Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1946 — Page 8
~. Congress Faces Sharp Issue|
On Time Buying.
By PAUL R. LEACH Times Special Writer WASHINGTON, July 22.—~Whether to continue controls over installment selling of autos and home appliances is going to be a sharp issue in the new congress next
Buried in the recent federal reserve system report was the recommendation congress consider making permanent the wartime presidential order to FRS regulating consumer credit. Installment selling is an imfportant element in credit control.
TT
"Hawaiian Student to Enter I vu.
There was no government installment control before the war, | but the FRS now thinks of it| as an anti-inflation and business | “regularizing’ valve, An example of control need is cited in the 1936 automobile sales. Terms were made as easy as three years by some dealers. The market was oversold. In 1937 terms were tightened up considerably. A slump followed. It is argued here that if the government had been able to tighten] up in 1936 and ease a bit in 1937 there would have been. no slump. “Managed economy” politicians! want it purely as another hand on the nation's business lever. “Free economy” politicians shriek against it as meddling. Most sellers, notably automotive, favor some federal control because of the brake it puts on credit term competition within industries. This all means extended hearings by congressional committees next
year. Copyright, 1946. by The Indianapolis Times and The Chicago Daily News, Inc.
ST. ROCH’S -DANCE
St. Roch’s Catholic church will sponsor a dance Aug. 4 at the Lake]
A 17-year-old youth from Hilo, H. L, winner of a national essay contest on equitable world food distribution, will enter Indiana university in the fall to take a pre-dental course. Son of American born parents, Chinese descent, Harvey C. Chong is shown being congratulated by the mayor of Honolulu, Lester Petrie,
Tattoos Used Successfully In Branding Horses, Sheep
black ear when it matured, so colors are now being used. While identification of sheep with
may be broken by sheep and horses ,.. cored tattoos has been found with the report of successful ex-| effective, Mr. Allen says marking
By Science Service OTTAWA, July 22.—The legendary monopoly of tattoos by sailors
| periments with colored tattooing to| horses on the inside lower lip re‘mark the animals. | quires special considerations.
The C. E. Allen, associate chemist for actual tattooing of horses is rela-| the dominion department of agri- | tively simple with two men and culture here, reports blue or green {the horse placed behind a wall or| tattoos have been found to be agate. A twitch is applied t6 the good permanent identification for | upper lip and closely spaced, short, two breeds of sheep and one breed pointed needles are used. of horses tested. ! Horses are tattooed inside the been found non-toxic, and a con-|
1“Operation Everest,”
[MEN SURVIVING ALTITUBE TEST ....
Simulated Atmosphere Now At. 20,000 Feet.
*
By Science Service PENSACOLA, Fla, July 22.-— Twenty days after the start of the month long - experiment that may make oxygen masks unnecessary for high altitude flying, the navy reports that “all's well”” with the four volunteers living in controlled atmosphere now simulating appreximately 20,000 feet above sea level. One “casualty,” who was replaced in the first days of the test, was disqualified by a condition that had nothing to do with the rigors of life in the laboratory. He was found to have an individual reaction of his veins that contracted and prevented extraction of blood for / tests. Twelve days after the experiment began, doctors in charge reduced the scheduled advance of the simulated altitude in whicly the four men are living from 1000 feet a day to 500 feet. The doctors still expect to achieve the ceiling level of 29,000 feet atmospheric conditions by July 28. [After living in the 29,000 feet atmosphere for a day, the men will be brought “down” to sea ‘level conditions in two days.
Green and blue compounds have|
Chief purpose of the “high living”
is to test the physiological reactions | irradiation of the parents will have ciently to permit the twin concrete
of the human bodies in conditions found more than 25.000 feet above sea level.
MORE TIME SIGNALS TO START AUGUST 1
By Science Service WASHINGTON, July 22-—Ac-curate naval observatory time will | be radioed to the world every two {hours on the odd hour eastern | standard time beginning Aug. 1. The familiar long dash exactly on the | hour will be heard by those who
Shore Country club. Music will be lower lip, and the sheep are marked | centratél paste form of tattoo com- tune in their shortwave receivers to
furnished by Ted Campbell's orchestra. Committee members plan- | ning the dance are Mrs. Harold] Bechert, chairman; Mrs. Roman | Sauer, Mrs. Paul Fitch and Mrs.| Emmett Fromhold.
black might
on an ear, {pound is used for the horses. Colors were used for the tattoos |astringents or protective coatings | after earlier use of black marks are necessary, but the compound | were found, in some cases, to be- must set quickly. come illegible. A lamb tattooed in| Clydesdale horses were used for] be found to have a the experiments”
No|
the navy's Annapolis station. Electric power companies, navigators, scientists, astronomers and in!dustries here and abroad requested |the increase from the previous four [time signals a da¥.
DISTINGUIS
THE 1 DIANAf OLIS TIMES |
ig Home Seivice| ector Is Named
Mis ayy Alice Orosson hae | ess | home service direc [ore eg Gas & Coke | She held a similar position with
the Memphis Power and Light
Co, Memphis, Tenn. : Recently, Miss’
Crosson has been household editor of the Star, 'writing a daily column and holding cooking schools at various neighborhood theaters. The new director also was employed previously as home service director of the West Texas Gas Co., Lubbock, Tex., touring cities and towns in the Panhandle,
113 MICE SURVIVE ATOM BOMB TEST
WASHINGTON, July 22 (U.P.).— One hundred and thirteen mice, all veterans of Bikini, scampered about their cages today while science prepared te study them to determine after-effects of the atom bomb blast. Geneticists at the national cancer | institute said the rodents would be | mated to determine what effect |
' Mary Crosson
on the offspring. The mice appeared fit and frisky despite their exposure to the atomic blast. The 113 were survivors of a | {group of 120 mice that were dis- | tributed among the target ships.!
‘HAYDEN RAHM NEW | PROBATION OFFICER Hayden Rahm, 5340 Crawfordsville rd.,, has been appointed boys’ probation. officer in the Marion | county juvenile court, Judge Mark! W. Rhoads announced. Mr. Rahm, who replaces Robert! Atkinson, is a graduate of Indiana | university and had been placement | officer at the Indiana boys school. | He is a veteran of 37 months service in the army where he did psychological testing.
A
{to each submarine by “halters” en-
teflects of the atomic blast,
i] v
i
NEWEST SUBS Wliborats Safeguards 7 Taken
-
10 TEST ATOM To Protect Atom Bomb Crews
. By 8. BURTONSHEATH Scripps-Howard Staff Writer
8 Uridersea C Craft to Be. ABOARD U. 8. 8. APPALA-
CHIAN, En Route to Bikini, July Used in Bikini Blast. 22.—Eleborate precautions have been taken to protect from injury By FRANK H. BARTHOLOMEW [the 40,000 men: involved in the secUnited Press Staff Correspondent ond atom bomb test, ABOARD U. 8. . 8. APPALA-| The A-bomb will not be brought CHIAN, Off Bikini Afoll, July 22— [to Bikini until virtually everybody Three of Uncle Sam's newest sub- has been taken miles from the la~ goon, The scientific observers, the marines will be among the eight | crews of the target ships, the undersea craft submerged at varl- | transport crews, and others will be ous depths between the surface of |Stationed miles away before the Bikini lagoon and the bottom 190 [Aborbiory ship, Albemarle, steams into the lagoon with the bomb. feet below when the next atomic bomb is detonated against the tar- | Four safeguards have been taken
get fleet, Cmdr. Lawrence D. Julilin, | agpinst premature explosion.
ONE: The bomb must be “armed” Washington, D. C., revealed today. | | und py o The death squadron will enter the| nider the supervision of Aden. Par
sons, technical kw lagoon under its own power With periment, el renin ole i full crews aboard, Aided by sub “aboard the iriegel oe Ai
marine rescue vessels, crewmen will
whi i attach two 30-ton concrete blocks Ch it is to be suspended in the
water for explosion. Until this arming is done the bomb cannot
Plan Refloating You' I Miss When the blocks are in place and Y . Your Friends
the submarines ready for what may | be their last dives, all men will be taken off by rescue vessels. { The rescue vessels will then at-|
tach long hose lines to the outboard
circling the bow and stern of each — target submarine.
while you are away on vacation . . . but you don't have to miss a single local or national news story dui - ing these exciting days . . .
main ballast tanks in each sub- : J if you choose one of The marine .and fill the tanks suffi- Times popular plans for vacationers. blocks to drag the submarines bow ia downward until the blocks rest on ci the bottom of the lagoon. * We'll-gladly mail you your Times anywhere in the
If submarine hulls, which are Jhe strongest seagoing hulls of any type not excepting battleships, withstand the | target boats may slip their halters land rise to the surface. Otherwise! divers will go down from rescue | vessels and attach hawsers to any
United States or Canada or your carrier will be glad to save your papers at the station and deliver them in one neat bundle on the day you return. The youngsters will go for this plan because
submarine which has not. been re- they won't miss a single duced to junk. Rescue tugs will day . "with their favorite pump in air to bring them to the comics. surface. s8 a ® Make arrangements for SPONSOR BOX SOCIAL either plan with your car-
The Irvington Democratic club will sponsor a box social Thursday at the Ettinger's, 5790 E. Michigan st. Boxes of food will be auctioned.
rier when he collects this week, or call RI-ley 5351 and ask for Cireulation— right now while you think of it
NTS
When starlight and music create an aura of romance, you're beautiful
the crowning touch is your slightly sophisticated perfume . .
be exploded even though radio impulses are present. TWO:. Between the antenna which picks up the radio impulses and the detonator under water are some clocks number not announced. These are like time clocks on a bank vault door. They are set to “unlock” a series of protective devices. Although their nature is not stated it is believed they open and close electrical éircuits, So long as the hands of the clocks remain in the green or “safe” sector —as they: will be set when the trigger ship is abandoned—the current cannot flow from the antenna to the detonator. When the hands of the clocks reach the red sector, Just prior to the intended detonation tinfe, radio impulses can reach the detonator. But this does no: complete the, system, THREE: A series of radio signals, not one which might be caused accidentally, but a series constituting a sort of code must be trans- | mitted to a bomb to complete its | arming and make it ready for the | final step, | FOUR: Finally, from a ship out= | side the lagoon, Marshall Holloway, {of Ithaca, N. Y., young huclear physicist who was ‘one of the origiio group in the Los Alamos lab|oratory wheye the first atom bomb | was built will throw a switch which | starts another clock. This is the final step. All the radio circuits have been closed and the bomb armed. Thirty seconds after Mr. Holloway pulls the switch an impulse leaps through | the air, is picked up by the anten{na on the trigger ship and is trans- | mitted through wires to the deto- | nator. That fires the bomb and the | most terrible force ever invented 3 released. >
MUSIC STUDENT ENROLLS Miss Carolyn Schmidt, 5110 Win|throp ave, is enrolled for the sum(mer term at the Cincinnati Con|servatory of Music. She will study J trumpet, harmony, band and band
“Iclinic classes there.
| FAMILY REUNION SET | Falls Park, Pendleton, will be the {scene of the Sears family reunion Sunday.
—————
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Barbara, 4; I Mr. and Mrs, Barbara Field William Field
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