Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 26 August 1946 — Page 13

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MONDAY, AUG. 26, 1946

POWDERED COAL

TO PULL TRAINS |

Allis-Chalmers Reveals New | Gas Turbine. |

MILWAUKEE, Aug. 26 (U. P.).— |! Development of a gas turbine which | will drive ‘locomotives fueled by || coal ground to the fineness of face: powder has been announced today | by Allis-Chalmers Co. i Company officials said the firm expects to yun tests on the new type locomotive within two years. Ordinary coal will be pulverized | and shot directly into a combustor to be burned under high pressure, officials said. Super-heated gasses at 1300 degrees fahrenheit will drive a generator which in turn will power electric motors. The mo- | tors will furnish the motive power. The company said the drive system will have a shaff efficiency of | about 24 per cent, making the unit “the most efficient single-shaft gas | turbine in this country.” The coal-burning gas turbine locomotive is a project of Bituminous Coal Research, Inc. which granted |

Allis-Chalmers a contract for its Most people have to get out into the

development, the company said. Cc

‘Giant Navy Transport to Carry 180 People AID IN DISASTER Sn T0 BE SPEEDED

Red Cross Prepared by Weather Reports.

By NEA Service WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—Let the hurricanes blow. The Red Cross and the weather bureau are ready. This is the heart of the hurricane season, If and when ‘a big blow strikes, the Red Cross expects to be on the scene this time, before—not after, Weather bureau reports on all possible threats of disaster stemming from weather conditions are being fed into Red Cross centers throughout the country so that advance preparations can be made. Minute-by-minute storm reports will let the Red Cross know where | to set up its shelters, where to asAbove is one of the first pictures of the navy's huge new transport plane, with data recently dis- | sign extra medical and nursing perclosed after three years of official silence. Navy at one time had 50 on order, but at war's end, cut back Sonnet utd Where to start evacuatto two... Overall cost of the two ships, including en peri y s ,000,000, 92- ' pu Thal ii Vt 1 he fw P ding gineering and tooling, was $27,000,000. The 92-ton . "Today the ' organization's 2300 - i ———— | chapters are prepared, on short -nofrom] tice, to house and feed 4,500,000 dis- | aster victims in 40,000 shelters. way of his tavern when he saw a Kowalik's gun made him eligible for| How It Will Work

‘a 4 ; . . Here is how it will work when the ountry to hunt fox Andrew red fox ambling down the busiest'a fox bounty. - I need arises:

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o nn FOX COMES TO HUNTER Kowalik was sitting in the door- street in town. One shot

SILVER LAKE, Wis. (U P,).—

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The weather bureau picks up a storm report and watches it move slowly northward toward the south. ern coastal region of the United States, Observers, chartmen and forecasters will “chaperone” (its course and give it elaborate advance billing. . Telephone reports pf the storm's progress come night and day to disaster headquarters as the storm develops. These reports are relayed to area offices in Atlanta, Ga.; Alexandria, Va.; New York City, St. Louis, Mo, and San Francisco, Cal. Area offices in the danger zone {alert all chapters which in turn | start making preparations and call out relief committees. | At the same time, trained disaster personnel are rushed from area and national headquarters to strategic points to get things started before the storm hits. By the time the hurricane has arrived, so has the Red Cross. ! The plan worked earlier this {year when the coast guard and navy in assault boats helped rush | relief workers into flood areas along the Gulf coast. Even heli | copters and “walkie-talkies” were {used in some. sectors. Since 1880, there have been 158 major hurricanes and more than 600 floods within the U. 8. In its growing battle against weather disasters, the weather bureau now maintains 550 airways stations and 250 off-airways stations. Disaster Tolls Cut It has developed radar patterns of storms. A telemeter circuit has been set up between three hurricane forecast centers: Miami, | Washington and Boston. The weather bureau even keeps track of areas that may be “ripe” for forest fires. Ability of the Red Cross to move

diSaster tolls during recent years. Death toll of the 1926-28 Florida hurricane was tremendous. In a storm just as violent last September, only four persons died. Volunteers, working 24 hours a day, succeeded in evacuating all residents from all Florida Keys in the storm’s path. The new system is expected to provide even more complete advance information with which to plan relief work.

B-17 Crew Gets A Together Again CHICAGO, Aug. 26 (U. P).= Six fliers who looked at death together kept a rendezvous today. They were crew members of the B-17, “Heaven Can Wait,” -which almost went down in flames on their 12th mission over Schweinfurt, Germany. Before beginning the 13th mission, Pilot Anderson, Bryan, O., then a captain, suggested “if we live through 18 more missions, let's get together every year back in the States.” They agreed. The 11-man crew “sweated out” all 30 missions. Six of them, one "still in the army, kept the date today. 7 After they returned to the State, “Heaven Can Wait” blew

up over Hamburg, Germany, kill« ing its new crew.

FLAGS OF MILITIA WILL BE PICTURED

COLUMBUS, O., Aug. 26 (U.P.). —Battle flags carried by national guard divisions in world war II will be preserved by photographic records for the first time in the nation's history. Before the flags are returned to COATS their home states for individual MMED Armistice day ceremonies, two photographs of each, one in color and ££! one in black and white, will be . made and stored in the East Columbus depot, the only flag storage depot in the country. More than 25,000 battle flags have been collected there for photographers. Not only national guard emblems, but regular army and reserve division banners, are in the collection,

"On the Job —or

———————————— ——

79.95 boys are back,

" at the says now th gracetu

hy " magazine says ing for Lat fp Charm ug And they re 90 rh pretty touches 0) M JULY STORE SALES ~ 1, , going 5155+ . , coats Da 1705 9-15. RG 5 are le fitted and {emnine Cc favorites 'n junior sist h as these wo belted chortie coal:

ch 2 on imme ABOVE LAST YEAR n | ¢ bove—Mau'o een. vr and cutis. A In beige i ¥ with fur agllar a gov Sales for 98 retail stores in Belted. fitted coal. Indianapolis dropped 4 per cent in Below n beige and green: July below those made in June, the ° : « i 1 * census bureau reported today. sir The local stores, however, showed “IB. G.—Business Tow Septem | a gain of 50 per cent in July over 8 ’

sales made in that month last year. In other Indiana towns and cities the census bureau reported a 45-per-cent gain in dollar sales for 793 independent retail stores, exclusive of department stores. Twenty - two department stores

i r Get your invitation now fo ber 5 at B i. lore 007. fhe In] Bure, second fl

a dh e Shop, surveyed recorded July sales this iil . Colley year 31 per cent above the same INE : ’ - month last year, - . "® a . : Ska . ; » : \ A A

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