Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 June 1947 — Page 3
visory aautics, aud enm authority; T. Caution admin- ¢ federal agency e for alr safety, ngineer: H. B, erican Alrlines and representa. y pilots -associa-
s Identified . Acene of the ll had not been e identity had r 37 victims, in- » Bryan, Ladoga, fant daughter,
0 army plane week-end. At today national it 12° charred the t of t A B-29, lost in d headlong into y ded. bt. Knox, Ky. mes, but its 20 i almost ununnamed army escape hatch.
Office of
Cathedral high idian st, over1 office desk of es said, indow on the ind the glass in r smashed,
. |
ge >
Chinchbugs Aho
Suffer From Water “By ‘Solence Service bv
‘WASHINGTON, June 16 ~The everlasting rainclouds in the Midwest show one scrap of silver lining, The wetness has been tough on two .of the worst Insect foes of
grainfields—grasshoppers and
chinchbugs. In an ordinary Year, mid-June
gees grasshoppers hatching in swarms and invading the fields, | there to feed on whatever they find ~—wheat, corn, alfalfa, soybeans or what have you. Chinchbugs,, very tifiy but in their uncountable billions vastly destructive, are more selective, feeding ply oa grain ung grasses. But both like heat, ai both find drought an ideal climate for their way of life, Gels Worst Weting This year in the Midwest there has been precfous little heat and no
diought at all. And entomologists
of the U. 8. department of agriculture report no grasshopper trouble east of Idaho and New Mexico. As for the chinchbugs, their national headquarters, the area from which their big raids start in dry
* years, has been getting its deepest.
wetting in years.
This is the spot where Kansas,
E. Joan Bryant Barbara Elliott
B. Mattingly
WIN SCHOLARSHIPS—Twelve Technical high school graduates have received scholarships to Butler university. They include E. Joan Bryant, Joanne Green, Louis E. Wallner, Ida Joan Keller, Ruth D. Taylor, Ann Schwomeyer, Barbara Elliott, Louise Grigsby, Barbara Mattingly, Shirley Klinge Marion Lou Spears and Dorothy Woerner. Miss Green. was the first girl i in Tech's history to be elected president of the senior
council.
Ruth D.
A. Schwomeyer " Marion Spears
Joanne Green E. Louise Grigsby 1 Joan Keller Shirley A. Klinge
; a study of 17-year-old boys by Dr.
Docior’ Says*Training Should Be Extended
By Science Service B ,. Cal, June 16.— Psychological kinks which often develop in men deficient in physical ability - might be avoided if wore attention were devoted in childhood and #dolescence to improving their 3) in athletics.
“This {5 one of the conclusions of
Harold E. Jones, director of the institute of child welfare at the Uni-
(versity of California,
# RIAA OR BM cducation is excellent for producing Taylor Dorothy Woerner Louis E. Wullner
+ vantages, he believes, to a system of
Nebraska, Jowa and Missourl joggle|is likely to make itself felt.
Bottomlands thereabouts! is the European corn borer, which Suddenly when the first real warn sk in thé East but has now weather reaches the Ohio and the arted upper Mississippi valleys. It will find the late-planted corn souri nto the eastern parts of Ne- small and weak, and consequences of ‘its mass attack are expected to]
corners. + have been thoroughly flooded, and the uplands thoroughly drenched.
Thus far, the chinchbugs just ain't. however, { pest, not native like the other two,
Later,
pv of ap bl! BE
extended its range across the Mis~
a third mu essa and the Dakotas.
Dormant in the stubble of old|be grave.
v
2% | : [ STRAUS
SAYS--- TRADITION
3 ry air (hair) conditioned—
\
.
This is the Dobbs
answer—to the heated and perplexed brow (and dome) of man!
It’s a hat that is as cool as a “Cucumber” It’s as light as a feather”
* RESEARCH—A nurse inserted a thermometer in a cucumber—and found it to be considerably c cooler than outside temperatures.
. RESEARCH—Some day whén time permits we shall go to the Sportsman’s floor—fisherman’s section—take a feather or two from one of the artificial flies—put it (or them) on
This | cornfields, it is expected to emerge
The present system of physical
championship athletes, Dr. Jones asserts, pushing to ever greater heights the performance of those well endowed physically. But there would be many psychological as well as physical ad-
physical training directed more especially toward those who are of sub-average physical ability “Under present conditions many of ‘those who most need training become spectators,” Dr, Jones says. “and those who least need n become performers.” “A program more specifically and more intensively "adapted to indi-
WIiT'H
(portal to porta) | ~
a very sensitive scale—and give the facts to a waiting world, .
vidual needs should compensate, to
safety, few accidents occur. after eating.
Muscle cramps while swimming may occur fo anyone. They are the same cramps which are experienced under other conditions. Swimmers should keep calm and rub the cramp until it disappears. ‘" ~~ ” CHILDREN WHO turn blue while swimming have
shiver and
when this occurs.
perature to return to normal.
infection.
improperly under water,
well as into the sinuses.
oa.
some extent, differences due to piological factors.”
Alllrouc HY OF
is as light 8 2 breezs.
'safety, there would be few accidents.
|But since some will take chances,
JO
> : ¥ ¥ ¥ By Af § ry iF A SWIMMING ACCIDENTS result and in If persons learn to swim when they are young 4nd i they otic 1t is not wise to go swimming if you are overheated or
Reason for increased number of water these conditions is not known, but experience shows that:
Children who are chilled should get out of the water and dress as it 1 takes several hours for their tem- |respiration, be sure the mouth and
Sinus infection can develop in tion. * | those who go in swimming while [compress the lower back region 12-
suffering with’ an upper respiratory
Diving feet first so that the water (Until a physician Promotie the forcibly enters the nose, exhaling Person Cea dead. and forcibly blowing the nose after coming out can force water and germs into the eustachian tubes as proved no handicap to Mrs. C. E.
everyone should learn respiration and give. it ‘when sary. tion is recommended.
with one arm ° ‘extended
stayed in the water too long. Body overhead, the other bent at pind temperature drops to below normal |€Ibow with the face turned outward |
and resting on the hand. BEFORE STARTING
nasal passages are free of obstrucKneel astride the patient,
16 times a minute. Continue until natural breathing is restored wor
Learns Typing at 82
FRAZEE, Mmm. (U. P.).—Age Walker when it came to mastering
The _ Schaefer pressure | hrs method for alr pro - lols
Tay the, patient én his siomach} |
artificial SF ect
typing. She observed her 82nd
IF EVERYONE practiced water (birthday by starting a typing course
and four days later she typed her first complete letter.
TOMORROW
%
‘They're of BYRD CLOTH—
which is a swell poplin weave— weather treated cotton—which 1s
fine for Dobbs hand work! Fine to
shield against the weather (and - .
to pleasure the eye).
They are shaped and seamed and detailed to the gentleman's taste.
They rest-ever so lightly, and ever so smartly and becomingly, onthe brow of man—And rest ever so i] easily—on the department of the
wallet. 3.9
5
J
BROWN TAN. GREEN = YALLAR : RED WHITE
of miles away; it very fine fiber, in cloth. vot springy plows. 3
