pep?
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ME FOUR KINDS OF NS SONG TITLES
T M. REG U.S. PAT OFF.
ANSWER~—Carolina Moon, Wabash Moon, Pale Moon, Harvest Moon.
MRS. SMITH MAK
ES A DISCOVERY!
DON'T KNOW WHAT T0 DO
YOU MUST BE A NEWCOMER * MERE, MRS. SMITH -, .WE USE
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IT SAVES SOAP
AND DOES BEAUTIFUL WORK
ENGINEER SURVEYS LIPSTICK |neering student, declares after a seIOWA CITY, Dec. 12 (U. P.).—|ries of experiments “just to satisfy The lipstick -used by ‘an’ average my curiosity.” A 250-foot line could woman in a single year would draw be painted with a year’s supply. of a quarter-inch line 600 feet,’ Joel fingernail polish, his computations
profit.”
Ferrell, University . of - Towa - engi- |show.
ee es
FLOOR LAMPS—BRIDGE LAMPS
A i 2-Day Event—Friday and Saturday!
WHITER WASH Use less soap and get § rich, lone 8
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